About

Judith (Judee) Burr is a student in the Geography PhD program at the University of British Columbia. Her past interdisciplinary scholarship has focused on fire-maintained ecosystems and the historical geographies of power, governance, and Indigenous knowledge that shape them. Her MA thesis research in the Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies program at UBC-Okanagan explored histories and contemporary challenges of living with fire in the Okanagan Valley on unceded Syilx Okanagan Nation territory and took the form of a public audio documentary podcast: “Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley.” Her undergraduate honours thesis work with the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University is summarized in the article “Burning Across Boundaries: Comparing Effective Strategies for Collaboration between Fire Management Agencies and Indigenous Communities in the United States and Australia” in the interdisciplinary journal Occasion.  
 



About

Judith (Judee) Burr is a student in the Geography PhD program at the University of British Columbia. Her past interdisciplinary scholarship has focused on fire-maintained ecosystems and the historical geographies of power, governance, and Indigenous knowledge that shape them. Her MA thesis research in the Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies program at UBC-Okanagan explored histories and contemporary challenges of living with fire in the Okanagan Valley on unceded Syilx Okanagan Nation territory and took the form of a public audio documentary podcast: “Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley.” Her undergraduate honours thesis work with the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University is summarized in the article “Burning Across Boundaries: Comparing Effective Strategies for Collaboration between Fire Management Agencies and Indigenous Communities in the United States and Australia” in the interdisciplinary journal Occasion.  
 


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Judith (Judee) Burr is a student in the Geography PhD program at the University of British Columbia. Her past interdisciplinary scholarship has focused on fire-maintained ecosystems and the historical geographies of power, governance, and Indigenous knowledge that shape them. Her MA thesis research in the Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies program at UBC-Okanagan explored histories and contemporary challenges of living with fire in the Okanagan Valley on unceded Syilx Okanagan Nation territory and took the form of a public audio documentary podcast: “Listening to Fire Knowledges in and around the Okanagan Valley.” Her undergraduate honours thesis work with the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University is summarized in the article “Burning Across Boundaries: Comparing Effective Strategies for Collaboration between Fire Management Agencies and Indigenous Communities in the United States and Australia” in the interdisciplinary journal Occasion.