Teaching Strengths
Dr Freya Higgins-Desbiolles
School of Management
College of Business and Law
Eligible to supervise Masters and PhD (as Co-Supervisor) - email supervisor to discuss availability.
Freya is a Senior Lecturer in Tourism Management employed in UniSA Business.
Before joining the University of South Australia, Freya worked in development, development education and university teaching in international relations. Joining the School of Management of the University of South Australia in 2001 she brought these experiences and knowledges to her work in tourism developing an innovative research agenda.
Freya's work focuses on human rights and social justice issues in tourism, hospitality and events. My topical areas of interest include the impacts of tourism, tourism policy and planning, tourism sustainability, Indigenous tourism, politics of tourism and peace through tourism. Geographical areas of interest include Indigenous Australia, the Middle East, the Pacific Islands and the Asia-Pacific region. Recent reseach projects have explored Aboriginal tourism, sustainable cafes, native foods in restaurants and tourism's role in peace and conflict. She is a recipient of a Council of Australiasian University Educators in Tourism and Hospitality Fellows Award for a signficant contribution to hospitality and tourism research and education in 2013.
Freya's teaching philosophy is based on critical pedagogy and she tries to create learning environments that respect students' prior knowledge and experiences and that challenges them (and herself) to think in new ways and "outside of the box". Freya has on a national teaching award from the Australian Teaching and Learning Council in 2009, as well as university and divisional teaching awards. One area of pedagogical expertise is indigenising the curricula in business school contexts.
Her research is focused on projects that deliver new insights into the tourism phenomenon and that advocate a more just and sustainable tourism future. Her work is engaged and she has formed research partnerships with tourism and hospitality stakeholders. She particularly tries to work with "host communities" and the NGO sector who seek to shape tourism to their needs and for positive futures. She has conducted engaged research with Aboriginal tourism operators, an events organiser, a cafe owner and sustainability advocate, tourism NGOs, among others. She received a commendation for industry collaboration in 2014 from the UniSA Business School.
Freya was recognized as an “Awesome Scholar in Tourism” by Women Academics in Tourism, an international group of female tourism academics committed to advancing gender equity in publishing and career advancement. Awesome Scholars in Tourism represent tourism professors who inspire others “by their contributions, encouragement, creativity, virtues, selflessness, humour, humanity, and even madness.”
Core Research focus: Human Rights and Social justice in tourism.
Research Interests: Impacts of Tourism, Tourism Policy and Planning, Indigenous Tourism, Responsible Tourism, Globalisation and Tourism, Reconciliation Tourism, Peace Through Tourism, Politics of Tourism,Tourism and Terrorism, Critical tourism research, Indigenous Management.
Current Research:
Climate Justice in Tourism - in collaboration with the Travel Foundation.
Previous research projects:
2018 Hospitality & Events driving the design & delivery of the purpose economy: a scoping study of a women's led initiative. Funded by Le Cordon Bleu-UniSA grants scheme. 2018-2019. Chief Investigator.
2018 Unsettling tourism: Settler stories, Indigenous lands and awakening an ethics of reconciliation. Funded by Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Collaborator.
2016 Bush to Table: Connecting the restaurant and catering sector and native food producers for their mutual benefit. Funded by Le Cordon Bleu-UniSA grants scheme.
2014 A taste of sustainability: Can restaurateurs contribute to sustainability pedagogy and urban place-making efforts? Funded by Le Cordon Bleu-UniSA grants scheme.
2012 Survey of 2012 Spirit Festival . Funded by Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute and the School of Management, UniSA.
2011 Aboriginal Hostels Ltd: A case study of Indigenous Australians as tourists.. Funded by the Division of Business, UniSA.
2006 The Coorong Wilderness Lodge: Case Study Of Aboriginal Tourism enterprise. Funded by the Sustainable Tourism Cooperative Research Centre.
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Unsettling tourism: Settler stories, indigenous lands, and awakening of ethics of reconciliation, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, 01/07/2018 - 31/03/2024
Available For Media Comment.