MIT SOLVE: Indigenous Communities Fellowship


As an initiative of MIT, solving is core to what we do. We believe that to build a better future for all, we need new voices and ideas. We launch open calls for brilliant and bold tech-based solutions that solve big problems.
How can Indigenous innovators in the US and Canada build upon traditional knowledge and technology to meet the social, environmental, and economic goals of their communities?
Indigenous innovation is as diverse and expansive as Indigenous communities, with entrepreneurs harnessing traditional knowledge systems, values, and teachings to reimagine and renew what is possible in their communities and beyond. Across the past seven years of the Fellowship, Indigenous innovators spanning the United States and Canada have demonstrated a long legacy of ingenuity, self-determination, and community-first organizing. Whether working in the fields to deploy food sovereignty programming, or behind a computer developing algorithms for community benefit—at the core of the Fellows’ work is the intersection of tech-enabled and culturally grounded solutions.
Central to modern Indigenous innovation in the United States and Canada is the importance of Indigenous peoples generating, modifying, and controlling their own technologies for the sake of their communities. With this in mind, Indigenous innovators continue to harness traditional knowledge and technology to solve some of the greatest challenges facing our shared earth, driving solutions to promote energy, food, and data sovereignty, climate resilience, Indigenous business, culturally grounded education, and positive physical and mental health outcomes. While this innovation flourishes at the community level it’s incumbent upon organizations such as Solve to catalyze resources and support for these outstanding change-makers.
MIT Solve seeks exceptional innovators supporting community-based solutions by and for Indigenous communities across the United States and Canada with a particular interest for 2025 in solutions that:
- Strengthen sustainable energy sovereignty and support climate resilience initiatives by and for Indigenous peoples.
- Develop tools to promote Indigenous sovereignty, including the ethical use of AI and data technologies, culturally aligned digital infrastructure, or access to economic opportunity.
- Drive positive outcomes for Indigenous learners of any age and context through culturally grounded educational opportunities.
What funding is available to Solvers?
Each Solver team receives $10,000 in unrestricted funding from Solve and access to additional financing in the form of grants and investments. Last year's Solver teams received an average of $40k each following selection and because once a Solver, always a Solver they will continue to be eligible for funding opportunities during their program year and beyond.
What resources does the Solve program provide?
Funding
- $10,000 prize from Solve
- Access to a pool of +$1.5M in prize funding at selection and additional funding opportunities throughout the program and after.
Nine-month support program
- Tailored capacity-building workshops covering marketing, public relations, monitoring and evaluation, business model, and more;
- Leadership coaching;
- Access to in-kind and pro bono resources such as software licenses and legal services;
- Monitoring and evaluation support to build an impact measurement practice;
- A powerful network of impact-minded leaders across industries and sectors, including MIT, with dedicated spaces to meet year-round;
- Attendance at two flagship events in New York City in September and Cambridge in May;
- Exposure in the media and speaking opportunities at conferences;
- Connections with past Solver teams for peer-to-peer support, inspiration, and guidance
What is the time commitment?
Selected Solver teams should expect to commit ~25 hours to the program over the course of nine months, inclusive of coaching sessions, workshops, virtual events, etc. Additionally, attendance to MIT Solve flagship events is usually four days for Solve Challenge Finals in New York City (September) and four days for Solve at MIT in Cambridge (May).
What happens after completion of the program?
Once a Solver, always a Solver! You will continue to have access to funding opportunities, in-kind and pro bono resources, exposure in the media, and speaking engagements, and you will receive invitations to join Solve in selected virtual and in-person events.
Solutions
What type of solutions is Solve looking for?
Solve seeks innovative, human-centered, tech-based solutions to our Global Challenges. Through open innovation, Solve is looking for a diverse portfolio of solutions across geography, development stage, and team members’ gender and background. We encourage people of all backgrounds to submit applications.
Solve is an initiative of MIT. We believe that to build a better future for all, we need new voices and ideas. We launch open calls for exceptional and diverse solutions to the most pressing global challenges from anyone, anywhere in the world. Selected innovators get the backing of MIT and our community of supporters to scale their impact and drive lasting change.
Solve was started in 2015, a natural offshoot of MIT’s mission, as a collaborative global problem-solving platform. Our work serves the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with the ultimate aim to create a more prosperous and sustainable future for all. To date, we’ve run over 85 challenges, supported over 400 innovators, and mobilized over $70 million in funding. In turn, our innovator community is reaching over 280 million lives and has raised over $1 billion in funding. At Solve, we continue to be motivated and inspired by the thousands of solutions we receive each year to our challenges. While there will never be a shortage of intractable global problems, we are steadfast in our optimism that through partnership, human-centered design, and innovation—there’s nothing we can’t solve together.

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