UMD and White House Representative Collaborate to Address Gun Violence Reduction Efforts
Two years ago, the 120 Initiative, a consortium of Washington, D.C.-area universities focused on reducing gun violence, was named for the number of people fatally shot every day in the U.S. Today, that’s outdated; the number is now estimated to be 134.
University of Maryland President Darryll J. Pines, who co-founded the initiative with George Mason University President Gregory Washington, on Wednesday decried a worsening epidemic and emphasized the role of UMD research in curbing it. He spoke at a campus event hosted by a new university initiative, PROGRESS (Prevent Gun Violence: Research, Empowerment, Strategies and Solutions), welcoming Rob Wilcox, deputy director of the inaugural White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, who outlined how the White House is addressing the issue.
“It’s a human-driven problem,” said Pines. “We created it—we should be able to find solutions for it.”
PROGRESS, led by School of Public Health Professor of the Practice Woodie Kessel and MPower Professor of African American studies, Medical Anthropology and Epidemiology Joseph Richardson, launched in November. It studies gun violence, offers educational programming across the state on gun safety and issues policy recommendations.
“Our multidisciplinary approach draws, analyzes and applies data from multiple sectors, including public health and the criminal legal system,” said Richardson to an audience of faculty members, government officials and community activists, including several survivors of shootings. “It’s a new model of equitable university-community research partnerships, with a specific emphasis on being community-driven and -led.”
[Making ‘Progress’ on Gun Violence]
Richardson pointed to a new PROGRESS project to use geo-artificial intelligence (AI) to map both gun violence and prevention efforts, revealing “hidden patterns and actionable solutions.”
Wilcox said that he was called to work on the issue of gun violence after his cousin was killed in a shooting at a mental health facility where she was volunteering. The White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention was established in September to facilitate policy changes mandated by the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the first federal gun control legislation in nearly 30 years.
“It’s so essential that (UMD is) helping to build this momentum” to reduce gun violence, Wilcox said.
Kessel invoked the words of the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis, who often referred to the idea of “good trouble,” asking, “How do we do this good trouble so we can end this bad trouble that we have?”