Join us on Wednesday, May 28th as we celebrate and honor the commitment of our award winners and their organizations at our 2025 Wiley A. Branton Awards Luncheon!

Wiley A. Branton Awards Luncheon
May 28, 2025
Networking 11:30 am | Program & Lunch: 12:00–1:30 pm

JW Marriott
1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20005

The Wiley A. Branton Award Recipient

Bryan Stevenson

Headshot photo of Bryan Stevenson

The founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), Mr. Stevenson has argued and won multiple cases before the Supreme Court, including a 2019 ruling protecting condemned prisoners with dementia and a landmark 2012 ruling that banned mandatory life sentences without parole for all children 17 or younger.

Mr. Stevenson and EJI have won reversals, relief, or release from prison for over 140 wrongly condemned death row prisoners and for hundreds of others who were wrongly convicted or unfairly sentenced.

He has received numerous awards, including the MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Prize, the ABA Medal (the American Bar Association’s highest honor), and the ACLU National Medal of Liberty, among many others.

Mr. Stevenson is also the author of Just Mercy, the critically acclaimed New York Times bestseller that was adapted into a major motion picture.

To read more about the Wiley A. Branton Award, click here. 

 


The Outstanding Achievement Awards

The Washington Lawyers’ Committee partners with the private bar and nonprofits to provide legal assistance to individuals and communities who experience violations of their civil rights.  Each year, area lawyers and law firms contribute thousands of hours of their time on cases and projects. During the Wiley A. Branton Awards Luncheon, the Committee recognizes these important law firm and advocacy organization partnerships through Outstanding Achievement Awards.

ArentFox Schiff
Fish & Richardson
Murphy Anderson
Proskauer Rose

Your support powers our fight for justice, equality, and civil rights.

Please contact Melissa Nussbaum, Director of Development, at (202) 319-1070 or [email protected] for more information.

Equality Sponsor ($125,000)

  • Premier Full-Page Recognition Ad in Program Book
  • Logo and/or name recognition as Equality Sponsor, in all event materials including, but not limited to:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Presentation Slides
    • Website
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  • Individual social media feature
  • Verbal recognition during live event
  • Event speaking opportunity for executive
  • Two Premium Tables for Ten Guests

Freedom Sponsor ($100,000)

  • Full-Page Recognition Ad in Program Book
  • Logo and/or name recognition as Freedom Sponsor, in all event materials including, but not limited to:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Presentation Slides
    • Website
    • Email marketing
  • Individual social media recognition
  • Verbal recognition during live event
  • Two Premium Tables for Ten Guests

Justice Sponsor ($75,000)

  • Three Quarter-Page Recognition Ad in Program Book
  • Logo and/or name recognition as Justice Sponsor, in all event materials including, but not limited to:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Presentation Slides
    • Website
    • Email marketing
  • Individual social media recognition
  • Verbal recognition during live event
  • Premium Table for Ten Guests

Integrity Sponsor ($50,000)

  • Half-Page Recognition Ad in Program Book
  • Logo and/or name recognition as Integrity Sponsor, in the following event materials:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Presentation Slides
    • Website
    • Email marketing
  • Group social media recognition
  • Recognition during live event
  • Select Table for Ten Guests

Impact Sponsor ($25,000)

  • Quarter-Page Recognition Ad in Program Book
  • Logo and/or name recognition as Impact Sponsor, in the following event materials:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Website
    • Program Book
    • Email marketing
  • Group social media recognition
  • Recognition during live event
  • Table for Ten Guests

Legacy Sponsor ($10,000)

  • Name recognition as Legacy Sponsor, in the following event materials:
    • Program Book
    • Signage
    • Website
    • Program Book
    • Email marketing
  • Group social media recognition
  • Recognition during live event
  • Table for Ten Guests

Wiley A. Branton was a tireless advocate for civil rights and equal justice throughout his entire career—as a private practitioner in Arkansas, a leader of federal agencies in Washington, and a Dean of the Howard University School of Law. The Wiley A. Branton Award is annually bestowed upon members of the legal community whose careers embody a deep and abiding commitment to civil rights and economic justice advocacy.

wiley branton
Wiley A. Branton, Sr.

Dean Branton started his career in private practice in Arkansas in the 1950’s, representing African-American criminal defendants in often racially charged prosecutions. Working with Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP, he took on some of the most significant civil rights cases in the South, including the representation of the Freedom Riders in Mississippi, who were arrested for desegregating public transportation and public accommodations.

Among his most notable cases was the litigation that desegregated the Little Rock public schools. It was Dean Branton’s injunction that led to President Eisenhower calling out federal troops to escort African-American students to school. From 1962 to 1965, he led the Voter Education Project in Atlanta. During the three years he was at the helm, the project registered more than 600,000 African Americans to vote.

President Lyndon Johnson appointed Dean Branton to lead the President’s Council on Equal Opportunity and then to work on the implementation of the Civil Rights Act as special assistant to the United States Attorney General. In 1967, he became executive director of the United Planning Organization, the District of Columbia’s anti-poverty agency. Two years later, he directed the social action program of the Alliance for Labor Action.

From 1978 to 1983, Mr. Branton was dean of Howard University Law School. During his tenure at Howard, he dedicated himself to the training of the next generation of civil rights advocates.

Following Dean Branton’s death in 1988, his friend Justice Thurgood Marshall remembered him as a great man who “believed in people and believed in what was right.’’

Wiley Branton was an inspiration to everyone who had the privilege of knowing and working with him. He personified the legal profession’s ideal of pro bono service that is at the heart of the Washington Lawyers’ Committee’s missionThe Wiley A. Branton Award was first bestowed by the Washington Lawyers’ Committee in 1989. It takes its name from Wiley A. Branton, Sr., an extraordinary man whose life embodied civil rights advocacy of the highest order.

CLICK HERE FOR PREVIOUS AWARD RECIPIENTS 

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