Amanda Nguyen, born on October tenth, nineteen ninety-one, is a prominent Vietnamese-American civil rights advocate and social entrepreneur. In two thousand fourteen, she founded Rise, a non-governmental organization dedicated to implementing a sexual assault survivors' bill of rights. Her advocacy led to the drafting of the Sexual Assault Survivors' Rights Act, which passed unanimously through the United States Congress, marking a significant milestone in the fight for survivors' rights.
In addition to her legislative achievements, Nguyen has been a powerful voice against violence towards Asian Americans. Her viral video in February twenty twenty-one called for increased media coverage of these issues, effectively kickstarting a movement that resonated across the nation.
Nguyen's impactful work has garnered her numerous accolades, including a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize in two thousand nineteen and recognition as one of Time's Women of the Year in two thousand twenty-two. She was also honored as a Top 100 Global Thinker by Foreign Policy, highlighting her influence on a global scale.
In March twenty twenty-five, she published her memoir, Saving Five, which debuted on The New York Times Best Seller list. Furthermore, on April fourteenth, twenty twenty-five, Nguyen made history as the first woman of Vietnamese heritage to fly into space aboard Blue Origin's eleventh spaceflight, where she conducted scientific experiments in microgravity, including research on wound dressing.