George Barrett Award Committee | Hillman Foundation

George Barrett Award Committee

Mary Barrett Brewer with George BarrettMary Barrett Brewer, George Barrett’s daughter, is a native Nashvillian. She received her undergraduate degree from Rhodes College in Memphis Tennessee in 1982 and her J.D. from Vanderbilt University School of Law in 1986.

In 1984, Mary worked for ACTWU under the tutelage of General Counsel Arthur Goldberg. She clerked for the Honorable Thomas A. Higgins, U.S. District Judge for the Middle District of Tennessee from 1986-1988. Upon completion of her federal clerkship, she practiced labor law with the Law Firm of Branstetter, Stranch and Jennings in Nashville before joining the Tennessee Supreme Court as a Staff Attorney from 1989-1991. Her legal work with the Supreme Court involved reviewing and researching issues of first impression before the Court.

In 1991, she joined the Nashville Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) office as an Attorney Advisor. As an Attorney Advisor, she was hired to do affirmative civil litigation and recover federal tax payer dollars from investors who had defrauded the federal government. Her work has continued with the Department over the years working with all program areas in the three Tennessee offices, Knoxville, Nashville and Memphis. She has provided legal advice to the Field Office Directors, Office of Multifamily Housing, Public and Indian Housing, Single Family, and Community Planning and Development. Her work with HUD also involves the Office of Healthcare Programs.

In 2010, she was appointed as the Associate Regionals Counsel for Housing Finance and Program for HUD for the State of Tennessee. She has continued her work at HUD as a public servant for over 26 years, marrying her social justice mission with her legal career, providing affordable housing.

She has attended The United States Sixth Circuit Judicial Conference for many years as a judicial delegate and is now a life member of this conference. In 2002, Ms. Brewer was inducted as a fellow of the Nashville Bar Foundation. She lives in Nashville with her husband Mark H. Brewer and they have three grown children, Matthew, Sarah Kate and Elizabeth.


Lucas GettentagLucas Guttentag is Professor of the Practice of Law at Stanford Law School and Robina Foundation Distinguished Senior Fellow and Senior Research Scholar at Yale Law School, where he teaches courses on immigration law, immigration administration, and constitutional litigation. He is the founder and former longtime national director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Immigrants’ Rights Project, which he led from 1985 to 2010. From 2014 to 2016, he was an immigration policy adviser in the Obama administration serving first as Senior Counselor to the Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and then as Senior Counselor to the Secretary of Homeland Security.

For more than thirty years, Guttentag has engaged in complex civil rights, class action, and appellate litigation in federal courts throughout the United States, including successfully arguing a landmark case in the United States Supreme Court on the habeas courts rights of noncitizens. Under his leadership, the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project became the country’s premiere organization engaged in strategic litigation to protect and advance the rights of noncitizens. The IRP achieved major successes enforcing access to the courts, compelling reform of the asylum system, restricting immigration detention, enforcing due process in the removal process, battling private discrimination against noncitizens, and enjoining state and local anti-immigrant laws and practices.

After law school and before joining the ACLU, Guttentag clerked for federal district judge William Wayne Justice in Texas, practiced civil rights law in Los Angeles, and taught at Columbia Law School. He received his undergraduate degree in history with honors from the University of California at Berkeley and his J.D. cum laude from Harvard Law School.


Nicole BernerPenda D. Hair is the Legal Director and co-founder of Forward Justice, a nonpartisan law, policy, and strategy center dedicated to advancing racial, social and economic justice in the U.S. South.  She has led the legal team for the North Carolina NAACP in a landmark voting rights case, NC NAACP v. McCrory, in which the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals found that North Carolina’s 2013 voting law was designed with “surgical precision” intentionally to suppress the vote of African Americans. She is the former director of the Washington, DC office of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and Founder and former Co-Director of Advancement Project. Hair is the author of the Rockefeller Foundation’s report on innovative civil rights strategies, Louder Than Words: Lawyers, Communities, and the Struggle for Justice (2001). After graduating from Harvard Law School, she clerked for U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Wilfred Feinberg, and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun.


Darren Robbins headshotDarren Robbins is a founding partner of Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP. Over the last two decades, he has served as lead counsel in more than 100 securities class actions and has recovered billions of dollars for investors. Darren was named California Lawyer’s Attorney of the Year and has been recognized as one of the nation’s top securities litigators by numerous organizations and publications, including The American Lawyer, which commended him for helping “set the pace for [his] peers,” and Chambers USA, which called him “a prominent figure in the field of securities litigation” and “one of the leaders of the plaintiff Bar.” Darren was also recognized as a Litigator of the Week by The American Lawyer for his work in In re Valeant Pharms. Int’l, Inc. Sec. Litig. Darren was awarded California Lawyer of the Year by the Daily Journal for 2022, and Lawyer of the Year by Best Lawyers® for 2023.


Peter WardPeter Ward is a Senior Counsel practising in Dublin, Ireland, who specialises in employment law, trade union law and human rights law. He was chairperson of the Free Legal Advice Centres (FLAC), a non-governmental organisation of lawyers committed to promoting equal access to justice from 2005-2021. As non-executive Chairperson he presided over the board of the organisation which currently employs a staff of 30 lawyers, researchers and administrators who carry out legal and social research, publish policy papers and law reform proposals, and pursue strategic litigation. He has been a member of the Strategic Advisory Committee on key constitutional referendum campaigns in Ireland which have resulted in constitutional recognition of same sex marriage in 2015 and the removal of the constitutional prohibition on abortion in 2018. He is a former Research Scholar at University College Dublin and Lecturer in Law at University College Cork. He is a founder of the Public Interest Law Alliance (PILA), a network of lawyers, NGOs and public bodies committed to the use of the legal process in the public interest.