Maxim Thorne


Maxim Thorne is an American lawyer and civil rights advocate who teaches on philanthropy at Yale University. He is the founder of JusticeInvestor, a litigation crowdfunding company focused on environmental and social justice cases. He became a Senior Vice-President of the NAACP in 2008, where he helped establish the first LGBT Task Force. Thorne helped argue Abbott v. Burke on behalf of Head Start and the NAACP.

Early life and education

Thorne was born in Georgetown, Guyana on 24 November 1964. He spent his early years in Nassau, Bahamas along with his sister, Katya, attending St. Thomas Moore's Primary School, until he was 10, then returned to Guyana where he attended St. Margaret's Primary School and Queen's College. His mother, Eslyn Thorne, who is of mixed Indian and Chinese descent, met his father, who is also multi-ethnic, while in Georgetown, Guyana. Thorne immigrated to the United States in 1984. He is the great grandson of Alfred A. Thorne, a human rights advocate and educator in British Guiana.
Thorne holds a bachelor's degree with cum laude honours in economics and political science from Yale College and a JD from Yale Law School.

Career

In 2012 he taught "Philanthropy in Action" at Yale, where a gift by an anonymous donor allowed students to donate $100,000 to charitable causes.
Thorne became of The Andrew Goodman Foundation in 2016.
Thorne was appointed Executive Vice-President of the Paley Center for Media in 2013.
Thorne was active in the 2008 Obama presidential campaign, serving on the Finance and Policy Committees, LGBT Leadership Council and African American Leadership Council. He resigned from the LGBT Council after a personal email exchange criticising the Clinton campaign became public.
Previously he was chief operating officer at Human Rights Campaign, and Vice-President at Human Rights Campaign Foundation.
Formerly, Thorne was Executive Director of New Jersey Head Start, an association of all the Head Start Programs in New Jersey. While at the NJHSA, he oversaw the implementation of Abbott v. Burke, the New Jersey Supreme Court decision that mandated parity in funding and Whole School Reform. Thorne had represented Head Start, the New Jersey NAACP State Conference, and daycare centres in later litigation. For its efforts the agency won the first annual "Lawyer as Problem Solver Award" of the American Bar Association in 2002.