Tosha Big Eagle
Lead Coordinator and Graduate Research Lead, Washington State University, United States
Tosha Big Eagle is a justice-impacted Indigenous Ph.D. student in the Prevention Science program at Washington State University Vancouver (WSUV). She currently serves as the Outreach Coordinator and Research Support Specialist for the PRISOM Collaborative at WSU’s Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine. Her research interests include health equity, harm reduction, mass incarceration, gender development, aging, death education, and Indigenous Ways of Knowing. Tosha earned her undergraduate degree in human development, psychology, and addiction studies from WSUV in 2022. Her academic focus is grounded in lived experience, including overcoming childhood trauma, addiction, mental health challenges, and incarceration.
She has the honor of collaborating with the HOPE Team, a grassroots health initiative at the Washington Corrections Center for Women. Together, they are developing an intergenerational elder care program for aging women in prison. This work includes training correctional staff and peer caregivers to facilitate Death Cafes and advocate for equity in end-of-life care within carceral systems. Through all her efforts, Tosha is committed to community-based, culturally grounded research that advances justice, healing, and systems change. Beyond her academic and professional life, her most important role is being a mother to two beautiful children, ages 7 and 3, and a wife to her husband and partner.