Lilith Winkler-Schor

Lilith Winkler-Schor is a PhD student whose research broadly examines how the field of urban planning is currently reimagining itself as a field of racial justice and attempting to rectify its origins in white supremacy. She is particularly interested in how the planning field is leveraging arts and culture to develop more responsive and just urban planning methods that authentically heal past racial harms. Her current research examines how the transportation planning sector has been working to acknowledge and redress the racial harms of the highway interstate program, particularly through the development and implementation of the Reconnecting Communities grant. She hopes to contribute deeper understanding on how planners are conceptualizing their role in redressing past racial harms and what delivering repair to historically harmed communities might look like.

Lilith’s previous research examined how two transportation agencies collaborated with embedded artists to address complex transportation justice issues. Through this research she found that artists provided departments with a new set of approaches that align well with reparative planning approaches. However, she also found that these new approaches, though theoretically aligned with emergent scholarship, were in tension with standard agency operations. She continues to explore how theoretical planning concepts around repair and justice can be translated into bureaucratic settings.

Professionally, Lilith works as an urbanist, designer, and urban cultural policy strategy consultant. Prior to moving to LA, she spent a decade in New Orleans, where she worked in holistic neighborhood development. She seeks to incorporate creative and human-centric methods that deliver equitable opportunity, belonging and joy in all the work that she does.
Lilith holds a Master of Urban and Regional Planning from UCLA and a certificate in Urban Humanities. She received her BA in Social Policy and Political Science and a BFA in Fine Arts in Visual Arts from Tulane University.

Amada Armenta

Amada Armenta’s research examines the connections between the immigration enforcement system and the criminal justice system, and the implications of this connection for immigrants, bureaucracies, and cities.

Her award-winning book, “Protect Serve and Deport: The Rise of Policing as Immigration Enforcement” (University of California Press, 2017), analyzes the role of local law enforcement agencies in immigration enforcement in Nashville, Tennessee. Currently, she is working on her second book project, an examination of the legal attitudes of unauthorized Mexican immigrants in Philadelphia.

Dr. Armenta’s research has been published in journals of sociology, law and society, and policy. She has received research funding from the American Sociological Association, the National Science Foundation, the American Society of Criminology, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Prior to joining Luskin as a faculty member, she was an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.