Kris Hartley is Assistant Professor of Sustainability and Enterprise at Arizona State University, School of Sustainability. He researches the role of public policy in technology-enabled sustainability transitions, with a focus on (i) circular economy and business models, (ii) global and multilateral policy frameworks for circularity, and (iii) state-society interface in the development and application of policy knowledge to scientific and technological issues.
Kris has published books with Cambridge University Press and Routledge Press, and peer-reviewed articles on a variety of topics including environmental policy, smart cities, and global development. He was a Fulbright U.S. Scholar (2020) and has held faculty appointments at Cornell University, University of Melbourne, and City University of Hong Kong.
With over 15 years of public and private sector experience, Kris has worked with the United Nations Environment Programme, ASEAN Secretariat, central and local government agencies in the United States, New Zealand, and Thailand, research institutes in Japan, China, South Korea, Singapore, and Australia, and private sector firms including Microsoft and Huawei. He has consulted on a variety of topics including sustainable urban development, transportation planning, earthquake recovery, digital transformation, and infrastructure management.
Kris’s research and consulting projects are connected by the overarching theme of new public policy models for 21st century challenges. His 2022 book with Cambridge University Press (Disrupted governance: towards a new policy science) addresses the shifting contexts and understandings of public policy in an age of uncertainty and disruption. His 2014 and 2020 books (both with Routledge Press) address governance and public policy amidst global systemic disruptions. His research has been published in a variety of leading academic journals including Policy Sciences, Policy and Society, Resources, Conservation and Recycling, Telematics and Informatics, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Telecommunications Policy, Geoforum, Journal of Economic Policy Reform, Environmental Development, and City, Culture and Society, among others.
Kris serves on the editorial boards of the following journals: Policy and Society, Journal of Economic Policy Reform, International Journal of Water Resources Development, Australian Journal of Public Administration, Policy Design and Practice, Journal of Asian Public Policy, and Journal of Circular Economy. He has pursued an active external engagement agenda, presenting at over 60 academic conferences, giving numerous broadcast interviews and invited lectures, and publishing over 100 commentaries in press venues including CNN International, Huffington Post, South China Morning Post, and The Straits Times. He has been quoted for articles in Times Higher Education and Reuters, and has appeared as an expert interviewee in several live television and radio broadcasts.
Kris holds a Ph.D. in Public Policy from the National University of Singapore (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy), Master of City Planning from the University of California, Berkeley, Master of Business Administration from Baylor University (Texas), and Bachelor of Arts (Phi Beta Kappa) in Classics from the University of Tennessee. As a doctoral student, he held the President’s Graduate Fellowship and was awarded the 2016 Wang Gungwu Medal and Prize for best Ph.D. thesis in the Social Sciences and the Musim Mas Dissertation Award for Research on Sustainability. Prior to his career in consulting and academia, he worked as a high school Latin teacher, wedding pianist, and NPR radio announcer. Kris is originally from Nashville, Tennessee.