Johnny Rice II

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Johnny Rice II DrPH, MSCJ, VASI

Associate Professor
he/him
Health and Human Services Building
5th Floor, Room 518-C

2500 W. North Ave
Baltimore, MD 21216

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Biography

Johnny Rice II, Dr.PH., MSCJ, VASI is an Associate Professor, and former Chair of the Department of Criminal Justice in the College of Behavioral Sciences (CBSS) at Coppin State University in Baltimore, a Historically Black College and University (HBCU). He is also currently a Research Fellow for the Bishop L. Robinson Sr. Justice Institute where he is leading student research teams exploring issues such as gun violence, domestic violence, and juvenile delinquency. Dr. Rice is a State of Maryland certified Victim Assistance Specialist (VASI).

Before joining Coppin, he worked as a senior program associate at the Vera Institute of Justice in their Center on Victimization and Safety. He has spent the past 24 years providing leadership, technical assistance, and support to organizations that serve low-income fathers and families in the areas of child welfare, youth development, and criminal justice in efforts to create safe and stable communities. Before joining Vera, he worked as a public administrator for the Maryland Department of Human Services (formerly Department of Human Resources). At DHR, he served as the state administrator for the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) Program, the Family Violence Prevention and Services Act (FVPSA) Domestic Violence Program, the Rape Crisis and Sexual Assault Program, and federal and state-funded Responsible Fatherhood programs. His portfolio also encompassed Emergency Food and Homeless Services programs.

Previously Dr. Rice held the position of Chief Operating Officer and Director of the nationally recognized Men's Services Responsible Fatherhood Program at the Center for Urban Families in Baltimore. At CFUF, he assisted in developing a partnership with the House of Ruth Maryland Gateway Project, cited by Health and Human Services as one of the first collaborations in the nation between a responsible fatherhood service provider and a domestic violence abuser intervention program. Dr. Rice has served in the role of consultant, speaker, workshop presenter, and faculty member for the Office of Violence Against Women (OVW), Futures Without Violence, Office of Family Assistance (OFA), and other recognized governmental, social justice, and fatherhood organizations. He formerly served as Board President for the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence (NRCDV) and now serves on the board of the National Domestic Violence Hotline.

His practice-based service delivery employment in the areas of youth development, foster care, and addictions counseling in the prison environment have greatly informed his work. Dr. Rice is a proud member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc., Baltimore Alumni Chapter "The Benchmark". Dr. Rice earned his Doctor of Public Health from Morgan State University’s School of Community Health and Policy, and his MS and BS degrees in Criminal Justice from the University of Baltimore respectively. He resides in Maryland and is a proud husband and father.

Additional Background (Early Career):

Dr. Rice's past employment experience covers a significant cross-section of diverse areas. While employed as a foster care worker for the Baltimore City Department of Social Services, Mr. Rice was given the task of the reunification of families. He would often assist in devising treatment plans for parents in efforts to strengthen the fragile family unit. He has worked at a secured residential treatment center as a youth counselor providing structure and guidance for adolescents with emotional and behavioral challenges who were deemed suicidal, homicidal, and AWOL risks. As an addictions counselor within the Maryland correctional system, Dr. Rice worked with incarcerated inmates teaching classes in Moral Problem Solving and Relapse Prevention. Working in corrections exposed Dr. Rice to low-income noncustodial fathers who needed a comprehensive array of support services (i.e., ongoing substance abuse treatment, domestic violence counseling, child support issues, and access and visitation concerns). He actively pursued resources to meet fathers’ needs. Before entering Human Services, Dr. Rice was employed in various capacities in the field of safety and security in the private sector.

Recent Publications

2025

  • Rice, J., II, Jones-Eversley, S. D., Gilliam, C. C., Dickens, D., & Henderson, H. (2025). Partnering with Black Funeral Home Directors to Reduce Mortality and Gun Violence. Social Work in Public Health, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/19371918.2025.2559987

2024

  • Dillard, D., Henderson, H., Rice, J. II, Goldstein, A. D., & Mangum, M. (2024). Understanding the perception of place and its impact on community violence. Delaware Journal of Public Health, 10(2), 46–49. https://doi.org/10.32481/djph.2024.06.07
  • Jones, S.D., Rhoden-Trader. J., and Rice II, J. (2024). Examining Black Homicide Through Lenses of Epidemiology. In: Parker, K.F., Stansfield, R. and Mancik, A.M. (eds), Taking Stock of Homicide: Trends, Emerging, Themes, and Research Challenges. Temple University Press, Philadelphia, PA. https://tupress.temple.edu/books/taking-stock-of-homicide

2023

2022

  • Interim Dean, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Fall 2024
  • Department Chair, Criminal Justice 2021-2024
  • Bachelor of Science, Criminal Justice, University of Baltimore, 1995
  • Master of Science, Criminal Justice, University of Baltimore, 1997
  • Doctor of Public Health, Public Health (Violence Prevention Focus), Morgan State University, 2011

University-Level Service

  • 2023 – 2025: Member, Academic Review Committee
  • 2023 – 2024: Academic Dishonesty Committee
  • 2023-Present: Primary Advisor, Zeta Gamma Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc.
  • 2023: Sabbatical Committee, Spring 2023
  • 2023: Director of Student Life Search Committee
  • 2023 – 2023: New Faculty Orientation & Onboarding Committee – Faculty Academic Resource and Retention Committee
  • 2022: Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs Committee
  • 2021: Inauguration Committee Appointment and President’s Symposium Related Event
  • 2020 – 2021: Provost and Vice President Search Committee
  • 2020 – 2021: Centivintennial Committee
  • 2020 – 2021: CSU Reopening Work Group
  • 2019 – 2020: Presidential Search Committee
  • 2019: Summer Academic Success Committee
  • 2018 – 2022: Virtual Reality Task Force
  • 2018 – 2019: Student Engagement System Project Team – SESP
  • 2017 – 2025: Campus Affairs Committee
  • 2017 – 2024: Black Male Initiative Task Force
  • 2017 – 2022: Full Curriculum Standards and Policy Committee
  • 2017: Baltimore City Police Department Consent Decree Competition

College-Level Service

  • 2021-Present: Mentor for Chat and Chew Mentor-Mentee Program
  • 2018 – 2023: Program and Curriculum Committee Co-Chair, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences
  • 2016 – 2017: Search Committee Chair, Department of Social Work

Departmental-Level Service

  • 2018 – Present: Criminal Justice Club
  • 2021 – 2025: Search Committee Member (multiple searches), Department of Criminal Justice
  • 2017 – 2020: Search Committee Chair, Department of Criminal Justice
  • 2019 – 2020: Credit for Prior Learning Committee

Memberships

  • Academy of Criminal Justice Science (ACJS)
  • American Society of Criminology (ASC)
  • American Public Health Association (APHA)
  • Baltimore Alumni Chapter, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc.
  • BCAAN (Baltimore Communities Assisting and Advancing Neighbors)
  • Baltimore City College Senior High School Alumni Association
  • HBCU Criminal Justice Consortium
  • HBCU Research Hub: Texas Southern University
  • National Association of Blacks in Criminal Justice (NABCJ)
  • National Organization for Victim Assistance (NOVA)

Dr. Rice’s research interests are Epidemiological Criminology, Public Health, Race and Culture, Media, Youth Delinquency, Victimology, Family Studies (Fatherhood and Child Welfare), Urban Sociology, and Qualitative Social Research. Prior to Coppin he formerly served as Senior Program Associate at the Vera Institute of Justice in the Center on Victimization and Safety.

Grantsmanship:

  • Funded Project: Subject Matter Expert Roundtable: Intimate Partner Violence, Victim Autonomy, and the Effects of Protection Orders. The main purpose of the study was to explore how converging societal conditions, namely the “tripledemic” of COVID-19, influenza, and RSV, along with heightened racial justice activism, political polarization, and economic instability have shaped the landscape of protective order use and help-seeking behavior among victims and survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV), particularly for persons from underserved communities. Employing a qualitative research design, the project convened recognized experts in IPV, victim advocacy, and legal protections for a structured roundtable discussion at Coppin State University. The session was guided by a scripted set of research questions and attended by a targeted audience of students, practitioners, and survivor advocates. Coppin State University research was funded by the Battered Women’s Justice Project (BWJP). BWJP serves as the national legal resource for gender-based violence. The BWJP, through a grant supported by the Federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), awarded $25,000 in support of this funded research project.
  • Funded Project: Johns Hopkins University and Arizona State University, September 2022-Present, Project Role: University Site Lead Investigator. Title of Project: “A Comparison of Firearm-Related Intimate Partner Homicide in Texas and Maryland: Prevalence, Identification of Those at Risk, and Firearm Regulations (The PAIRS Studies)”. Amount Funded: $59,845; The Grant was awarded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and CSU is a subrecipient under Johns Hopkins grant. As a research partner, the CSU team will extract case file (medical examiner and police) interview data to compare the histories of IPH victims (cases) to those of a random sample of victims of non-fatal physical IPV in the past two years (controls). The CSU team will also conduct Proxy interviews of family members connected to deceased victims of domestic violence to gather data that will contribute to achieving the study's aims.
  • Funded Project: National Collaborative on Gun Violence Research and the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, October 2021-Present, Project Role: Site Lead-Investigator. Title of Project: “A Dangerous Recipe: Ingredients Contributing to African American Gun Violence”. Amount Funded: $105, 290; The grant was awarded to CSU by the Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF), which received a $1 million grant from the National Collaborative for Gun Violence Research. To implement the study, TMCF brought together leading HBCU Criminal Justice researchers in Houston, TX, Wilmington, DE, Jackson, MS, and Baltimore – leveraging the experience, knowledge, and status of HBCUs in the African American community to conduct research on attitudes toward guns ownership, possession, and usage by urban youth; the dynamics of social transmission of gun ownership and possession, carrying a gun, using a gun to threaten someone; and escalation to gun violence.
  • National Criminal Justice Month Community Engagement Award (Departmental); Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences for Year 2022
  • “Faculty Excellence in Research Award” Coppin State University (2022)
  • “Distinguished Alumni Award” Morgan State University (2016)
     

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