Pictured at the UN Roundtable on Digital Sovereignty are DeEtta Jones, CEO CultureRoad and YPO Social Impact Network ExCo, and Simi Nwogugu, CEO of Junior Achievement Africa, sharing 10 Million African Girls, a collaborative campaign between YPO Social Impact Network and JA Africa, and with CultureRoad as the enabling technology platform.
Over the past several months, I’ve been working alongside global leaders, thinkers, entrepreneurs, and institutions to deeply explore the root causes—and possible solutions—to some of the world’s most insidious challenges. One of the most complex, and yet deeply human, among them is poverty.
Poverty is not just about money; it’s about access, agency, and power. And at the heart of every conversation about equity and progress lies a fundamental question:
What is the importance of sovereignty—particularly in a world defined by rapidly advancing technology?
The Systems That Shape Us
The systems that govern our lives—economic, political, educational, technological—were largely created to serve institutions. Governments, corporations, and multilateral organizations hold the keys to participation: access to credit, healthcare, education, and even identity.
But these same systems fail enormous segments of the global population. Across much of Africa and the Global South, for example, the absence of reliable electricity—let alone consistent internet connectivity—cuts millions of children off from even the most basic digital learning tools.
If the systems that are supposed to empower us exclude us, then what is left?
A Radical Reframe: Sovereignty at the Level of the Person
What if sovereignty could happen at the level of the person—not the government?
What if every human being on the planet had the tools, the identity, and the agency to shape their own destiny, regardless of where they were born?
That’s the question animating a growing movement—one that challenges the old paradigms of power and participation. Self-sovereignty is not about isolation or rebellion. It’s about ownership: of one’s data, one’s labor, one’s learning, one’s voice. It’s about individuals having access to systems that allow them to authenticate, transact, and thrive without waiting for permission from institutions that were never designed with them in mind.
Imagine a world where a young woman in Ghana can verify her education credentials, start a business, access financial tools, and build a digital reputation—all from her phone, all without dependency on opaque bureaucracies or predatory intermediaries.
That’s not science fiction. The technology exists. What’s missing is the mindset shift—a belief that sovereignty is not the privilege of the powerful, but the birthright of every person.
Why Self-Sovereignty Matters Now
The pace of technological advancement has outstripped the pace of human governance. Artificial intelligence, blockchain, and data-driven economies are rewriting the rules of participation faster than policies can adapt. Those who control the data control the future.
If we don’t democratize sovereignty—if we don’t put power back in the hands of individuals—then inequality will deepen, not diminish. The gap between the connected and the disconnected will widen into something far more perilous: a world divided by who is visible and who is not.
Self-sovereignty is not only about access to tools; it’s about dignity. It’s about ensuring that every person can author their own narrative, make choices about their information, and benefit directly from their contributions to the global economy.
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The Fire We Need
The idea of self-sovereignty should catch fire now—not tomorrow. Because every innovation that doesn’t include the billions currently excluded reinforces a future of dependency rather than empowerment.
We have the capacity to design technologies that serve humanity rather than dominate it. We can build systems that recognize each person as an essential node in a living network—not as data to be mined, but as a participant in shared progress.
To be sovereign is to be free—to make choices, to be accountable, to belong to something greater without being consumed by it.
Our challenge—and our opportunity—is to ensure that this new age of technological revolution becomes not another chapter of inequity, but the first era of human-centered sovereignty.
A world where power begins—and belongs—with the person.