WE BELIEVE
​Elite universities have enormous power to shape society. But today, the academic social contract — the implicit bargain between universities and society — is broken. Fixated on exclusivity and prestige, elite colleges have drifted from their obligation to serve as pillars of democracy, engines of opportunity, and champions of the common good. As a result, America's trust in these institutions has plummeted.
Now, the outside actors are exploiting public mistrust for political ends, jeopardizing academic freedom and the capacity for universities to promote critical inquiry and open intellectual exchange.
Rather than rally to defend a broken status quo, the best way to protect higher education is by organizing around a bold and pragmatic vision for the future. Class Action is a student-driven organization of student, alumni, faculty, and civil society leaders organizing for a new academic social contract: one that rebuilds public trust by embracing inclusion over exclusivity, public service over private gain, and opportunity over inherited advantage.
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OUR STORY

2024
Our inaugural campaign to end legacy admissions won a major victory in California where, hand in hand with key allies, student organizers helped pass legislation aimed at ending legacy admissions in the state.
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Our first annual conference brought 75 students from 18 institutions to Brown University, growing our network and catalyzing new campaigns.

2026
As threats to higher education mount, Class Action is organizing to rebuilt trust in higher education — by addressing the very real ways elite colleges have left the American public behind. Click here to join our national campaign to hone our new academic social contract, end corporate career funneling, and hold elite colleges accountable to their public obligations.
FALL 2023
We started scrappy and unfunded, but with clear eyes as to how "elite" universities could live up to their promise.
Using a time-tested community organizing methodology, we launched with two focus areas: ending inequitable admissions and corporate career funneling at "elite" colleges. We recruited dozens of students eager to ask more of their institutions.

2025
Yale Law School hosted our second annual conference aimed at drafting a new social contract for "elite" higher education. Nearly 300 students, alumni, faculty and nonprofit leaders from 65 colleges and nonprofits participated.
With the wind in our sails, we grew our organizing team, launched a research arm and implemented a national chapter model.




