“I started this company to assist people and organizations with the passion to effect change in their lives and communities but lacked the expertise or support required to bring their vision to fruition. Social Justice Ventures’ goal is to tap into available resources in the areas of policy, research, and practice in order to assist our clients in achieving their strategic goals and objectives.”

Dr. Johnny Rice II
Founder and Principal Consultant

Johnny Rice II, M.S., Dr.PH., serves is the founder and principal consultant for Social Justice Ventures LLC a boutique public health consulting firm.  He also serves as Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at Coppin State University in Baltimore. Before joining Coppin, he worked as a senior program associate with the Supervised Visitation Initiative (SVI) at the Vera Institute of Justice. He has spent the past 20 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 Resources (DHR). 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. In the capacity as mentioned earlier, he served on the Governor’s Family Violence Council and the Maryland State Board of Victims Services. In his government grants management role, he was charged with oversight and administration of a $25 million dollar annual budget that was also inclusive of Emergency Food and Homeless Services program funds.

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 been a 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. In 2003, Dr. Rice served on the OVW Supervised Visitation Program National Steering Committee and contributed to the development of the Guiding Principles. He currently serves on the Constituent Advisory Council for the National Domestic Violence Hotline and Board President for the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence (NRCDV). Dr. Rice has a BS and MS degree in criminal justice from the University of Baltimore with a specialization in corrections. He also holds a Doctor of Public Health Degree from Morgan State University’s School of Community Health and Policy where his study emphasis was violence prevention and intervention. In the past, he has served as an adjunct faculty member at the University of Baltimore’s School of Criminal Justice, and adjunct faculty for Penn State’s World University Online. In 2004 he established his consultancy Social Justice Ventures LLC, a public health consulting firm, as a means to support

the development of safe and healthy homes, schools, workplaces and communities. Dr. Rice is a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Baltimore Alumni Chapter “The Benchmark”. He resides in Maryland and is a proud husband and father.

Dr. Rice’s past employment experience covers a significant cross-section of diverse areas. While employed as a foster care worker for 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. 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 non-custodial fathers who were in need of 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.

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