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Melinda Wiggins

August 7, 2025 by

Melinda Wiggins is originally from the Mississippi Delta, where her family still resides. She grew up in a segregated working class community and is the daughter and granddaughter of sharecroppers. Melinda was the first in her family to graduate from college. She studied political science and history at Millsaps College, where she began exploring the civil rights movement in the US South, was active with the anti-apartheid movement on campus, and worked with the MS PEER legislative committee helping to redraw district lines in the Mississippi Delta. Melinda moved to Durham, North Carolina to study at Duke Divinity School, where she focused on liberation and feminist theology.

Melinda got involved with Student Action with Farmworkers as an intern and served as the Program Director and then Executive Director. Through her nearly 30 years at SAF, Melinda led and supported efforts to create learning communities for young people interested in workers’ rights, facilitated community-labor alliances, built greater support for equity within the nonprofit sector, and educated philanthropy about the need to support agricultural workers in the South. In March 2012, she was honored by the Obama White House as a recipient of the “Cesar Chavez Champion of Change” award. Melinda helped initiate two key statewide coalitions in North Carolina–the Adelante Education Coalition and the Farmworker Advocacy Network—focused on immigrant and farmworker rights. She co-edited The Human Cost of Food, Farmworkers’ Lives, Labor, and Advocacy. While at SAF, Melinda was engaged with a number of community and worker organizing efforts, including Wake Forest School of Medicine Center for Worker Health; STITCH, a group that built solidarity between women workers in the US and in Central America; and Windcall Institute, a social justice residency program.


After transitioning from SAF, Melinda worked with the Labor Innovations for the 21st Center (LIFT) Fund as the Director of Strategy and Operations for three years. While at LIFT, she was able to connect with worker centers and labor unions throughout the US South and across the country. She was a part of LIFT’s launch of the Southern Workers Opportunity Fund and Imperial Valley grantmaking, the creation of grantee support programs that incorporated training, coaching, and rest, and the development of LIFT’s internal capacity, staffing, policies, fundraising, and financial management. She currently serves on the board of Migrant Clinicians Network and participates in the US Campaign to End Child Labor. Melinda continues to live in Durham with her partner Dave and cat Cocoa.

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