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24 in 2024

A window into the lives, hopes and fears of 24-year-olds around the world in a year of election uncertainty, conflict and climate change

  • Noya Lee in Taipei, Taiwan. She is sitting in front of a red slippery slide in a park and gazing into the distance

    24 in 2024: salsa parties, stinky tofu and being queer in Taiwan

    Social media manager Noya Lee says Gen Z struggles with ‘everything’ but going straight into the workforce has given her confidence
  • 24 year old Wilson Piritauarii Tuhiti Poareu, at his home in Papara, of Tahiti in French Polynesia.

    24 in 2024: marriage dreams, back to school and barefoot in Tahiti

    Stockroom worker Wilson Poareu plans to study accounting and feels hopeful despite the world facing ‘more difficulties’ this year
  • Titapa Thaipreecha plays a cat YouTube channel for her cat in the bedroom of her parents' house in Bangkok, Thailand.

    24 in 2024: first job, making money and avoiding ghosts in Thailand

    Titapa Thaipreecha is back living with her parents in Bangkok and will soon veer away from her engineering degree to take a corporate job
  • Lekima Waqavuki is 24 in 2024 living in Fiji.

    24 in 2024: dancing, home-cooked meals and celebrating little wins in Fiji

    Lekima Waqavuki visits his family’s village to unwind from city life and this year wants to stop worrying, improve his finances and his health
  • The 24 year old, Ji-hwan Ryu, who lives in Jeonju, South Korea

    24 in 2024: career anxiety, travel dreams and ‘meme studies’ in South Korea

    Ryu Ji-hwan and his friends hope to soon land corporate jobs but worry about what’s next and making the right choices
  • Taualofa Totua

    24 in 2024: ASMR, Chinese takeaway and indigenous rights in New Zealand

    Since Covid, Auckland’s Taualofa Totua has minimised socialising but loves music, creating and dreams about a better world
  • Miho Suzuki (24) at Shinto shrine near her university in Tokyo. Photo by Androniki Christodoulou

    24 in 2024: equal rights, clear skin and being a witch in Japan

    Student and ‘apprentice witch’ Miho Suzuki is set to enter the workforce and hopes Japan can shrug off its horrible start to the year
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