Efficiency, current throughput, and speed of electronic devices are to a great extent dictated by charge carrier mobility. The classic approach to impart high carrier mobility to polymeric semiconductors has often relied on the assumption that extensive order and crystallinity are needed. Recently, however, this assumption has been challenged, because high mobility has been reported for semiconducting polymers that exhibit a surprisingly low degree of order. Here, we show that semiconducting polymers can be confined into weakly ordered fibers within an inert polymer matrix without affecting their charge transport properties. In these conditions, the semiconducting polymer chains are inhibited from attaining longrange order in the π-stacking or alkyl-stacking directions, as demonstrated from the absence of significant X-ray diffraction intensity corresponding to these crystallographic directions, yet still remain extended along the backbone direction and aggregate on a local length scale. As a result, the polymer films maintain high mobility even at very low concentrations. Our findings provide a simple picture that clarifies the role of local order and connectivity of domains.organic electronics | conjugated polymers | aggregation | charge transport C onjugated polymers have received significant scientific attention as the active material in devices for printed and flexible organic electronics (1, 2). Owing to their versatile chemical synthesis, inexpensive processability from solution, and unique mechanical flexibility, these materials are in fact promising for a vast array of devices in future low-cost and distributed technologies, such as integrated systems for electronic labels targeting safety, security, and surveillance applications (3). The rational design of new organic semiconductors has been guided by a thorough investigation of their limitations in charge transport, leading to the development of high-performance materials for next-generation electronic applications such as low-cost displays, solar cells, sensors, and logic circuits (4, 5). For more than a decade research has primarily focused on increasing the long-range order and the crystallinity of conjugated polymers as a strategy to improve the solid-state charge transport properties. As a result, the charge carrier mobility has increased by several orders of magnitude through the design and synthesis of highly ordered polymers. However, recent studies have suggested that the key to designing high-mobility polymers is not to increase their crystallinity but rather to improve their tolerance for disorder by allowing more efficient intra-and intermolecular charge transport pathways (6). This observation explains why mobility values obtained from recently designed seemingly disordered organic semiconductors often exceed those of polymers having a high degree of crystallinity (∼1 cm 2 ·V -1 ·s -1 ) (7-10). Indeed, polymers may exhibit little longrange order, as measured by X-ray diffraction (XRD), and yet display a remarkable degree of short-range or...