Skip to content

The Ecosystem

The Future of Public Safety

The Foundations of a Public Safety Ecosystem

In biology, an ecosystem is a group of organisms that have interconnected relationships. The relationships contribute to the quality of life of the individual organisms and as a whole. In a city, every aspect of the ecosystem works together to create overall safety and a better quality of life. Explore the foundations of a community-centered public safety ecosystem below.

SIGN UP for updates and get involved with organizers across the country.

1 Social & Cultural

Collective Community Identity

Newark’s residents demonstrate a fierce connection to their city. While its history is painful, Newarkers again and again identify that history as a galvanizing force inside their many paths for civic engagement.
LEARN MORE ›

Deep Love of Community

When Newark gathers, whether in protest, at a public safety roundtable, or at any of the multitude of cultural events, its people — across generations — sound off on their bond with and commitment to their city.
LEARN MORE ›

Spirit of Innovation

Newarkers have long looked within their community for solutions. This report is filled with stories from grassroots leaders who saw a need and created the vehicle that would address that need.
LEARN MORE ›

Open Channels of Communications

City officials and law enforcement leaders have engaged with community in an open, active, and sustained way to understand and act on the most pressing needs. This is best exemplified by the public safety roundtables operating in multiple wards.
LEARN MORE ›

Engagement of the Full Community

Grassroots leaders have been unflinching in putting the public in public safety. Their call has activated Newarkers across generations and led to a more comprehensive vision for what safety truly means in the community.
LEARN MORE ›

2 Community-Led Strategies

High-Risk Street Intervention

Violence is a public health issue, and it will spread without a containment and prevention strategy. The Newark Community Street Team’s credible messengers are a national model for the impact this work must have.
LEARN MORE ›

Bridge Building: Community and Police

Police cannot deliver public safety on their own. To collaborate with community, they need to reckon with the trauma police brutality and oppression inflict on the community and work to overcome it.
LEARN MORE ›

Healing-Centered Programs/Youth Development

Healing trauma to rebuild lives is essential to breaking the cycle of violence and harm. Newark was one of the first cities to make the healing of trauma a foundation of the way it addresses violence.
LEARN MORE ›

Community-Led Coordinating Body

The diversification of approaches to public safety requires vigorous community leadership and participation. The roundtable format has proven to be an exceptional channel for receiving and acting on the community’s needs.
LEARN MORE ›

3 Political & Institutional

Political Leadership, Vision, and Will

The 1967 uprisings mark a seminal moment in power building within the community and the strength is evident today, especially in the way Mayor Baraka leads while also empowering the community.
LEARN MORE ›

Policy Changes Responsive to Community

Official Newark leadership has validated its community engagement by enacting policies and procedures that address community needs articulated through activism and as a response to the 2016 federal consent decree.
LEARN MORE ›

4 Systems-Led Strategies

Coordinating Body/Budgetary Support

The many elements of an ecosystem require planning and alignment at a high level. Mayor Baraka established that capacity with a historic investment in the city’s first Office of Violence Prevention and Trauma Recovery.
LEARN MORE ›

City and State Grant Programs

Community-led public safety initiatives are under-resourced almost universally, despite their positive impact. New Jersey and Newark are leading the way financially in recognizing the power of community-based violence prevention.
LEARN MORE ›

Back To Top