Jonathan L. Allen (he/they)

Co-founder & Director of Development at Leadership Brainery

PIOW Board Member

Jonathan L. Allen, J.D., M.T.S. is a champion for equity. He is Co-founder and Director of Development for Leadership Brainery, a Boston-based nonprofit fostering equity by providing college-enrolled diverse young leaders, who are working for the greater good, with opportunities to advance their education, build inclusive networks, and gain access to impactful and high-wage careers. Jonathan is also committed to public service, and recently ran for Boston City Council in the Fall 2019 election. In response to the pandemic, Jonathan worked at Partners in Health as a supervisor on the Community Contact Tracing Collaborative working to stop the spread of COVID-19 throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts — through which he helped develop protocols and train teams for equitable data collection.

Jonathan followed his maternal and paternal grandmothers’ footsteps and began preaching at age 11, and was ordained at age 20. Recognized as a social engineer and an advocate for love and equity, his beliefs surrounding transformative leadership, collective responsibility, political spirituality, and social and emotional intelligence have influenced individuals and groups throughout the world.

As a first-generation college student, he became freshman and sophomore class president, junior senator, and Student Body President of Grambling State University. After receiving his BS in Business Management, Jonathan worked to expand services for a pediatric day healthcare center for chronically ill children until departing to earn his Master of Theological Studies degree from Southern Methodist University | Perkins School of Theology.

Jonathan is a 2019 graduate of Boston University School of Law, where he was an active leader. He has participated in international arbitration and mediation competitions and served as the president of the Black Law Students Association. Jonathan has written speeches for U.S. Congresspersons while studying Faith and Politics under former White House Press Secretary Mike McCurry at Wesley Theological Seminary. He was later a fellow at Free Speech for People, research assistant to the Honorable Geraldine S. Hines of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, research assistant to Rev. Cornell Brooks who is former President and CEO of the NAACP, and fellow at Harvard Law School’s Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice.

His honors include the Massachusetts Black Lawyers Association’s Honorable Chief Justice Roderick L. Ireland Leadership and Juvenile Advocacy Award, the American Public Health Association Campus Leadership Award, and BU Law’s Emmanuel Hewlett Award. He has been highlighted for making cultural inroads by More than Esquires Network, Move To Amend, Daily Free Press, The Rainbow Times, Boston Lawyers Group, The Fight Magazine, Arts & Understand Magazine, and Forbes Under 30 Scholars.

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