By Invitation | Tech and diplomacy

Linda Thomas-Greenfield believes the UN Security Council should make better use of technology

America’s ambassador to the UN wants to fight hunger with specialised digital tools

AT THE BEGINNING of my career, I visited a Sudanese refugee camp in Uganda and saw a two-year-old girl die before my eyes. The technical term for what this girl experienced, when you are too thin and malnourished for your size, is childhood wasting. And it was, indeed, a waste. A young life—with all its potential—gone forever. There was enough food in the world to go around. There was no reason for her to die.

This article appeared in the By Invitation section of the print edition under the headline “Linda Thomas-Greenfield believes the UN Security Council should make better use of technology”

How to win the long war

From the July 2nd 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from By Invitation

Peter Sands of the Global Fund on the pandemic’s positive legacies

New vaccines got most of the attention but there’s a lot more to celebrate

Reihan Salam

Trumpism is becoming more pragmatic, argues Reihan Salam

But not all of the incoming president’s backers buy it


Time is not on Russia’s side, argues Finland’s foreign minister

Elina Valtonen calls for a lower oil-price cap and tougher measures against Russia’s shadow fleet


Oriana Skylar Mastro makes a case for paring America’s nukes

The political scientist explains why beefing up is bad China strategy

A new Iranian approach to regional security and prosperity, by M. Javad Zarif

Iran’s vice-president on how his country can make the region more secure and prosperous

The EU must be bolder and faster in enlarging, writes Nicu Popescu

A former foreign minister of Moldova on the means and the dividends of speedier accession