Week-Long Youth Leadership Conference Focuses on Public
Safety Within Tribal Communities
WASHINGTON – One hundred and seventy five young men and
women from nearly 50 tribal communities across the country have convened at the
week-long 2011 National Intertribal Youth Summit in Santa Fe, N.M., which runs
from July 24-28, 2011. The summit features administration officials from the
White House and the Departments of Justice, Interior, Health and Human Services
and Education, and it coincides with the one-year anniversary of President
Obama’s signing of the Tribal Law and Order Act (TLOA) into law.
The 2011 National Intertribal Youth Summit is a youth
leadership conference for tribal youth participants to meet other American
Indian and Alaska Native youth through special sessions targeting leadership
development and critical youth issues such as healthy relationships and
lifestyles, education, substance and alcohol abuse, cultural preservation,
community development and protecting the environment.
The summit also provides an opportunity for Obama
administration officials to hear directly from youth in Indian Country. The
administration and federal agencies have made a commitment to building
healthier and safer communities through strengthened coordination and
collaboration with tribal partners.
“You are the future, and the small choices you make can have
an enormous impact on your communities,” Associate Attorney General Tom
Perrelli told the group of assembled students. “Tribal communities face unique
challenges, and it can’t be overstated the importance of your leadership in
securing a bright future for your friends, families, and neighbors.”
In response to requests from tribal leaders for the
development of more culturally appropriate prevention, early intervention,
treatment, rehabilitation and reentry programs for tribal youth and families,
the Justice Department launched the Youth Summit initiative to promote
long-term improvement in public safety in tribal communities.
The summit’s focus was on youth voices. During the week-long
session, participants had the opportunity to create a Public Service
Announcement (PSA) to run in their communities. In a special session called
Voices of Youth, participants shared thoughts, concerns and recommendations on
ways to address public safety and positively impact the lives of youth across
Indian Country—providing a platform for honest dialogue with federal officials.
Additional workshops provided tribal youth with knowledge and skills in
leadership development and strategies for achieving academic and career
success.
Youth were nominated by their tribal youth program
coordinators and submitted an application to attend the summit. The Department
of Justice’s Office on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Programs (OJJDP) and
Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) made the final selections.
In addition to the Youth Summit this week, Attorney General
Eric Holder, thirty U.S. Attorneys and other administration officials will
visit Rapid City and Pine Ridge Reservation, S.D., to engage in listening
sessions with tribal leaders and hear from advocates in the fields of tribal
safety and domestic violence. Attorney General Holder will also participate in
a special wreath laying ceremony at Wounded Knee.
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