When we met Aimeé Navarro Villegaz she wondered aloud with us, in one of the our more poignant interviews, who she would be had she not chosen to speak up on behalf of undocumented young people. Being an advocate and being undocumented herself, someone who has benefited from the DACA program for young people, has become an important part of her identity, she told us. It was a reminder that the kind of leadership and advocacy our project celebrates takes a toll on some, and how that must be a special kind of weight for young people, even when they are among the clearest and strongest voices. Aimeé is a 2020 graduate of Marquette University who has been working for social justice on and off campus. She majored in anthropology with a minor in gender and sexuality studies. She’s a graduate of Dominican High School and was awarded a Burke Scholarship, which provides support and emphasizes leadership and community service. She has been a college coach at the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Milwaukee, where she works with high school students to help them gain access to higher education. For the past two years she’s chaired Marquette’s Dreamers Gala, which raises scholarship money for undocumented students. She plans to pursue a master’s degree and continue working for social justice. And she plans to leave Milwaukee, at least for a while.