Sovereign Systems: How Organizational Development and People Operations (HR) Strengthen Tribal Governance (Tract 4)
Presenter: Tori Whipple and Elle Swan
Tribal self-governance is not only shaped by laws, leadership structures,
and external relationships; it is also shaped by the internal workforce
systems that guide daily operations.
This session explores how Organizational Development and People
Operations support sovereignty by creating clarity, accountability, consistency, and strong decision-making pathways. When workforce
systems are weak, tribal organizations may face role confusion,
inconsistent policy application, leadership gaps, and operational strain.
Grounded in practical experience within a tribally governed healthcare
organization, this session offers real-world strategies to strengthen
workforce systems, align policy with practice, improve leadership
accountability, and support sustainable, mission-driven self-governance.
Participants will leave with practical tools to identify system gaps,
improve alignment, and strengthen the internal conditions needed for
effective tribal self-governance.
Learning Objectives:
By the end of this session, participants will be able to:
- Identify workforce system gaps that weaken tribal self-governance,
including unclear roles, inconsistent policy application, and weak
accountability structures.
- Explain how HR practices and organizational development systems
support leadership accountability, operational consistency, and
sovereign governance.
- Assess common workforce and organizational challenges affecting
tribal governments, tribal healthcare systems, and nonprofit
organizations.
- Apply practical strategies to strengthen policy alignment, supervisory
consistency, decision-making pathways, and accountability within tribal
organizations.
- Develop culturally responsive approaches to building leadership
pipelines and strengthening internal organizational capacity.