Participants of the first Arctic Leader’s Youth Summit in Rovaniemi, 2019 photo© Kristina Bär / Arctic Council Secretariat Resilient Root: Safeguarding Indigenous cultures, identities, and livelihoods in the Arctic May 12, 2025Arctic PeoplesAleut International AssociationArctic Athabaskan CouncilGwich'in Council InternationalSaami CouncilArctic youth Article by: Julius Mihkkal Eriksen Lindi,Saami Council Destiny Kushin, Aleut International Association Zakayla Netro, Gwich'in Council International Jazmyn Vent, Arctic Athabaskan Council Tatiana Korthuis, Inuit Circumpolar Council Per Henning Mathisen, Saami Council The Permanent Participant Youth Network (PP Youth Network) brings together youth representatives from the Arctic Council’s six Permanent Participants to discuss issues of shared concern. Through joint activities and projects, the network ensures that youth play an active role in addressing challenges such as cultural preservation, climate resilience, and sustainable development. Permanent Participant Youth Network The Permanent Participant Youth Network (PP Youth Network), established after the first Arctic Youth Leaders’ Summit in late 2019, is a cooperative platform for the Arctic Indigenous Youth affiliated with and nominated by the Arctic Council’s Permanent Participant organization. The network gathers youth representatives from each of the six Permanent Participant organizations - Aleut International Association, Arctic Athabaskan Council, Gwich’in Council International, Inuit Circumpolar Council, Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North, and Saami Council - to discuss topics relevant to the framework of the Arctic Council and brings up perspectives of the Indigenous youth in the work of the Council. The network meets regularly and coordinates joint youth activities of the Permanent Participants. Indigenous youth engagement is a joint priority for the Permanent Participants, and they have been instrumental in engaging their youth in the work of the Arctic Council. Even before establishing the PP Youth Network, Permanent Participants have included youth representatives in their official delegations to the Arctic Council meetings and Working Group projects and, in this way, have shown examples of meaningful youth engagement through practice. In addition, Permanent Participants have their respective youth councils, member organizations or advisory boards, as well as youth initiatives and youth training and capacity-building programs that strengthen Arctic Indigenous youth activities locally, nationally and internationally. The Permanent Participant Youth Network started to take shape following the discussions of the Arctic Council Senior Arctic Officials’ meeting in Hveragerði, Iceland in 2019. The Arctic Youth Leaders’ Summit (AYLS) in November 2019 in Rovaniemi, Finland, gathered Indigenous youth from all over the Arctic and served as a platform to connect the youth. At the summit, the Permanent Participant youth called for more active involvement in the issues that affect them and by doing so they joined a global movement of young people who are speaking up for their rights as they see their future threatened by climate change. The first online meeting of the PP Youth Network took place early 2020 and since then, the network has met in a regular basis to discuss topical issues. The PP Youth have actively worked with their own projects and initiatives, such the PP Youth podcast project that marked the Arctic Council’s 25th anniversary. As part of the meetings between the Senior Arctic Official Chair (SAOC) and PPs throughout the Norwegian Chairship of the Arctic Council (2023-2025), PP youth have been part of the official delegations. In the SAOC-PP Tromsø meeting in January 2023, PP youth briefed the SAOC Chair on their initial ideas and visions for the Arctic Youth Conference (AYC). From the AYC’s inception to its delivery, the PP Youth network remained highly involved by offering a valuable platform for elevating young Indigenous voices from around the Arctic.