Student Delegates

ENACT student delegates are appointed to foster civic engagement on their college campus and facilitate engagement and interaction with ENACT Ambassadors, students and alumni around the country. In addition, student delegates mentor and collaborate with members of campus clubs to help them become more effective citizen advocates at the state legislative level.

2022-23 Student Delegates

Tyler Carruth ’23

Headshot of ENACT student delegate Alison Cantor

Tyler Carruth is a senior majoring in political science and minoring in international and global studies and legal studies at Brandeis University. As an ENACT delegate, Tyler is excited to educate and support his fellow students who are starting to learn about importance and power of advocating for issues that are important to them in their state legislatures by introducing them to the ENACT network and the amazing work that their peers who are advocating for similar or the same issue have done in the past.

Tyler is also excited about the opportunity to connect his peers with subject matter experts and experienced advocates that exist within the ENACT Ambassador and Student Delegate alumni network. These connections, along with the ability to communicate with appears across the country about advocacy efforts, as well as seeing the results of advocacy efforts of peers from the past, are just a few of the reasons that Tyler believes that the ENACT program is incredibly special in its ability to serve as an indispensable resource that needs to be shared with youn activists.

Elaina Pevide ’20

dlaina pevide at desk with paper and pen

Elaina Pevide is a recent graduate of Brandeis University, where she built her own major in public policy while pursuing a second major in psychology and a minor in economics. Upon graduation, she returned to her hometown of Fall River, Massachusetts, where she now works as the special projects and media coordinator to the city's mayor.

Last fall, Pevide began her work with ENACT as an ENACT Labor Network student fellow, where she got an immersive education in labor policy. She was able to interact with experts from around the country and with a small cohort of other ENACT students passionate about labor issues.

With the ENACT Labor Network, Pevide began her research and advocacy on the Fair Work Week bill well before enrolling in the Enact Advocacy for Policy Change course in the spring. This work inspired her to focus her senior capstone research project on the implications of labor policy on economic outcomes for low-income women and women of color.

Besides her work with ENACT, Pevide is involved with Brandeis' Women's Studies Research Center; volunteers with Massachusetts Jobs with Justice, which led the coalition for Fair Work Week legislation; and served as editorial assistant to ENACT Assistant Director David Weinstein in preparing Brandeis' 2020 ENACT Anthology.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the rise of virtual learning, Pevide believes that the ENACT network has never been so important. As this year's ENACT delegate, she hopes to provide opportunities for collaboration and connection between students and faculty across the country.