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Culture is as an infrastructure for impact
L+R’s Abhi Patil attended Global Citizen NOW on May 14, 2026 at Spring Studios in New York City. The summit brought together leaders, artists, entrepreneurs, advocates, technologists, and changemakers around a shared goal of moving faster on the issues that shape human progress.


The Global Citizen NOW 2026 summit was a meaningful event that pointed toward the next chapter of global impact. Rather than stopping at awareness, the summit centered on how to turn attention into coordinated action, moving people, resources, and commitments at scale.
My key takeaways from the summit
The biggest announcement was Global Citizen’s partnership tied to the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the first-ever FIFA World Cup Final Halftime Show. Produced by Global Citizen and curated by Chris Martin of Coldplay, the show will feature Madonna, Shakira, and BTS and support the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund. The fund aims to raise $100 million for education and football access for children around the world and has already raised $47 million.
For me, this was one of the clearest takeaways from the summit: culture is becoming infrastructure for impact. A global entertainment moment like the World Cup halftime show is not just a stage. It is a way to direct attention, funding, and action toward urgent human needs.
The summit also reinforced how quickly Global Citizen is expanding its reach. Following previous events in places like Detroit, Spain, Brazil, and South Africa, the organization announced plans to continue expanding into new international cities throughout 2026. It also announced an expansion of its European and Global Boards, signaling a deeper commitment to building the networks needed to address issues like education, food security, clean energy, economic opportunity, global health, nutrition, and climate action.
Another key takeaway was the growing role of creators and new media in advocacy. Content creators including @jesser and @haileyybaylee spoke about how technology has allowed them to reach millions, build communities, and use their platforms for good. Their perspective highlighted an important shift: influence today does not only live in institutions. It lives in creators, communities, and digital networks that can move people quickly and emotionally.
That idea connects directly to L+R’s work with Global Citizen. We are grateful that the mobile application we developed for Global Citizen has become such a meaningful tool for raising awareness, mobilizing support, and encouraging people around the world to take action. It is more than a digital product. It is a symbol of how technology, when designed with intention, can help people learn, engage, and contribute to real-world change.
The summit also offered a look at emerging technology as a force for human progress. Diana Virgovicova, founder of Xatoms and winner of the 2026 Global Citizen Prize: Cisco Youth Leadership Award, shared work using AI and quantum chemistry to design molecules that can help purify contaminated water. Her work points to a future where quantum and AI can accelerate new material discovery dramatically, compressing processes that once took years into weeks and opening new possibilities for clean water, energy, health, and climate resilience.


H.E. Mariam Almheiri also made an important point about AI’s role in accountability. As more money is pledged toward global causes, AI can help track how those dollars are dispersed, creating greater transparency and making it easier to ensure funding reaches the people and places it is meant to support.
The most relevant takeaway from Global Citizen NOW 2026 is that the future of impact will be built at the intersection of culture, technology, policy, and accountability. Global Citizen continues to show what it looks like to connect attention with action at scale, and L+R is proud to support that mission through technology designed in service of humanity.





