The death of George Floyd while pleading for his life shall forever be ingrained on the conscience of America. American policing needs radical restructuring.
Read MoreOur national web panel, Street Outreach During COVID-19: The Essential Work of Violence Intervention and Virus Interruption, convened over 200 partners from across the country working to promote public health and safety during this pandemic.
Read MoreUPI is advocating for the immediate release for nearly 600 youth within the nation’s largest juvenile justice system. It is imperative during this public health crisis that all youth are released from unsafe detention conditions that do not allow for social distancing, nor adequate prevention efforts to stop the spread of COVID-19.
Read More
This is the first expansion of the Community Safety Partnership initiative into the Valley region. UPI's trainings connected officers with community residents, service providers, and gang intervention workers to learn how to create safety together.
Read MoreTo kick off Watts’ first Walk to School Day celebration, UPI guided children across South Los Angeles to walk to school safely without fear of gang intimidation and violence. Our efforts were part of the national Walk to School Day celebration, where communities across the country came together to encourage walking and biking to school.
Read MoreLarry Sanders can often be found joking with youth and managing the grill at Green Meadows Park while working to creating a community of peace, positivity, and laughter in South Los Angeles.
Read MoreIn August 2019, Los Angeles took a monumental step toward ending youth incarceration.
Read MoreIn the past three months, UPI has presented introductory and advanced courses for over 267 brave peacemakers working in Los Angeles, Chicago, Stockton, and Sacramento.
Read MoreUPI helped convene the eighth annual Gang Prevention & Intervention Conference, organized by our partners Southern California Crossroads and St. Francis Medical Center.
Read MoreUPI spearheads efforts to create safe and healthy communities throughout Los Angeles through its leadership of the Community Safety Partnership initiative.
Read MoreUPI recently joined with partners in Oakland for a special gathering of President Obama’s My Brother’s Keeper Alliance grantees and partners.
Read MoreA groundbreaking series by the LA Times highlights the vast physical and psychological trauma that thousands of students face when navigating safe paths to schools.
Read MoreJudge Sherri Honer of the Orange County Superior Court refused to order the Fullerton Police Department to remove Ruben Lona from the CalGang database.
Read MoreSandra Martinez is a recent graduate of the Urban Peace Academy, and like so many of our graduates, her story is remarkable. An organizer from an early age, Sandra has always been a leader dedicated to her community. As a child, Sandra and her twin ran away from an abusive home and joined a gang shortly after. That gang became their family.
Read MoreSummer brings long days, warm nights, and unfortunately, seasonal spikes in crime. UPI has been busy these past two months, proactively working to ensure the summer is peaceful for all families.
Read MoreRecently, 25 brave peacemakers graduated from our Urban Peace Academy with the complex skills needed to reduce violence in Los Angeles’ most violent communities. Each participant completed 140-hours of intense coursework focusing on effective strategies for forming trust with both residents and officers to ensure neighborhood safety.
Read MoreEarlier this summer, alumni of UPI’s Latino Leadership Institute gathered to celebrate their accomplishments in creating a safe and healthy community. This community event provided an opportunity for over 40 Latino Leadership Institute alumni to reconnect and share their experiences with the whole family.
Read MorePBS SoCal featured the Urban Peace Institute's continuing work to break the cycle of violence throughout Los Angeles. This story highlights our innovative Urban Peace Academy, which trains former gang members and community leaders to promote peace.
Read MoreThe Orange County District Attorney (OCDA) withdrew its attempt to impose gang injunctions on two communities in the city of Placentia. After more than two years, the OCDA has been unable to prove that any of the 50 people they alleged were gang members were actually active gang members. As a result, the injunctions never became enforceable. Any reduction in crime in Placentia can only be attributed to other causes.
Read MoreOne year ago, UPI received an urgent call from Liz Blanchard, whose brother, Nelson Valle, was detained at the Otay Mesa Immigration Detention Facility as a result of gang allegations. Liz knew Nelson was living a peaceful life and was no longer a gang member.
Read More