Ninth National Indian Nations: Justice for Victims of Crime Conference

   

 

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Contact Us

Questions about the 2004 OVC Indian Nations Conference? Please call Lavern Yanito Dennison at 1-323-650-5467, or email your questions to us at conference@tribal-institute.org.

Important Phone Numbers

 

Reviving our Sacred Legacy: Lighting the Path to our Future
Wyndham Palm Springs Hotel
Agua Caliente Tribe's Spa Hotel
Panoramic View of the Coachella Valley
 Office for Victims of Crime - Putting Victims First
Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians
 Fox Valley Technical College
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community

The Native American Children's Alliance (NACA) is an intertribal, cross-mentoring organization whose mission is to inspire and support the development, growth, and maintenance of multi-disciplinary teams and Children's Advocacy Centers in Native American and Alaska Native communties in their efforts to address child abuse. NACA was formed in April of 1999 and held it's first formal meeting on September 26, 1999 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Morongo Band of Mission Indians
AltaMira Press exists to disseminate high quality information of value to those who research, study, practice and read in the humanities and social sciences with a particular focus on helping in the professional development of those who work in the cultural life of a community-- the museum, historical society, arts center, and church.
For thousands of years, long before the arrival of any European discoverers, the indigenous people of California lived in harmony with the Earth. Their cultures, traditions, and lives were interdependent with the land and shaped by the natural resources of the region they inhabited.

 

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Home | Pre-Conference Institutes | Agenda | Event Highlights | Registration & Fees | Scholarships | Hotel & Airlines | Contact Us

This conference and conference web site are funded under grant 2003-VR-GX-0022 from the Office for Victims of Crime, Office of Justice Programs, United States Department of Justice. Site created and maintained by the Tribal Law and Policy Institute, Inc.