‘Going Door-To-Door, Block-To-Block’ To Treat Root Causes Of Violence, Says Ernest Johnson, Director and Co-founder of Ubuntu Village NOLA
Program Date: Jan. 19, 2024

A growing number of American cities scarred by gun violence are turning to partnerships involving community activists and public health authorities to drive down firearm deaths and related violence.

Longtime New Orleans community advocate Ernest Johnson, co-founder of Ubuntu Village NOLA, and Chip Brownlee, a correspondent for The Trace which covers firearm policy and gun violence in America, said cities are no longer relying exclusively on law enforcement to address violence involving firearms.

Violence Intervention

Johnson and Brownlee described New Orleans’ newly launched strategy to journalists at the Crime Coverage Summit.  Trained citizen “intervenors”, in partnership with local health authorities, will seek to quell tensions in high-risk neighborhoods in a campaign aimed at halting deadly conflict and retaliation.

“If you don’t involve the community in what you’re doing, then you’re just spinning your wheels,” Johnson said. “You have to really have them involved in it in a way and build trust.”

Johnson said high-risk neighborhoods—or hotspots for violence—have been identified and intervenors will be going “door-to-door, block-to-block” to help resolve conflict.

Ernest Johnson and Chip Brownlee, Photo by: BP Miller/Chorus Photography

Similar programs have been launched in Alabama, New York, Virginia and other states.

Johnson said communities had previously relied exclusively on law enforcement programs to address violence, often resulting in arrests and prosecutions but without focusing on the overall health and well-being of local neighborhoods.

“Government programs come in for a few years, give you little money, you think you’re doing something and then something else becomes sexy and it shifts,” Johnson said. “So, we’re trying to build some sustainability outside of what we’re doing with the government.”

Access the full transcript here.


Crime Coverage Summit 2024: Beyond ‘If It Bleeds, It Leads’ was sponsored by Arnold Ventures and hosted by NPF and RTDNA. NPF is solely responsible for this content.

Chip Brownlee
Reporter, The Trace
Ernest Johnson
Director & Co-Founder, Ubuntu Village
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Transcript
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Resources
Resources for When Local Governments Fail To Halt Gun Violence, Community Advocates Fill The Void

The gun that divides a nation,” Todd C. Frankel, Shawn Boburg, Josh Dawsey, Ashley Parker and Alex Horton, The Washington Post, March 2023

Proliferation of modified weapons cause for alarm, officials say,” Norah O’Donnell, CBS News, April 2023

Map of gun deaths across the U.S. shows cities have lower rates than rural counties,” Aria Bendix and Joe Murphy, NBC News, April 2023

The Surprising Geography of Gun Violence,” Colin Woodard, Politico, April 2023

Blog: “Seven Trailblazers Addressing Community Violence Intervention Across the U.S.,” Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, February 2023

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