Arctic Indigenous Youth

The Arctic Council supports fostering sustainable and meaningful collaboration and engagement with youth representatives.

Indigenous youth representatives at the first Arctic Leaders’ Youth Summit in 2019 called for a more active involvement in the issues that affect them, stating that Arctic youth are “not just the future but also the present”.

Arctic Leaders’ Youth Summit

Arctic Leaders’ Youth Summit

The Youth Summit is a new, complementary addition organized to provide a dedicated summit for Indigenous youth and promote youth engagement. It was held for the first time at the Arctic Leaders’ Summit (ALS6) in Rovaniemi, Finland in 2019.

It is an excellent opportunity for rising Indigenous leaders from across the circumpolar Arctic to learn about each other’s homelands, discuss issues of joint concern, and build their networks and skills in international cooperation.

Primarily developed by Saami youth organizations, the program allowed youth nominees to share dreams for their common Arctic future, prepare for ALS6 and compose a declaration presented during ALS6.

A one year anniversary event was held online in November 2020 and further public events are planned.

Permanent Participants

Youth Network

Following the discussions of SAO meeting in Hveragerði in 2019, the Permanent Participants took action by starting their youth initiative in 2020: The PP Youth Network. The PP Youth Network gathers youth representatives from each of the six PP organizations, who meet to discuss topics related to the Arctic Council.

The Arctic Youth Leaders’ Summit (AYLS) in November 2019 in Rovaniemi, Finland was the starting point for the Network. The summit gathered Indigenous youth from all over the Arctic and served as a platform to connect the youth. At the Summit, the PP youth called for more active involvement in the issues that affect them and by doing so they joined a global movement of young people that are speaking up for their rights as they see their future threatened by climate change.

However, some PPs have practiced youth engagement in the work of the Arctic Council already before 2020 by having youth representatives in their official delegations to the Arctic Council meetings. Many PPs have youth councils, youth initiatives and youth training and capacity building programs.

In November 2020, the PP Youth arranged AYLS online anniversary event that attracted 70 participants around the Arctic.

Meet the PP Youth
Network representatives

At its inception in 2016 the PP youth network consisted of specific designated youth representatives. In more recent years the PP organizations have instead incorporated youth engagement more broadly in their organizations and projects, and an overarching youth representative is not always nominated.

First cohort PP Youth Network (2016-?)

Enni Similä

The Saami Council

Darling Joy Anderson

Aleut International Association

Joshua Vo

Inuit Circumpolar Council Alaska

Deenaalee Chase-Hodgdon

Arctic Athabaskan Council

Olga Chordu (Nikolaeva)

RAIPON

Our Arctic Presence podcast

Our Arctic Presence

Welcome to Our Arctic Presence, a podcast series created by Indigenous Youth from throughout the circumpolar north in celebration of 25 years of the Arctic Council. Over the course of six episodes, you will learn about the Arctic Council and who the Permanent Participants are, hear stories from Arctic Indigenous Elders and Youth, and tune into crucial conversations taking place regarding Northern lands and waters.

The Arctic. It has always held its allure. Often known as the “Last Frontier,” the tundra and taiga that defines the topmost part of the northern hemisphere have been the subject of many an explorer’s daydream. This place, this frozen expanse technically known as a “desert” due to the low levels of precipitation that fall each year, is also known as home.

For millennia, the Arctic has been home to the Indigenous Peoples of the North. From Sápmi to Inuit Nunat, Gwichyaa Zhee’ to Denendeh, Tanax to Yakutia, stories ring from these lands. Though the Peoples have always been meeting and engaged in trade and ceremony with one another, Arctic cooperation was strengthened 25 years ago when the Indigenous Peoples joined the Arctic States of Iceland, Finland, Sweden, the Russian Federation, the Kingdom of Denmark, The United States of America, Norway, and Canada in forming the Arctic Council.

“This is our Story.”

Listen to the full season

Our Arctic Presence podcast trailer
Permanent Participant Youth Network

Credits 

Published and produced by: On The Land Media – a multimedia organism created to center Indigenous voices and our relationships to the land and water.

In Collaboration with: The Indigenous Peoples’ Secretariat, Arctic Athabaskan Council, Aleut International Association, Gwich’in Council International, Inuit Circumpolar Council, Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North, Saami Council, the Permanent Participant Youth Network.

Sponsored by:  The Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Iceland, The Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland

Cover art by: Halux Markings by Dustin Newman, Aleut International Association Youth Representative.

Theme Music: Maani Nunamteni by Uqill’aq Byron Nicholai 

This project was undertaken as an approved project of the Permanent Participant Youth Network. The podcast and written content was prepared by the project team and do not necessarily reflect the policy or positions of any Arctic State, Permanent Participant, or Observer of the Arctic Council.