Camille Holmes is a skilled facilitator, trainer, speaker, coach and consultant committed to equity, inclusion, personal growth and wellness.  She has designed and delivered training in the areas of leadership development, community problem solving, diversity and inclusion, and racial equity.

Camille enjoys coaching professionals committed to creating clarity, purpose and values alignment in their work and lives. In her spare time, Camille practices yoga, solves puzzles and enjoys great food with good friends.

In June 2015, Camille received the Henry A. Freeman Champion of Justice Award from the National Center for Law and Economics (formerly the Welfare Law Center) at their 50th Anniversary Annual Dinner. In May 2015, she delivered the Johnson State College commencement address and received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree. In 2010, Camille was selected as an Aspen Ideas Festival Scholar. In 2009, Camille received a Race Consciousness in the Law Award from the Equal Justice Society for her work promoting racial equity in the legal aid community.

Camille was formerly the Director of Leadership and Racial Equity at the National Legal Aid & Defender Association.  She came to NLADA from the Center for Law and Social Policy. During her tenure at CLASP, she was instrumental in the founding of the Mississippi Center for Justice, a nonprofit public interest law firm explicitly committed to advancing racial and economic justice. She formerly served as executive director of the Southern Africa Legal Services and Legal Education Project, an attorney at the D.C. law firm of WilmerHale and a law clerk for the Honorable Damon J. Keith on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. She is a cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School and Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges.

Camille serves on the board of directors of the Poverty and Race Research Action Council. She is a past president of the board of directors of Washington Council of Lawyers.