V. Kelly Turner

Kelly Turner (she/her) is an associate professor of urban planning and geography and serves as associate director of the Luskin Center for Innovation (LCI). She leads LCI’s research on heat which provides evidence-based approaches to protect people where they live, work and play.

Dr. Turner’s current research encompasses heat governance and policy, planning for heat resilient communities, and producing actionable data for heat preparedness. She directs the Center for Heat Resilient Communities, a National Integrated Heat Health Information Systems Center for excellence. Her work has been published in Nature, Environmental Research Letters, and the Journal of the American Planning Association and funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, National Science Foundation, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. She has served as a panelist for the National Academy of Sciences and as a Science Advisor to the Arsht-Rockefeller Extreme Heat Resilience Alliance. She regularly appears on television, radio, and print media including CNN, NPR, and NBC.

She received a doctoral degree in geography from the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning at Arizona State University and a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Wellesley College.

Recent Publications

Derakshan, S., Dialesandro, J., Turner, V.K., and Longcore, T. 2025. Space-time dynamics in hazard exposure analysis: smartphone locations show pedestrian routes are inflexible to extreme heat events. NPJ Natural Hazards: https://rdcu.be/d5Rst

Matthews, T., Ramsay, E., Saeed, F., Sherwood, S., Jay, O., Raymond, C., Abram, N., Kai Wei Lee, J., Barley, S., Kirkpatric, SP., Khan, MS., Meissner, K., Roberts, C., Mavalankar, D., Smith, KGC., Ullah, A., Sadad, A., Turner, V.K., Forrest, A. 2024. Humid heat exceeds human tolerance and causes mass mortality, Nature Climate Change, 15:4-6. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-024-02215-8

Sullivan, A., White, D., and Turner, V.K. 2024. Framing uncertainty in water-policy discourse: Insights from Arizona’s Project ADD Water. Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13412-023-00868-z

Turner, V.K., Middel, A., and Vanos, J. 2023. Shade is an essential solution to hotter cities. Nature, 619, 694-697. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02311-3

Engel, RA., Millard-Ball, A., and Turner, V.K. 2022. Contributions of Roads to Surface Temperature: Evidence from Southern California. Environmental Research Communications, 5: 015004 https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2515-7620/acabb8/meta

Turner, V.K., *French, E., Dialessandro, J., Hondula, D., Middel, A., BanWeiss, G., and *Abdelatty, H. How are Cities Planning for Heat? Analysis of United States municipal plans. 2022. Environmental Research Letters, 17: 064054 https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ac73a9

Turner, V.K., *Gmoser-Daskalakis, K., Costello, D., Jefferson, A., and Bhaskar, A. 2022. Champions and Traditional Technocrats: The Role of Environmental Value Orientation in Stormwater Management. in Journal of the American Water Resources Association special issue on Connecting Land and Water for Healthy Communities. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1752-1688.13015

Turner, V.K. 2022. The environmental consequences of residential land tenure in single family neighborhoods. Land Use Policy, 114:105959. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264837721006827

Turner, V.K., Rogers, M.*, Yujia, Z., Middel, A., Schneider, F.*, Ocón, J., Seeley, M.* Dialesandro, J. 2022. More Than Surface Temperature: Mitigating Thermal Exposure in Hyper-Local Land Systems. Journal of Land Use Science, 1:79-99. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1747423X.2021.2015003

Keith, L., Meerow, S., Hondula, DM., Turner, V.K., and Arnott, J. 2021. Deploy heat officers, policies and metrics. Nature, 598:29-31. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02677-2

Wang, C., Turner, V.K., Wentz, E.A., Myint, S.W. 2020. Optimization of Residential Green Spaces for Water Conservation and Heat Mitigation: A Case of Phoenix Metropolitan Area, Arizona. Science of the Total Environment, 763:144605.

Middel, A., Turner, V.K., Schneider, F.A.*, Zhang, Y., and Stiller, M.* 2020. Solar reflective pavements – A policy panacea to heat mitigation? Environmental Research Letters, 15: 064016.

Turner, V.K. and Stiller, M.* 2020. How do Homeowners Associations Regulate Residential Landscapes? An Analysis of Rule Structure and Content in Maricopa County, Arizona. Journal of the American Planning Association, 86(1):25-38.

 

9 New Faculty Hired by UCLA Luskin An extraordinary recruitment effort that included visits by 40 candidates will soon enlarge the size of the full-time faculty by almost 20 percent, adding new expertise and greater diversity

By Les Dunseith

Nine new faculty members will be joining the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs on July 1 as part of a hiring binge that will soon enlarge the size of the full-time faculty by almost 20 percent and further diversify its demographic makeup.

The additions will help UCLA Luskin expand it course offerings, in part to support the new undergraduate major in public affairs set to launch in fall of 2018. A few positions will fill openings that had become vacant because of faculty retirements and other departures.

Dean Gary Segura said the new hires expand the Luskin School’s range of knowledge and evolve its faculty to better match the country’s rapidly changing demographics.

“These additions to the Luskin School faculty represent an outstanding growth and expansion of our expertise and social impact,” Segura said. “With these additions and those last year, we are among the most diverse and interdisciplinary units in the entire UC system and profoundly well-positioned to engage, educate, study, and contribute to California’s diverse and dynamic population.”

Six of the new hires are women and four are Latino. They include two new assistant professors in Social Welfare and three new assistant professors in Urban Planning, plus two assistant professors, one associate professor and one full professor who will join Public Policy.

The new faculty represent additional expertise for the School in international human and women’s rights; survey research; environmental planning, adaptation, and justice; criminal justice and bias in policing; immigration; gentrification; social and political inequality; poverty; and social identity among youth.

Among the additions are three political scientists, two economists, a developmental psychologist, a sociologist and a geographer. All of the positions have multidisciplinary aspects, crossing department lines not only within the Luskin School but also, in some cases, with academic units elsewhere on campus.

In all, 40 candidates were interviewed, coming from across the United States and around the world. The new faculty range from people just finishing graduate school to a full professor.

Here are the nine new faculty members:

  • The full professor is Martin Gilens, who previously taught political science at UCLA and has also worked at Yale and, most recently, Princeton. Gilens, who will join the Public Policy faculty, grew up in Los Angeles and has strong ties to the university.

 Read our previous story about Martin Gilens

 


  • Amada Armenta: She is returning to UCLA where she completed her PhD in sociology, and will join Urban Planning in the fall. Armenta comes to UCLA from the University of Pennsylvania where she is an Assistant Professor of Sociology. Her work looks at immigration enforcement and its impact on the lives and communities affected. She is particularly interested in the intervention of the criminal justice system in immigration enforcement. She has been published in Social Problems and the Annual Review of Sociology, in addition to her University of California Press book, “Protect, Serve, and Deport: The Rise of Policing as Immigration Enforcement.”

 


  • Natalie Bau: She is an international economist currently at the University of Toronto and will be joining Public Policy. Bau’s work examines several different aspects of the economics of education and educational policies and their downstream implications, including the effects on marriage patterns, teacher pay, student achievement and motivation, and others. She has projects in the works including “The Misallocation of Pay and Productivity in the Public Sector: Evidence from the Labor Market for Teachers” as well as “Labour Coercion and Economic Growth: Evidence from the Harrying of the North.”

 


  • Liz Koslov: She will assume a joint post in Urban Planning and the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability as an assistant professor. Koslov is a scholar of environmental justice and specifically examines the urban socio-cultural impacts of climate change. She is currently a Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow at MIT, and holds a PhD in Media, Culture, and Communication from New York University. She is in the process of completing her first book, “Retreat: Moving to Higher Ground in a Climate-Changed City,” under contract to the University of Chicago Press.

 


  • Amy Ritterbusch: She will be joining Social Welfare. Ritterbusch is a human and urban geographer and currently an associate professor of government at the Universidad de los Andes in Bogotá, Colombia. Her work is focused on urban social justice movements, marginalized youth, substance abuse, prostitution and other downstream effects of child poverty. She also brings extensive expertise in field work, ethnographic methods and Latin American populations across the hemisphere. She has written several journal articles, which have been featured in Child, Abuse & Neglect, Global Public Health, Annals of the American Association of Geographers and other peer-reviewed journals.

  • Carlos Santos: Currently an assistant professor in counseling psychology at ASU, Santos is coming to UCLA Luskin Social Welfare. His work is principally on gender and ethnic identities, stereotypes, and their impacts on social adjustment, educational performance and outcomes among adolescents in communities of color. He received his PhD from NYU and his work has been funded by NSF and NIH. In addition to his monograph “Studying Ethnic Identity” for the American Psychological Association, his work has been published in many outlets, including the Journal of Youth and Adolescence and the Journal of Counseling Psychology.

  • V. Kelly Turner: Turner is currently an assistant professor of geography at Kent State and her focus is human-environmental interaction and urban management.  She will join Luskin Urban Planning in the fall. Her focus has been on how institutional arrangements and good metrics for resource consumption can help us build toward a more sustainable ecosystem, and she has applied this work to water resources, sustainable urbanism, and green infrastructure. She is the author of more than a dozen journal articles in publications such as Applied Geography, Ecology and Society, Urban Geography, and others.

  • Emily Weisburst: She is finishing a PhD in economics at UT-Austin and will be joining Public Policy. Her work focuses on bias in policing, officer discretion in arrest behavior, police reform, and the effects of police presence in public schools. Weisburst previously served as a staff economist at the Council of Economic Advisors in the Executive Office of the President, and has done collaborative research for RAND and the State of Texas. Her work has been published in the Journal of Higher Education and Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis.

  • Chris Zepeda-Millan: He joins Luskin Public Policy. Zepeda-Millan is a political scientist and current professor of ethnic studies at UC Berkeley. His research focuses on social movements, immigration and communities of color, and has been published in American Journal of Political Science, Political Research Quarterly, Social Science Quarterly, and Politics, Groups and Identities. His book, “Latino Mass Mobilization: Immigration, Racialization and Activism,” was recently published by Cambridge University Press. Zepeda-Millan will be jointly appointed in the Department of Chicana/o Studies and will be working with the Latino Policy and Politics Initiative.