Antigua and Barbuda to Host Major Caribbean Youth Leadership Conference After Over 20 Years

More than 20 years after last welcoming the event, Antigua and Barbuda is preparing to step into the regional spotlight in June 2026 as the official host of the Rotaract District 7030 Annual Conference. Organized under the distinctive theme “Linked in Wadadli” – a local name for Antigua that nods to the island nation’s cultural identity – this year’s flagship gathering is being spearheaded by the Rotaract Club of Antigua, marking a historic milestone for the country’s youth development community.

Running from June 25 to 29 at the scenic Pineapple Beach Club, the five-day conference is expected to draw roughly 200 emerging young leaders and industry professionals from across the Caribbean region. For attendees, the event will offer a dynamic mix of programming centered on three core goals: deepening leadership capacity, fostering cross-territory collaboration, and facilitating immersive cultural exchange between neighboring island communities.

Rotaract District 7030 encompasses a sprawling network of 47 local clubs spread across 16 Caribbean territories, including Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Barbados, Curacao, Dominica, French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Martinique, Montserrat, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago. As the district’s marquee annual gathering, the conference has long served as the leading regional platform for youth skills training, professional networking, and the co-development of youth-led solutions to pressing shared challenges across the Caribbean.

The 2026 theme “Linked in Wadadli” was chosen to emphasize three core priorities: meaningful cross-sector connection, celebration of local cultural identity, and deeper regional integration. It frames Antigua and Barbuda as a welcoming central hub where Caribbean young people can build durable cross-territory partnerships, exchange innovative ideas, and strengthen collective leadership capacity to address shared concerns.

Attendees can expect a diverse schedule of programming, ranging from intensive skill-building leadership training sessions and panel discussions led by industry and civil society experts, to hands-on innovation workshops and structured community service projects. The event will also feature dedicated cultural showcases highlighting the rich diversity of Caribbean heritage, along with targeted networking opportunities designed to help participants build long-lasting professional and personal connections that outlast the conference itself.

For decades, the annual Rotaract District 7030 Conference has rotated between member territories, drawing an average of 150 to 200 participants each year. Beyond leadership development, the recurring event delivers tangible benefits to host communities, boosting local tourism and hospitality economies while cultivating a growing pipeline of skilled, service-oriented leaders across the region.

overseeing the 2026 conference planning and execution is District Rotaract Representative Crystal Mohammed, from the Rotaract Club of San Fernando South, supported by local co-chairs Sherwyn Greenidge and Dr. Namadi Belle, both members of the Rotaract Club of Antigua.

Beyond workshops and networking, the 2026 event has a clear actionable mission: to equip Caribbean young people with practical, job-relevant leadership skills, strengthen formal and informal ties between regional youth groups, and drive measurable positive impact in local communities through service projects aligned with global sustainable development priorities.

Organizers have extended an open invitation to all members of the public, non-governmental organizations, private sector stakeholders, and other interested parties that wish to support the conference’s work advancing Caribbean youth leadership and regional integration to reach out to the organizing team for partnership opportunities.