A group of parents whose children killed themselves at university are campaigning for a change in the law to make the institutions more accountable.
They are calling for universities to have a legal duty of care towards students - the same duty that applies to employers to keep their staff safe at work.
This would entail organisations providing educational and pastoral services to their students that would protect them from what is referred to in legal terms as "reasonably foreseeable harm" - a risk to their welfare that the university should have been aware of.
A petition set up by the campaigners, which has amassed more than 100,000 signatures as part of a movement called #ForThe100, is due to be handed in at Downing Street on Tuesday and it is hoped it will be considered for parliamentary debate.
Some of the families behind it have been speaking to the BBC about what they hope it will achieve.