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Alum Who Works for the ACLU Is Named a Gates Cambridge Scholar | Rutgers University
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Alum Who Works for the ACLU Is Named a Gates Cambridge Scholar
Cassandra “Cassie” Vega is a civic engagement organizer for the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey and a 2024 alum of Rutgers University-New Brunswick.
John Munson/Rutgers University
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By
Mike Lucas
Date
February 16, 2026
Media Contact
Mike Lucas
mike.lucas@rutgers.edu
Cassandra Vega, who graduated from Rutgers-New Brunswick in 2024, will pursue a master of philosophy degree in education at the University of Cambridge
Cassandra “Cassie” Vega, a civic engagement organizer for the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey and a 2024 alum of Rutgers University-New Brunswick, is heading to the United Kingdom to pursue graduate-level studies as a Gates Cambridge Scholar.
The
scholarship
, one of the most prestigious international postgraduate opportunities available, is awarded to outstanding students from outside the United Kingdom and covers the full cost of studying at the University of Cambridge in England.
Vega, whose
mother attended Rutgers
and is a longtime employee of the university (first at the Center for Women's Global Leadership, then with Rutgers Libraries), said she is “incredibly grateful” for the scholarship, which is funded by the Gates Foundation (formerly the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation).
Cassandra “Cassie” Vega
Courtesy of Cassandra Vega
“It is more than just an award for me,” said Vega, who attended the
Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences
and
Douglass Residential College
and majored in political science with minors in Latino and Caribbean studies as well as women’s and gender studies. “It’s an award for my family. It’s an award for my community. It’s an award for every single professor and every single teacher I’ve ever had.”
As a staffer with the ACLU of New Jersey, Vega supports the group’s political advocacy team, works with volunteers and organizes “Get Out the Vote” events for statewide elections, which take place every year. The 23-year-old will spend nine months at Cambridge pursuing a master of philosophy degree in education with a concentration in knowledge, power and politics.
“I will study how nontraditional education systems can be used to improve civic engagement and create a politically informed public,” she said. “When we think of education, we think of K-12, then college. There is this misconception that education abides by rigid structures, and that there are only specific periods of time in which you can learn. I believe that learning is so much more than that. It is a lifelong process that we participate in every day.”
Vega, whose hometown is South Brunswick, N.J., is the 12th Rutgers-New Brunswick student to be awarded a Gates Cambridge Scholarship.
Established in 2000, the
Gates Cambridge Scholarship program
selects roughly 80 scholars annually based on exceptional academic ability, leadership potential and a commitment to improving the lives of others. The scholarships cover all fees and living expenses for a student’s master degree or doctoral studies at the research university, which is about 60 miles north of London.
“We are so proud of Cassie and look forward to the great things she will accomplish at Cambridge,” said Rutgers-New Brunswick Chancellor Francine Conway. “Rutgers is the place where access and excellence come together to help students like Cassie fulfill their highest ambitions.”
We are so proud of Cassie and look forward to the great things she will accomplish at Cambridge.
Francine Conway
Chancellor of Rutgers-New Brunswick
Vega said as a participant in the
Coro Fellows Program in Public Affairs
in New York City last year, a friend of hers “really pushed me” to apply for the scholarship “because I came in every day talking about how frustrated I was with the world and the spread of misinformation and disinformation. People were uninformed, and I was increasingly disheartened at the state of our democracy. At some point she said, ‘You should do something about it.’”
Vega said she then came across a program at Cambridge focused on knowledge, power and politics within education.
“It is perfectly aligned with everything I'm passionate about and everything I believe in,” she said. “And the Gates Cambridge community is specifically focused on how to make the world a better place through different fields of study, adding another layer of intellectual diversity.”
She added, “Education is the bedrock of democracy. Without an informed and engaged public, there is no accountability, and we are seeing the ramifications of this with each passing day. This program explores how education is governed, understood, spread, and a key to peace and justice internationally.”
Vega kept busy as an undergraduate at Rutgers-New Brunswick. A member of honor societies Phi Beta Kappa, Cap and Skull, Pi Sigma Alpha and
Iota Iota Iota
, she participated in the
Lloyd C. Gardner Fellowship Program
, the
Undergraduate Associate Program
at the Eagleton Institute of Politics and the
Institute for Women's Leadership's Leadership Scholars Program
When we think of education, we think of K-12, then college. There is this misconception that education abides by rigid structures, and that there are only specific periods of time in which you can learn. I believe that learning is so much more than that. It is a lifelong process that we participate in every day.
Cassandra Vega
Gates Cambridge Scholar
A founding executive board member of the
Women's Pre-Law Society
, Vega was a member of the
Douglass Welcome Ambassadors
and an ambassador of the
Public Leadership Education Network
at Douglass. She also is a member of the board of the Associate Alumnae of Douglass College.
Vega also helped form the
Fellows in Racial Justice Learning Community
alongside professors
Carlos Decena
and
Michelle Stephens
. Operated through the
Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice
, the university-wide undergraduate program mentors and trains students to be intellectual activists.
“I am incredibly proud of the work we did there,” she said.
Vega, who plans to study law and become a civil rights lawyer, said she is grateful to educators and administrators at Rutgers, crediting professors
Bailey Eaise
and
Saladin Ambar
, both with the
Department of Political Science
, as well as Anne Wallen, director of the
Office of Distinguished Fellowships
at Rutgers-New Brunswick.
She added it is important to remember that academic awards such as the Gates Cambridge Scholarship aren’t just about individuals.
“They are about the people in communities that make up an individual,” Vega said. “So, anyone who's ever been part of my story has won this scholarship and will be with me in Cambridge this fall.”
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