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alumni
profiles
Melissa
K. Nelson, Ph.D., is a writer, educator, researcher, and
activist. Her work is dedicated to indigenous revitalization,
environmental protection and restoration, and the renewal
and celebration of community health and cultural arts. She
is a professor of American Indian Studies at San Francisco
State University and received her doctorate degree in Cultural
Ecology/Native American Studies from the University of California,
Davis. She completed her undergraduate degree at the University
of California, Santa Cruz where she received highest honors
for her independent major in Integrated Ecology. She is also
the president of The Cultural Conservancy (TCC), an indigenous
rights nonprofit organization. Melissa served as TCC's executive
director from 1993 to 2006. In 2005 she co-produced the award-winning
documentary short film The Salt Song Trail - Bringing Creation
Back Together and a musical CD, Songscapes of Native America.
Her essays and writings have been published by Harvard University
Press, MIT Press, University of California Press, and various
academic and popular journals. Melissa is an enrolled member
of the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Tribe.
Mischa
Plunkett graduated from UCSC in 2003 with a B.A. in Psychology and
a minor in Sociology. At UCSC she was a member of the Women's
Basketball team and the Student Alliance of North American
Indians. After graduating she worked in the Athletics Department
for 3 years, spending 2 years as the Sports Information Director
and Assistant Women's Basketball Coach. Mischa is currently
pursuing her M.Ed in Sport and Recreation Administration at
Temple University and plans on interning at Haskell Indian
Nations University next year.
Julie
Randall is an Oglala Sioux and an enrolled member of the
Cheyenne River Sioux tribe in South Dakota. Born and raised
in the Bay Area, CA, Julie attended UCSC in 2001 pursuing
a degree in Environmental Studies. While attending UCSC, Julie
was also a 3-year member of the women's basketball team, earning
All-Independent achievements by the Association of Division
III Independents and set a school record for most blocked
shots in a season. Graduating in 2005 with a BA in Environmental
Studies and an emphasis in Environmental Justice, Julie's
research focused on uranium mining in the Black Hills of South
Dakota and the environmental, social and health impacts to
Lakota communities living on and off the reservation. Julie
is currently working as an engineering technician for an environmental
consulting company performing groundwater monitoring and
sampling. She is also applying to graduate school to pursue
a Masters degree in Environmental Science and Management.
Claradina
Soto (Navajo/Pueblo) was born and raised in the Bay Area
of California. She is a first year doctoral student in the
Health Behavior Research program at the University of Southern
California. She received her B.A. in Community Studies from
the University of California, Santa Cruz and her MPH from
USC. Mrs. Soto completed her field research for her undergraduate
thesis in Shiprock, New Mexico where she conducted interviews
with former Navajo uranium miners, millers, and families living
in close proximity to un-reclaimed mines on the Navajo Nation
reservation. Since then, she has continued to work with the
American Indian populations in health promotion, access, and
education. After graduating from UCSC in 1997, she worked
for about 6 years in the field of case management and as a
health education specialist where she provided information,
health education and disease prevention to the American Indian
and Alaska Native populations in California. Currently, as
a doctoral student at USC, she manages a research project
titled, "Culture and tobacco use among American Indian
adolescents," to identify the general and cultural specific
risk and protective factors for their tobacco use. In a previous
grant, she coordinated and facilitated focus groups among
Californian urban and rural American Indian adolescents to
understand psychosocial risk factors and protective factors
with tobacco use where study's findings have been presented
at national conferences. She currently serves as an Advisory
Committee member with the American Indian Tobacco Education
Partnership and as a member of the American Indian / Native
American Breast and Cervical Cancer Taskforce, Partnered for
Progress. Additionally she has conducted tobacco control joint
activities with the African American, Hispanic/Latino, and
Asian and Pacific Islanders populations. She strives to reduce
the smoking rates among ethnic populations in California and
nationwide as well as promote the well being of the diverse
populations she works with.
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