

Amanda Nguyen
Introduction
Amanda N. Nguyen (born c. 1991) is the founder and president of Rise.
Education and career
Nguyen earned a Bachelor of Arts and Science at Harvard University, graduating in 2013.
She interned at NASA in 2013, and has also worked at the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. She worked as the Deputy White House Liaison for the U.S. Department of State. She left her job at the State Department in September 2016 in order to work full-time at Rise. She is currently training to become an astronaut.
Activism
Rise
In 2013, Nguyen was raped while she was in college in Massachusetts. Nguyen chose not to press charges immediately since she did not feel she had the necessary time and resources to participate in a trial that could potentially last for years. After police officers informed her there was a 15-year statute of limitations for rape in Massachusetts, she decided she would press charges at a later date when she was ready. She had a rape kit performed and discovered that, if she did not report the crime to law enforcement, her rape kit would be destroyed after 6 months if an extension request was not filed. This was despite the statute of limitations for rape being 15 years. She was also not given official instructions on how to file for an extension. Nguyen considered this system to be broken, partially because the extension request would be an unnecessary reminder of a traumatising experience. Nguyen met other survivors with similar stories and concluded that the current legal protections were insufficient.
In November 2014, Nguyen founded Rise, a nonprofit organisation which aimed to protect the civil rights of sexual assault and rape survivors. Nguyen headed the organisation in her spare time until September 2016. Everyone who works with Rise is a volunteer, so the organisation has raised money through GoFundMe. Nguyen explained that the organisation was named Rise to "remind us that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can rise up and change the world." Nguyen's aim is for Rise to successfully pass a Sexual Assault Survivor Bill of Rights in all 50 U.S. states as well as on the national level. She has also travelled to Japan where a similar bill was presented.
Sexual Assault Survivors' Rights Act
In July 2015, Nguyen met with New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen in order to discuss legislation that would protect survivor rights on the federal level. Legislation that Nguyen had helped draft was introduced to Congress in February 2016 by Shaheen. Nguyen collaborated with Change.org and comedy website Funny or Die in order to draw attention to the legislation and encourage voters to support it. Nguyen launched a Change.org petition that called on Congress to pass the legislation. The Funny or Die video and Change.org petition received support from Judd Apatow and Patricia Arquette on Twitter. As of 28 February 2016, the Change.org petition gained 60,000 of the 75,000 requested signatures. By October 2016, there were more than 100,000 signatures.
The bill passed through the Senate in May and the House of Representatives in September. It passed unanimously in both chambers of Congress, and was signed into law in October 2016 by President Barack Obama. The new law protects, among other rights, the right to have the evidence of a rape kit preserved without charge for the duration of the statute of limitations.
Recognition
Nguyen was the recipient of a Young Women's Honors Award by Marie Claire magazine in 2016. Nguyen was named on Foreign Policy magazine's list of the leading global thinkers in 2016, and was featured on Forbes' 2017 "30 Under 30" Law & Policy list. She was an invited speaker at the 2017 Women's March on Washington.
Personal life
Nguyen's home state is California, and she currently resides in Washington, D.C.