About
Don is a veteran broadcaster/podcaster, settler scholar, sessional instructor, and community activist. He is interested in the relationship between media, art, culture, and our interconnectedness with each other, the world we share and learning the art of how to ask beautiful questions. Don is a strong supporter of community organizations promoting the important work that they do. He has served on the boards of Variety the Children’s Charity, PFLAG, the Kelowna General Hospital Foundation, the Canadian, Ontario, and British Columbia Association of Broadcasters, and Advisory Boards of the University of British Columbia and The British Columbia Institute of Technology. Don is a sessional instructor at BCIT, City University, and UBC’s Climate Hub. He volunteers with Vancouver Co-op Radio and the Downtown Eastside Community Coordinated Response Network.
Research
Don’s research explores the words we use and how people talk about climate change and its interconnectedness with settler colonialism, white supremacy, and other intersecting social justice issues. He is interested in how people talk about climate change and its psychological, cultural, and political components in other areas of daily life. His work explores these intersections and how these conversational ecosystems influence our thinking and meaning-making. He argues that many of these issues sit on the same foundations and that there are tipping points in conversations that open up or shut down how we talk across difference, which include race, gender, culture, politics and climate. He wants to find out if we can learn to speak to individuals and communities from different social, economic, religious, political or cultural backgrounds and fill structural holes where we can build trust and bridges of understanding.
Publications
Publications
Dialogue, discourse, disjuncture’s: Building critically affirmative politics in radio; Minelle Mahtani, Don Shafer – University of Victoria
Climate Change and The Many Faces of Denial; Don Shafer – Simon Fraser University
On-Air & Online
The Conversation Lab is now in its 3rd year with over 80 episodes with not-for-profit organizations, community groups, and changemakers worldwide. The program is written, produced, and hosted by Don and airs weekly on CFRO FM (Co-op Radio) and dozens of podcasting platforms.
Invited Speaker
The Victoria Forum: Invited Speaker & Moderator; How to bridge economic, environmental, and social divides, focusing on three intersecting perspectives of turf, truth and trust. Ideas for a Better World, August 28-30th 2022. University of Victoria.
NASH81: Student Journalism Conference. The Heart of The Interview. Calgary. January 4, 2019
West Coast Liberal Studies Symposium, University of Washington. Climate Change and The Many Faces of Denial. June 26, 2017
Vancouver Board of Trade. Emergency Preparedness in a Changing World. April 5, 2017
Simon Fraser University. Researching the World. Media’s Role in Climate Change. March 8, 2017
BC Society of Landscape Architects. The Pope, The Poet and the Patriot; What Pope Francis, Rachel Carlson and Franz Fanon Have in Common. March 31, 2017
Variety the Children’s Charity. Media & Not for Profits. January 14, 2017
West Coast Liberal Studies Symposium, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver. What is Wilderness? June 17, 2016
Awards
UBC Presidents Academic Excellence Initiative Award 2022
Faber Residency Recipient. New Journalism II, Olot, Spain 2018
British Columbia Association of Broadcasters, Community Service Awards 2017, 2018
Recipient of the Allan Waters Broadcast Lifetime Achievement Award 2015
Variety the Children’s Charity, The Heart Award for Community Service 1982, 2013
Additional Description
I’m in my third year of doctoral studies at the University of British Columbia with the Social Justice Institute. My supervisors are Dr. Minelle Mahtani, a distinguished award-winning journalist and Geography and Critical Race professor; and Dr. Janice Stewart, Senior Instructor, Critical Studies in Sexuality, English professor, and Associate Dean, Faculty of the Arts.
My research and teaching Interests include media & communication, depth psychology, philosophy, environmental justice, art & culture and learning the art of how to ask beautiful questions.
As a CIS white male, broadcaster/podcaster, sessional instructor, settler scholar and community activist, I am uniquely situated to undertake my research interests as I rely on critically engaged, anti-racist, and anti-colonial approaches that challenge our assumptions and ways of being in pursuit of social change. I draw upon feminist theories and concepts from political ecology (and geography more broadly), environmental sociology, settler-colonial studies, and critical discourse analysis. My current academic guides, cohort, and prior educational and professional pursuits regarding the science of climate change and the psychology of denial, and work with some of Vancouver’s most marginalized and vulnerable groups during Covid 19 afford me a unique and relevant opportunity to explore these critical issues.