Dr. Joseph H. Brenner Award
The annual Brenner Award is named in honor of Dr. Joseph H. Brenner, a psychiatrist and social justice advocate who founded De Novo in 1970, and his personal commitment to living a life of service. The award recognizes and celebrates community leaders and professionals who embody his spirit of volunteerism and who, by example, inspire others to engage in volunteer service.
List of Recipients:
2019 — Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights at Boston Medical Center and the Coordinated Care Program for Political Violence Survivors at Cambridge Health Alliance
2018 — City of Cambridge
2017 — Malana Gleason, Staff Attorney, FINEX House
2016 — Congressman Michael Capuano
2015 — Dulce De Pina and Fania Resendes, Mass. Alliance of Portuguese Speakers (MAPS)
2014 — Valerie Fisk, Immigration Supervisor, De Novo
2013 — Shawn MacMaster, Director of Community Partnerships, Middlesex District Attorney’s Office
2012 — Michelle Hyppolite, Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee (CEOC)
2011 — Michelle Fine, RESPOND, and Dr. Ilana Amrani-Cohen, Guidance Center (now Riverside Community Care)
2010 — Herbert Epstein, Volunteer Immigration Attorney, De Novo
2009 — The Political Asylum/Immigration Representation (PAIR) Project
2008 — Laura Booth, community advocate
2007 — Leslee Klein, retired Executive Director, De Novo
2006 — Marguerita Reczycki, Greater Boston Legal Services
2005 — Allan G. Rodgers, retired Executive Director, Mass. Law Reform Institute
2004 — Paul Goldmuntz, Clinical Director, De Novo
2003 — Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition (MIRA)
2002 — Transition House
2001 — Macy DeLong, Founder, Solutions at Work
2000 — Jeffrey Wolf, retired Legal Director, De Novo
1999 — John H. Curtin, attorney who lobbied for creation of the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corporation
1998 — Reps. Paul C. Demakis and Anne M. Paulsen, Massachusetts State House of Representatives
1997 — David Hall, former Dean, Northeastern University School of Law
1996 — Nancy Ryan, Executive Director, Cambridge Women’s Commission
1995 — Judith Herman, nationally-known author and psychiatrist
In an essay published in the New York Times in 1970, Dr. Brenner writes about his inspiration for founding the Cambridgeport Problem Center, now known as De Novo. Read the essay.