Our Chapters
Our network of boots on the ground powers local initiatives across borders.
Use the map below to access volunteer form links for individual chapters by clicking on the pins. Don’t see your state or country represented? Start a chapter and join the Encode community today!
Our community spans 1,300 high school and college students across over 40 U.S. states and 30 countries.
Whether they’re standing up to techno-authoritarianism in Egypt or advancing AI safety bills in California, we’re committed to empowering young people to take action on the ground.
California Chapter
France Chapter
New York Chapter
Keeping up-to-date with AI can be confusing. We’ve compiled an FAQ on relevant terms + concepts in AI, plus questions we hear all the time!
In the years since our founding, we’ve contributed to the passage of local ordinances restricting surveillance in Minneapolis, New Orleans, Seattle, and more; spearheaded advocacy efforts for more than 10 pieces of federal legislation; helped shape the White House’s Bill of Rights for an Automated Society and President Biden’s executive order on AI; reached more than 20,000 high school and college students with workshops about the implications of AI, using our own curriculum; and built a network of 50+ autonomous state, country, and campus chapters. Most recently, our founder Sneha Revanur was the youngest civil society leader invited to advise Vice President Kamala Harris at a private roundtable on AI held at the White House in July 2023—a watershed moment for youth engagement in AI policy.
We were launched in July 2020 by high school student Sneha Revanur, then 15 years old, as a single-issue campaign against a California ballot measure seeking to expand the use of biased algorithms in the state’s justice system. In coalition with other California advocacy groups, we helped defeat the ballot measure by a 13% margin in November. But that was only an opening salvo; by then, our army of students had snowballed. We decided to keep our movement alive — and expand globally — to address other challenges presented by the age of AI, including surveillance, disinformation, democratic erosion, and potential catastrophic risk.
We believe human-centered AI must be built, designed, and governed by and for diverse stakeholders. AI should help guide us towards our aspirational future, not simply reflect the data of our past and present. Rather than creating AI that supplants humans and human capabilities, we should invest in AI that enhances our potential—for example, innovations in personalized education or medicine that nourish human knowledge, creativity, connectedness, and health—while ensuring that the benefits of these technologies are distributed equitably. With appropriate guardrails, AI has the potential to dramatically advance the human condition.
We rely on the generous support of donors and allies like you to drive our work forward. Here are a few ways you can help advance our mission:
- Make a donation through our website. Financial contributions of any amount will help support our advocacy, workshops, events, and chapter network.
- Help spread the word. Follow us on social media and share our work.
At present, we find ourselves face-to-face with challenges like algorithmic bias, misinformation, democratic erosion, and labor displacement. We simultaneously stand on the brink of even larger-scale risks that could result from the loss of human control over increasingly powerful systems. If AI surpasses human capabilities at most tasks, the consequences may be existential. The AI factionalism we see today — which has created a false choice between focusing on current harms and preparing for emerging threats — serves no one. We must future-proof, and we must continue our unfinished efforts to create a more equal and just world. We see a moral imperative for the AI community to stand united in addressing the full spectrum of AI risks. Read more here in our recent joint statement with the Future of Life Institute.
Our generation was born into the age of social media: we have seen how AI-powered platforms have expanded our access to knowledge and created new modes of connection, but they have created a youth mental health crisis and allowed misinformation to proliferate, too. As young people, we are the next generation of advocates, consumers, voters, policymakers, developers, educators, parents, and community members. The AI being built today will shape the world that we and our peers inherit tomorrow. More so than any other generation, we have a unique stake in AI’s immediate and long-run impacts. Because of the pace of AI development, the world 10 years from now could be entirely unrecognizable to us today. In the face of what could be one of the most significant and potentially catastrophic threats to our shared future, we refuse to bury our heads in the sand. We are urgently taking up arms to address the full spectrum of AI risks and unleash AI's potential to benefit humanity.