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NRA Collegiate Coalition

The newest addition to our campus programs is the NRA Collegiate Coalition, which is an NRA-ILA branded chapter-based organization available on campus. As an NRA affiliated program, the NRA Collegiate Coalition chapter works with NRA-ILA staff and NRA Campus Coordinators to promote the Second Amendment on campus.

The NRA-ILA provides resources for chapter use to inform students about current issues. Based on the geographic location of your campus, this may include election activism and legislative priorities. An array of NRA Collegiate Coalition materials such as stickers, cups, bottle openers, and sunglasses are available at no cost to groups for events and tabling on campus.

Typical Activities of NRA Collegiate Coalition Chapters:

Host the NRA U program on campus

Educate those attending NRA Collegiate Coalition meetings on relevant issues

Advance NRA’s Legislative Agenda

Support NRA-PVF Endorsed Candidates

Table on Campus

Exhibit at a local gun show or community event

Your chapter is not limited to the activities above. All chapters are encouraged to come up with creative ways to advance the Second Amendment on their campus! Chapters may submit an event request to the NRA-ILA Grassroots Division to apply for funding when necessary. 

After the receipt of your completed paperwork and acceptance as an NRA Collegiate Coalition Chapter, we will send you a free box of supplies to start your campus engagement. Official recognition as a Student Organization on your campus is preferred, but not mandatory. 

If you are interested in starting a chapter on your campus, let us know! Fill out the form below:

NRA Collegiate Coalition

NRA Collegiate Coalition

An NRA Campus Coordinator works to build a pro-Second Amendment network on campus. NRA Campus Coordinators may operate independently on campus, or be part of an NRA Collegiate Coalition Chapter.

NRA U is an interactive presentation where students learn about the history of the Second Amendment, the NRA, and the current gun debate. NRA staff travel to your campus to debunk anti-gun myths, answer questions from students, and inform students of opportunities to get involved locally. 

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

The Daily News, Longview, WA, 3/31/94

Out of jail only seven weeks, a convicted burglar returned to his old habits; and an armed citizen ...

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

The Herald, Everett, WA, 3/25/94

In what is becoming a trend on the west coast, John Ayler was forced to shoot a cougar ...

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

Florida Today, Melbourne, FL, 3/31/94

Believing he was about to be fired from his job with a Fort Pierce, Florida, lawn-care business, a ...

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

The Tennessean, Nashville, TN, 3/24/94

Ben and Kate Krantz, owners of a Nashville pawnshop, started wearing guns on the job after losing cash, ...

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

The News-Leader, Springfield, MO, 3/21/94

Uneasy after a man asked to use her phone, a Springfield, Missouri, woman told him to use one ...

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Wednesday, June 1, 1994

The Daily Tribune, Columbia, MO, 3/11/94

Jim Dalton, 83, of Higbee, Missouri, was afraid that three men on his front porch were going to ...

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Sunday, May 1, 1994

The Press, Grand Rapids, MI, 2/12/94

The burglar who broke into Joseph Thompson's Saranac, Michigan, home hit Thompson in the face with a steel ...

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Sunday, May 1, 1994

The Courier-Post, Cherry Hill, NJ, 2/6/94

A handgun provided the margin of protection Camden, New Jersey, store owner Raoji Prajapati needed when a thief ...

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Sunday, May 1, 1994

The Daily Progress, Charlottesville, VA, 2/1/94

Brenda Jones, a 24-year-old University of Virginia graduate student, was leaving her Charlottesville, Virginia, apartment when a man ...

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Sunday, May 1, 1994

The Dispatch, Columbus, OH, 2/24/94

"He picked the wrong guy to pick on," was one Washington Court House, Ohio, resident's assessment of an ...

NRA ILA

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the "lobbying" arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.