Students in Service and Leadership at HarvardMain MenuAbout this Scalar online bookAbout the course: SOCIOL1130 Student Leadership and Service in Higher EducationVolume 6: 2023 Student ProjectsVolume 5: 2022 Student ProjectsVolume 4: 2021 Student ProjectsVolume 3: 2020 Student ProjectsVolume 2: 2019 Student ProjectsVolume 1: 2018 Student ProjectsDepartment of Sociology and Mindich Program in Engaged Scholarship, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
12021-02-25T14:23:31-05:00Act on a Dream ---Story of Us29image_header2021-04-28T01:27:16-04:00Act on a Dream (AOD) is the premier student-led immigrant rights organization at Harvard. Founded in 2008, it began as student-led group meetings in the Philips Brooks House Association (PBHA) between undocumented students. Since then, it has expanded to serve the undocumented, mixed status, DACA/TPS community on campus. It has led a dual mission of building community on campus and advocating or the immigrant community in the U.S.
Undocumented immigrants are a resilient community whose presence in the U.S. protests their ongoing dehumanization by U.S. policies and institutional barriers that attempt to suppress their power. Among these barriers being access to an education, many undocumented students are denied the clearance to pursue a higher education. At the university level, they lack the institutional support that is there to uplift them.
AOD has created longstanding initiatives that have been aimed at uniting immigrants’ rights organizations at the college level, such as the Collegiate Alliance for Immigration Reform (CAIR) Conference, an annual initiative that introduces college students to immigrant justice projects and advocates while engaging them in the prospect of cross-collaboration. AOD has supported students on campus and helped them have access to resources such as through the hiring of a full-time immigration lawyer and social worker for students. AOD has centralized information for students by pushing Harvard to dedicate its own website for undocumented students. AOD has also pushed for staff and administrators to be trained on the topic of undocumented students and their unique needs as a student group. AOD has celebrated its community through initiatives such as the first ever UndocuGraduation ceremony for students in 2019, a tradition that continues to the present. In order to continue our plan to be engaged in the communities we aim to serve, we began a College Mentorship Program, in which we have worked to pair students across the United States with mentorship order to support them throughout the college application process.
Hopes and Visions of AOD:
Strong partnerships and ongoing dialogue with community organizations in the Greater Boston area that are engaged in immigrant justice work, as well as the simultaneous support of national coalitions and lobbying efforts that are striving for legislative change.
A supportive community with robust access to resources, and a network of accomplices and allies that support our initiatives
reducing the turnover rate of administration that directly support us , including the hire of an assigned Undocusupport person in the EDI department--- in order to optimize institutional support