PERSON
Calestous Juma
The Kenyan-born innovation scholar whose six-century comparative study of resistance to technology revealed that opposition to the new is never random but structurally predictable—and that the fears of the displaced are the most reliable intelligence available to institutions designing a transition.
Calestous Juma was born on the shores of Lake Victoria in Budalangi, western Kenya, in 1953, trained first as a journalist, then as a science-policy scholar, and eventually appointed to the Harvard Kennedy School, where he spent his career asking why people resist technologies that will ultimately prevail. His 2016 masterwork
Innovation and Its Enemies traced
the innovation resistance pattern across nine technologies and six centuries, demonstrating that opposition recurs with such fidelity that it constitutes a mechanism rather than a coincidence: commercial interests clothed in quality rhetoric, cultural identity expressed as aesthetic judgment, and power preservation articulated as moral philosophy. Juma's most profound recharacterization was of
fear as intelligence—the claim that the resistance of those closest to the costs is not noise to be managed but signal to be decoded, a blueprint for exactly which institutional interventions a transition requires. He argued that the distance between what an institutional environment provides and what