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Bobbie Chew Bigby

(She/Her)
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Recreation and Leisure Studies, University of Waterloo

Bobbie is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow through the University of Waterloo (Canada) and is based primarily in Oklahoma. She is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation and is a daughter of Cantonese, Cherokee and Euro-American heritages. Bobbie completed her PhD dissertation at the University of Notre Dame Australia, Nulungu Research Institute and continues to be affiliated with Nulungu as an Adjunct Research Fellow. Her PhD thesis focused on comparative Indigenous tourism models, as well as the links between Indigenous-led tourism and cultural resurgence. This research was supported by the Western Australian Government’s JTSI Science/Tourism Fellows program, Graduate Women Western Australia and the Australian Government’s Research Training Program (RTP). Through her current Postdoctoral Fellowship with the University of Waterloo, Bobbie is able to continue the research begun during her PhD looking at supporting Indigenous communities, cultures, arts and relationships to the environment through tourism.

Bobbie has BA degrees in Chinese Language/Literature, as well as Anthropology, from Washington University in St. Louis where she was proud to be Rodriguez Scholar (2005-2009). As a Rotary Peace Fellow (Class XII) from 2014-2015, Bobbie obtained her MA degree in International Studies, Peace and Conflict Resolution at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. Bobbie also holds an MS degree in Arts and Culture Administration as an AIANTA Scholar from Drexel University. Bobbie has been the recipient of Mellon Mays and Fulbright Fellowships that allowed her to engage in research focused on Indigenous and post-conflict communities, tourism and resurgence in China, India, Cambodia, Australia and back home in Oklahoma Indian Country. Bobbie most recently co-edited and co-wrote (with Dr. Freya Higgins-Desbiolles), “The Local Turn in Tourism: Empowering Communities” (Channel View, 2022). The first edited volume that she co-edited/co-wrote was “Socialising Tourism: Rethinking Tourism for Social and Ecological Justice” (Routledge, 2021). In addition, Bobbie has been published and interviewed in a number of journals and outlets, including Journal of Sustainable Tourism, Annals of Tourism Research, Journal of Tourism Futures, and Cultural Survival Quarterly, among others. Bobbie has a deep passion for Indigenous and community-based participation in tourism and believes that tourism can be used as a tool for resurgence, culture, arts and language revitalization, along with environmental stewardship.

Experience

  • –present
    Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Recreation and Leisure Studies, University of Waterloo

Education

  • 2023 
    University of Notre Dame Australia, PhD, Indigenous Tourism