Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley: A Podcast
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Full Interview with Daryl Spencer

Dublin Core

Title

Full Interview with Daryl Spencer

Subject

Fire in British Columbia and the Okanagan Valley

Description

This is the audio and transcript of an interview with forester and staff member of the BC Forest Practices Board Daryl Spencer conducted on January 6, 2022 by UBC-Okanagan Masters student Judith Burr for her Digital Arts & Humanities thesis project “Listening to Fire Naturecultures: A Feminist Academic Podcast of Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley.” UBC-Okanagan Project Ethics ID: H21-01618.

Creator

Judith Burr

Date

January 6, 2022

Contributor

Judith Burr; Daryl Spencer

Rights

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license. This means it is available for the public to view and copy for non-commercial purposes only, without prior permission or charge, provided that the project is not altered in any way and is properly acknowledged, including citing the author(s), title and full bibliographic details.

Format

mp3

Language

English

Type

Interview

Oral History Item Type Metadata

Interviewer

Judith Burr

Interviewee

Daryl Spencer

Location

Zoom

Transcription

Transcript attached as pdf

Collection

The Interview Archive

Files

DS_JB_Interview_01062022.mp3 - audio/mpeg
DS_JB_Transcript_01062022.pdf - application/pdf

Citation

Judith Burr, “Full Interview with Daryl Spencer,” Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley: A Podcast, accessed March 23, 2023, https://listeningtofirepodcast.ca/items/show/15.

Output Formats

  • atom
  • dcmes-xml
  • json
  • omeka-xml


“Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley” was created by Judith Burr as her master's thesis project in the Digital Arts & Humanities theme of the Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies program at the University of British Columbia Okanagan, Project Ethics ID: H21-01618. This work was supported by UBC-Okanagan’s feminist digital humanities lab, the AMP Lab. This project was also supported in part by the Government of Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) through UBC Okanagan’s “Living with Wildfire” Project. This podcast was created on the unceded territory of the Syilx Okanagan Nation.

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