Foreign Policy Magazine

the innovators

WHAT IF SPECIALLY ENGINEERED SHOES COULD FEND OFF MOSQUITOES OR A TRACTOR-SHARING APP COULD PUT MONEY IN NIGERIAN FARMERS’ POCKETS? THESE ARE JUST TWO OF THE QUESTIONS INNOVATORS WERE BOLD ENOUGH TO ASK–AND ANSWER–THIS YEAR. THEY TAUGHT A NEW GENERATION OF ROBOTS TO PERFORM MILLIONS OF TASKS. THEY MIXED CARBON DIOXIDE AND SUNSHINE TO MAKE CHEAP, CLEAN FUEL. AND IN JUST 15 HOURS, THEY FASHIONED A DEVICE THAT CAN CONVERT PRINTED WORDS TO BRAILLE. COLLECTIVELY, THESE THINKERS ASKED ONE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION: WHAT DOES THE WORLD NEED NEXT?

Chandani Doshi, Grace Li, Jialin Shi, Bonnie Wang, Charlene Xia, and Tania Yu

STUDENTS

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

For lifting words off the page.

Earlier this year, these six

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine6 min readWorld
Ukraine Isn’t Just Putin’s War
For years, as Moscow’s intent to challenge the West became clearer, a key question loomed: whether the country as a whole or its leader was at fault—in effect, whether the world had a Russia problem or a Putin problem. Since the full-scale invasion o
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
Foreign Policy
Ravi Agrawal EDITOR IN CHIEF EXECUTIVE EDITOR Amelia Lester EXECUTIVE EDITOR, PODCASTS Dan Ephron MANAGING EDITOR Audrey Wilson CREATIVE DIRECTOR Lori Kelley DEPUTY EDITORS Cameron Abadi, James Palmer, Sasha Polakow-Suransky, Stefan Theil, Jennifer W
Foreign Policy Magazine8 min readInternational Relations
What South Africa Really Won at the ICJ
For those with long memories, the seed of South Africa’s case against Israel—accusing it of genocidal acts in the Gaza Strip—might be traced to a spring day nearly 50 years ago. On April 9, 1976, South Africa’s white supremacist prime minister, Balth

Related Books & Audiobooks