Interamerican Scout Region (World Organization of the Scout Movement)

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InterAmerican Scout Region
Interamerican Scout Region (World Organization of the Scout Movement).png
Owner World Organization of the Scout Movement
Headquarters Ciudad del Saber, Panama
Website
http://scout.org/en/around_the_world/region_interamericana
 Scouting portal
Member countries of the InterAmerican Scout Region, note several Pacific island chains are linked to the IASR through mainland political ties

The Interamerican Region is the divisional office of the World Scout Bureau of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, headquartered in Ciudad del Saber, Panama. The InterAmerican Region services Scouting in the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America. Until the 1960s, the Region serviced only Mexico, Central and South America, with Canada and the United States serviced through the then-named "Boy Scouts International Bureau" in Ottawa, Canada. Even today, the Interamerican Region exists more for the benefit of countries south of the Rio Grande, as evidenced by the website being only in Spanish until 2011; consequently, the United States and Canada do not participate as vigorously in regional activities as do other national organizations around the world.

The headquarters of the InterAmerican Region moved progressively southward from its inception until 2010, starting in Havana, Cuba, from 1946 to 1960; moving briefly to Kingston, Jamaica, in 1960; immediately relocating to Mexico City, Mexico, between 1960 and 1968; then to San José, Costa Rica, between 1968 and 1992; Santiago, Chile, from 1992 to 2010, most recently relocating to Ciudad del Saber, Panama.

The Scouts of the nations in the Caribbean basin host their own subregional jamborees.

The InterAmerican Region contains one of the five countries with no Scouting organization, Cuba, due to political constraints within the country.

This region is the counterpart of the Western Hemisphere Region of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS).

Regional Scouts administered directly by WOSM[edit]

The needs of Scout youth in the Region in unusual situations has created some interesting permutations, answerable directly to the World Scout Bureau. For years there was an active Boy Scouts of the United Nations with several troops at Parkway Village in New York City, with but 14 members in 1959. Also directly registered to the World Bureau were the 900 member International Boy Scouts of the Canal Zone.[1]

Pan-American Region Scout Jamborees[edit]

The Region has run or sponsored region-wide jamborees in its member countries. Past Jamborees include:

Interamerican Scout Conferences[edit]

  • 1946 Columbia (1st)
  • 1948 Mexico
  • 1953 Cuba
  • 1957 Brazil
  • 1961 Venezuela
  • 1964 Jamaica
  • 1968 El Salvador
  • 1972 Peru
  • 1974 USA (Miami, Florida)
  • 1976 Mexico
  • 1978 Guatemala
  • 1980 Chile
  • 1982 Bahamas
  • 1984 Brazil
  • 1986 Trinidad and Tobago
  • 1988 Argentina
  • 1990 Uruguay
  • 1992 Costa Rica
  • 1995 Colombia
  • 1998 Mexico
  • 2001 Bolivia
  • 2003 El Salvador
  • 2007 Ecuador
  • 2010 Panama
  • 2013 Argentina
  • 2016 USA (Houston, Texas)

Pan-American Moot[edit]

Interamerican Leadership Training[edit]

The Interamerican Leadership Training (ILT) is a Leadership Training Course in the Interamerican Region of the World Organization of the Scout Movement.

Youth of the Americas Award[edit]

The Youth of the Americas Award is the only award conferred by the Interamerican Scout Committee. The award is given to persons who have made an impact at the international level.[2]

See also[edit]

External links and references[edit]

  • Facts on World Scouting, Boy Scouts International Bureau, Ottawa, Canada, 1961

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wilson, John S. (1959). "The International Bureau Goes on the Road". Scouting Round the World (first ed.). London: Blandford Press. p. 134. At Balboa we met up with Gunnar Berg and Ray Wyland of the B.S.A., also on their way to Bogota, and had a conference about the question of coloured Scouts in the Canal Zone, who claim British and not Panamanian nationality. It was agreed that they should be taken under the wing of the Canal Zone Council of the Boy Scouts of America, but ten years later they were transferred directly under the International Bureau as the International Boy Scouts of the Canal Zone. 
  2. ^ "Convocation of nominations for the Youth of the Americas Award" (PDF). World Scout Bureau, Interamerican Region.