1984 to the Present
The seeds for The Island Institute were planted by four Sitkans interested in ideas and writing who founded the Sitka Symposium in 1984. They began a nonprofit organization that has grown to be multifaceted and has, for more than two
decades, explored social, cultural, and community questions of local and global concern.
The Sitka Symposium has been held annually for twenty-four years, involving more than ninety nationally recognized writers and important emerging, indigenous, and international voices as faculty. Several hundred participants from thirty Alaskan communities and an equal number of states have also taken part.
Our Resident Fellows Program was initiated in 1989 to create a strong link between the literary arts and the community of Sitka.
Our publications reflect the substance of conversations from the Symposium and Resident Fellows Program, offering those ideas to a broad reading audience.
Our initiatives encouraging conscientious civic engagement in community well-being grew out of our strong ties to Sitka. Our indicator reports and collaborative leadership training opportunities have been noteworthy in the region and state.
The Island Institute has changed lives in ways not often measured.
Assumptions have been reconsidered, values examined, and spirits renewed for people from all walks of life. We remain committed to fostering insight and inquiry that contributes to the greater global effort to shape a sustainable human culture.
[Follow this link for a slightly longer and more detailed history.] |
 |

"It is enormously important
for our national well-being that Alaska and the Great Northwest produce
their own writers, scholars, artists, and intellectual dialogue. The
symposia put on be The Island Institute provide an ideal nurturing place
for those individuals and beginning for that dialogue."
William Kittredge
Symposium faculty
Missoula, Montana |