Press Release
May 8, 2026
Youth leadership programs are a powerful way for young people to build confidence, develop skills, and create community impact. However, access to these opportunities is shaped by barriers that are often overlooked in mainstream program design.
Youth leadership programs can be a powerful way for young people to build confidence, develop skills, and create community impact. For many Indigenous youth, however, access to these opportunities is shaped by barriers that are often overlooked in mainstream program design.
Two barriers come up again and again: geography, especially for youth in northern and remote communities, and a lack of programs that feel culturally connected and relevant.
Geography and Distance Can Make Participation Unrealistic
For Indigenous youth living in northern, rural, or remote communities, even the best programs can be hard to reach. Many leadership opportunities are hosted in larger cities or regional hubs, and that distance can create multiple layers of difficulty.
The logistical issues that geography poses directly affect who gets included and who gets left out. If opportunities aren’t designed with northern and remote realities in mind, access will remain uneven.
Programs Can Feel Disconnected When They Don’t Reflect Identity
Another major barrier is the experience of entering a program and realizing it does not resonate. Many Indigenous youth have shared that programs can feel “not for them” when:
Leadership is deeply connected to identity and community. When programs are not connected to culture, land, language, and lived realities, they can feel irrelevant or even harmful. Youth may choose not to join, or they may join and then disengage because they don’t feel seen, respected, or safe.
What Better Access Can Look Like
Removing barriers doesn’t just mean offering more programs; it means changing how programs are designed and delivered.
Some approaches that can help include:
Moving Forward
Indigenous youth deserve leadership opportunities that are accessible, relevant, and rooted in culture. When geography and cultural disconnect are ignored, programs unintentionally limit who can participate. When these realities are taken seriously, leadership development becomes something that can truly reach youth across all communities, including northern and remote ones, and reflect who they are.
If we want youth leadership opportunities to be meaningful, we need to ensure they are designed in ways that Indigenous youth can access and want to be part of.
That’s why the team at ISWO created Standing Bear. Created by Indigenous youth, for Indigenous youth, and continuing to adapt based on input from Indigenous youth, elders and communities, the Standing Bear Indigenous Youth Leadership Program aims to break down barriers and inspire the next generation of community leaders.
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