
Jasmine Gatlin
National Field Organizer
Jasmine is an organizer and social impact strategist with nearly a decade of experience mobilizing communities toward collective action across racial justice, public health, and community-based advocacy.
She currently serves as National Field Organizer at the National Alliance to End Homelessness, where she builds and sustains relationships with field partners across the country, equips advocates to engage their members of Congress on federal housing and homelessness policy, and ensures that ground-level intelligence from the field informs the Alliance’s advocacy strategy. In her first weeks, she helped coordinate the Alliance’s 2026 national conference and Capitol Hill Day.
Prior to the Alliance, Jasmine served as Program Director at Abolitionist Sanctuary, where she recruited and organized a multi-state network of 50 partner organizations around advocacy addressing mass incarceration and the criminalization of Black motherhood. She served as Sr. Program Manager at the National Alliance on Mental Illness, directing the Sharing Hope Series across 400+ partner organizations and 35,000+ participants and building culturally specific ecosystems connecting Indigenous tribes, NAACP chapters, Black sororities, and community organizations. At Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America, she managed a $1M federal portfolio across ONDCP, SAMHSA, and CDC funding streams and helped build the Take Back Your 10 campaign, a youth-led tobacco prevention initiative across 24 Maryland districts. She has also served as an organizer at the Children’s Defense Fund, Research Assistant at Howard University School of Divinity, and Investigator at the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. She holds a Master of Divinity with a Certificate in Racial Justice and Ethical Leadership from Howard University and a B.A. in Communication and Legal Studies from the University of Texas at San Antonio.




