Melissa K. Nelson, Ph.D., is a mixed-blood cultural ecologist, writer, educator, researcher, media-maker, and activist. Her work is dedicated to indigenous revitalization, environmental protection and restoration, and the renewal and celebration of community health and cultural arts.
In 2002 Melissa was hired as an assistant professor of American Indian Studies at San Francisco State University and continues to teach there and work with her colleagues in the development of their
American Indian Studies Department. Since 1993 Melissa has served as the president and executive director of
The Cultural Conservancy (TCC), an indigenous rights nonprofit organization. The Cultural Conservancy is dedicated to the revitalization of indigenous cultures and their ancestral lands. In 2005 Melissa co-produced the award-winning documentary film,
The Salt Song Trail: Bringing Creation Back Together. Her first book,
Original Instructions: Indigenous Teachings For A Sustainable Future, an edited anthology of over twenty indigenous leaders, will be available in 2008.
Melissa is an enrolled member of the
Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians of North Dakota and is of mixed-blood heritage: Chippewa (Anishinaabe) and French-Cree (Métis) from her mother and Norwegian from her father. She was born and raised in northern California. Melissa and her partner, composer and musician,
Colin Farish, live and work in the San Francisco Bay Area.
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