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Indigenous Relations Jobs (NOW HIRING)

Participate in Stantec's Indigenous relations strategies, including the identification of potential business opportunities with Indigenous groups. * Identify, track, and monitor issues, concerns, and ...

Participate in Stantec's Indigenous relations strategies, including the identification of potential business opportunities with Indigenous groups. * Identify, track, and monitor issues, concerns, and ...

... Relations to inform policies and processes with respect to patient concerns involving allegations of racism. 6. Fulfilling clinical duties relevant to Indigenous health. Qualifications: 1. The ideal ...

Mainframe Developer

Chicago, IL · On-site

$90K - $96K/yr

Capgemini also participates in the Partnership Accreditation in Indigenous Relations (PAIR) program which supports meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities across Canada by promoting ...

Java Fullstack Developer

New York, NY · On-site

$57.50 - $74/hr

Capgemini also participates in the Partnership Accreditation in Indigenous Relations (PAIR) program which supports meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities across Canada by promoting ...

Guidewire Developer

Atlanta, GA · On-site

$85K - $100K/yr

Capgemini also participates in the Partnership Accreditation in Indigenous Relations (PAIR) program which supports meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities across Canada by promoting ...

Guidewire Business Analyst

Manhattan, NY · On-site

$105K - $125K/yr

Capgemini also participates in the Partnership Accreditation in Indigenous Relations (PAIR) program which supports meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities across Canada by promoting ...

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Indigenous Relations information

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How much do indigenous relations jobs pay per hour?

As of Jul 8, 2026, the average hourly pay for indigenous relations in the United States is $27.89, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $22.36 and $31.49 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

How does an Indigenous Relations professional typically collaborate with internal teams and Indigenous communities to achieve organizational goals?

Indigenous Relations professionals serve as vital bridges between their organizations and Indigenous communities. They frequently coordinate with internal departments—such as legal, operations, and communications—to ensure that projects align with both corporate objectives and Indigenous rights and interests. This role involves facilitating respectful consultation, fostering long-term partnerships, and ensuring that both sides’ perspectives are understood and integrated into decision-making. Successful collaboration requires strong listening skills, cultural awareness, and a commitment to transparent communication. By building trust and mutual understanding, Indigenous Relations professionals help create sustainable, positive outcomes for all parties involved.

What is the difference between Indigenous Relations vs Community Engagement Coordinator?

AspectIndigenous RelationsCommunity Engagement Coordinator
Required CredentialsRelevant degrees in Indigenous studies, social sciences, or related fields; certifications in cultural competencyDegrees in communications, public relations, or community development; certifications in engagement strategies
Work EnvironmentOften in government, resource industries, or non-profits working directly with Indigenous communitiesIn various sectors, engaging with diverse community groups, including Indigenous populations
Employer & Industry UsageCommon in industries like energy, mining, government, and consultingUsed across non-profits, corporations, and government agencies involved in community outreach

Indigenous Relations focuses specifically on building and maintaining relationships with Indigenous communities, often involving cultural understanding and negotiation. Community Engagement Coordinators handle broader community outreach, including diverse groups, and may work on public events, communication strategies, and stakeholder engagement. While both roles involve communication and relationship-building, Indigenous Relations is specialized in Indigenous issues and partnerships.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in Indigenous Relations, and why are they important?

To thrive in Indigenous Relations, you need a solid understanding of Indigenous cultures, history, and governance, often supported by relevant education or experience in community engagement. Familiarity with consultation frameworks, land management systems, and relevant legislation such as UNDRIP or the Indian Act is typically required. Strong interpersonal skills, cultural sensitivity, and the ability to build trustful relationships are essential soft skills in this role. These skills are crucial for fostering respectful collaboration, ensuring compliance, and supporting meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities.

What are Indigenous Relations?

Indigenous Relations refers to the practices and roles dedicated to building and maintaining respectful, collaborative relationships between organizations or governments and Indigenous peoples and communities. Professionals in this field work to ensure that Indigenous perspectives, rights, and interests are considered in decision-making processes, policies, and projects. Their work often involves consultation, negotiation, cultural awareness, and the development of policies or programs that promote equity and reconciliation. The goal is to foster mutual understanding, trust, and positive outcomes for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous stakeholders.
More about Indigenous Relations jobs
What cities are hiring for Indigenous Relations jobs? Cities with the most Indigenous Relations job openings:
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What states have the most Indigenous Relations jobs? States with the most job openings for Indigenous Relations jobs include:
What job categories do people searching Indigenous Relations jobs look for? The top searched job categories for Indigenous Relations jobs are:
Indigenous Relations Program Lead

Indigenous Relations Program Lead

Montana State University

Bozeman, MT • On-site

$55K - $60K/yr

Full-time

Posted 14 days ago


Montana State University rating

7.1

Company rating: 7.1 out of 10

Based on 30 frontline employees who took The Breakroom Quiz

359th of 546 rated colleges and universities


Job description

Position Details
Position Information
Announcement Number
STAFF - VA - 26458
For questions regarding this position, please contact:
Siriana Lundgren
siriana.lundgren@montana.edu
Classification Title
Program/Project Lead
Working Title
Indigenous Relations Program Lead
Brief Position Overview
The Indigenous Relations Program Manager coordinates and supports Museum of the Rockies' Indigenous relations work across departments. This position helps sustain respectful, reciprocal, and accountable relationships with Native Nations, Tribal Historic Preservation Officers, Indigenous artists, cultural representatives, contributors, and community partners.
Position Number
4C2296
Department
Museum of the Rockies
Division
Museum of the Rockies
Appointment Type
Professional
Contract Term
Fiscal Year
Semester
If other, specify From date
If other, specify End date
FLSA
Exempt
Union Affiliation
Exempt from Collective Bargaining
FTE
1.0
Benefits Eligible
Eligible
Salary
$55,000 - $60,000 annually, commensurate with experience, education, and qualifications
Contract Type
LOA
If other, please specify
Recruitment Type
Open
Position Details
General Statement
With over 250,000 general visitors and program participants, MOR is one of Montana's most visited museums. The museum has recently completed an ambitious and transformative master plan and anticipates a significant campaign on the horizon. With vision and a record of success in a thriving community, MOR is poised for substantial growth. MOR has actively established and seeks to maintain reciprocal relationships with Tribes across Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho. The Indigenous Relations Program Lead will be a fundamental player in the success of the museum and these relationships.
The position reports to the Curator of Cultural History, serves as an integral member of the Cultural History Team, while also coordinating across museum departments.
Duties and Responsibilities
  • Manage and coordinate Indigenous relations work that fosters respectful, reciprocal relationships with Native Nations, Tribal Historic Preservation Officers, designated tribal representatives, Indigenous artists, cultural advisors, contributors, and community partners.
  • Serve as a primary point of coordination for Indigenous relations across Cultural History, Collections, Paleontology, Education, Exhibits, and Public Programming.
  • Oversee tribal relations to ensure equitable opportunities are provided for all willing tribes in MOR's geographic region in working with MOR activities.
  • Coordinate with MOR Departments for tribal visitation support processes, including scheduling, correspondence, agenda preparation, meeting materials, travel logistics, documentation, and follow-up.
  • Coordinate with Cultural History, Collections, and the Associate Curator of Indigenous History to support research, documentation, collections care, and exhibit development related to Indigenous cultural items, histories, and community priorities.
  • Coordinate with Paleontology staff on Indigenous relations needs related to tribal consultation, culturally significant sites, fieldwork, research communication, interpretation, educational content, and community engagement.
  • Coordinate with MOR Education Department in working with Tribal colleges, K-12 schools, and governments to represent the needs of the Museum.
  • Coordinate with MOR departments to develop their specific goals, objectives and strategies to guide to achieve a reciprocal relationship with individual tribes.
  • Collaborate with relevant MOR directors and curators to develop and administer the overall oversight body that oversees MOR Tribal relations on all MOR activities.
  • Identify and coordinate effective strategies for MOR's Indigenous relations work, and track commitments made to Native Nations, contributors, artists, and community partners, across MOR departments.
  • Coordinate with MOR Education and Cultural History departments to conduct outreach to Native communities, including identified public cultural gatherings, such as powwows, conferences, and other significant tribal events, and report on feedback of tribal nations and communities.
  • Represent the Indigenous Relations Program in MOR internal planning meetings that involve Indigenous relations, including project discussions, tribal consultation and coordination preparation, programming, exhibit development, educational planning, docent training, and community partnership work.
  • Build a plan to present at conferences and scholarly venues to represent MOR Indigenous Relations Program to advocate the tribal relations process to museums, schools, tribal offices, and other requested education and outreach requests.

Required Qualifications - Experience, Education, Knowledge & Skills
  1. Bachelor's degree in any field.
  2. 3-5 years of experience coordinating projects, programs, events, meetings, outreach, or communications involving multiple stakeholders.
  3. 3-5 years of experience working with tribal governments, Indigenous communities, Native student organizations, cultural organizations, community partners, or relationship-based programs.
  4. Must have knowledge of the tribes within MOR's geographic region.

Preferred Qualifications - Experience, Education, Knowledge & Skills
  1. Significant experience working with Native communities, Native student organizations, tribal representatives, Indigenous artists, cultural workers, educators, or community leaders in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho.
  2. Established relationships with Native Nations, Indigenous communities, Native student organizations, Indigenous artists, cultural workers, educators, or community partners in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho.
  3. Successful experience in respectful internal relations with MOR Departments and staff members.
  4. Experience in Indigenous student leadership, campus-community engagement, cultural programming, community organizing, outreach, or Native student support.
  5. Familiarity with Museum of the Rockies, including its departments, collections, exhibitions, programs, audiences, institutional priorities, and internal procedures.
  6. Experience coordinating tribal culturally responsive meetings, programs, visits, events, consultations, or community partnerships.
  7. Experience supporting communication between museums and Native communities, contributors, artists, students, cultural advisors, or community partners.
  8. Familiarity with museum work, collections care, exhibitions, public programming, education, tribal consultation, or Indigenous-centered cultural projects.

The Successful Candidate Will
  • Be knowledgeable of NAGPRA consultation requirements for specific MOR staff.
  • Builds trust and maintains respectful, reciprocal, and accountable relationships with Native Nations, Indigenous communities, colleagues, students, artists, contributors, community partners, and with internal MOR staff.
  • Communicates effectively, clearly, and professionally with people from a wide range of backgrounds, roles, and communities.
  • Represents Museum of the Rockies with professionalism, cultural humility, discretion, and care.
  • Navigates university, museum, and community environments with confidence, good judgment, and respect for appropriate protocols.
  • Coordinates complex projects involving multiple departments, partners, timelines, logistics, and communication needs.
  • Maintains organized records, tracks follow-up, manages details, and ensures commitments are completed.

Position Special Requirements/Additional Information
This position is contingent upon continued funding.
Must possess a valid driver's license, an acceptable driving record, and meet all State of Montana requirements to operate State/University vehicles. (If successful candidate possesses a valid out-of-state driver's license, must obtain a valid Montana driver's license within 60 days of hire.)"
This job description should not be construed as an exhaustive statement of duties, responsibilities or requirements, but a general description of the job. Nothing contained herein restricts Montana State University's rights to assign or reassign duties and responsibilities to this job at any time.
Physical Demands
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential duty satisfactorily with or without reasonable accommodations. The requirements listed above are representative of the knowledge, skill, and/or ability required.
This position has supervisory duties?
Yes
Posting Detail Information
Number of Vacancies
1
Desired Start Date
Upon completion of a successful search
Position End Date (if temporary)
Open Date
Close Date
Applications will be:
Screening of applications will begin on July 14, 2026; however, applications will continue to be accepted until an adequate applicant pool has been established.
Special Instructions
This position is not eligible for sponsorship.
EEO Statement
Montana State University is an equal opportunity employer. MSU does not discriminate against any applicant on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, political ideas, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, marital status, national origin, physical or mental disability, or any other protected class status in violation of any applicable law.
In compliance with the Montana Veteran's Employment Preference Act, MSU provides preference in employment to veterans, disabled veterans, and certain eligible relatives of veterans. To claim veteran's preference, please complete the veteran's preference information located in the Demographics section of your profile.

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