Conference addresses economic development challenges facing indigenous communities

April 18, 2008

  • Engaging our World
  • Living Portland

(Portland, Ore.)—On April 4, Lewis & Clark hosted Indigenous Economic Development: Sustainability, Culture and Business, a conference for professionals and leaders from the economic development and legal communities. Economic development for Indian tribes and their citizens is one of the most important topics in Indian law and policy today. Indian gaming gets all the headlines but the grinding poverty and lack of economic activity on reservations is a fact of life for almost all American Indians and their governments.

The conference brought together scholars from around the country, most of whom are tribal citizens and experienced in economic development, to discuss both the practical and the theoretical issues facing American Indian governments in their task to bring sustainable and culturally appropriate economic development to their reservations.

Read Indian Country’s coverage of this important event.

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About Lewis & Clark:

Lewis & Clark prepares students for lives of local and global engagement. Located in Portland, Oregon, the college educates approximately 1,900 undergraduate students in the liberal arts and sciences and 1,300 students in graduate and professional programs in education, counseling and law.

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