Sarah Hunn (she/her)
sarahhunn.bsky.social
Sarah Hunn (she/her)
@sarahhunn.bsky.social
Passionate about Emergency Management, community resilience, books, maps, and sustainable fashion. Views and bad jokes are my own.
Reposted by Sarah Hunn (she/her)
Great interview with Jonathan Eaton on Disaster Preparedness research and engagement in Vancouver via Vancouver Co-op Radio: www.spreaker.com/episode/jona... Link to the full report here: drrn.ubc.ca/research/res...
Jonathan Eaton - Disaster Preparedness - The Conversation Lab
www.spreaker.com
November 19, 2025 at 11:49 PM
Reposted by Sarah Hunn (she/her)
Summary and report on how C40’s Inclusive Climate Action Fund supported the distribution of 155 cooling vests for people with disabilities in Vancouver in 2024:
www.c40.org/wp-content/u... and www.technologyforliving.org/wp-content/u...
www.c40.org
August 11, 2025 at 8:27 PM
I wish more earthquake graphics included this fault rupture zone. Earthquakes aren't just singular points!
In addition to many M7+ earthquakes, this boundary has also hosted half a dozen M8+ earthquakes. Red circles mark the epicenter above the site where fault rupture began, and yellow shows the area on the megathrust fault that ruptured.
July 16, 2025 at 11:41 PM
Reposted by Sarah Hunn (she/her)
Yes to this! "In a world increasingly defined by disruption — from climate-driven disasters to social isolation and polarization — public spaces that bring us together can be a primary source of resilience and connection." medium.com/reimagining-...
In Times of Disaster, It’s Our Social Infrastructure That Will Save Us
From extreme weather to economic woes, our parks, libraries and gathering places may be more important than you think
medium.com
July 2, 2025 at 5:22 PM
Catching up on the latest @samlmontano.bsky.social's Diasterology and as always it made me laugh and cry in equally parts.

But my favourite line of course is "These people tend to take the approach of isolationism, which we know is not what makes people able to survive disaster — it’s community."
Diasterology: April 2025
This newsletter is a compilation of recent disaster ~things~ that I think are cool, important, or otherwise of interest to people who are intrigued with disaster (broadly defined).
open.substack.com
May 15, 2025 at 6:36 PM
I hate that search engines have automatic AI and try my best to ignore them, but sometimes you get a gem like this that reminds you the machines are not smart enough to take over yet.

PS. If anyone has any insight on how you would alphabetize "Sarah H" and "Sara S", please let me know.
April 7, 2025 at 11:42 PM
Nothing like a minor earthquake to bring everyone together (everyone I have ever known who felt the earthquake emailing me to ask if I felt it)
February 22, 2025 at 12:36 AM