Sociologist/Criminologist/Social Scientist on Scholarly Standards

I am an interdisciplinary social scientist specializing in the history and sociology of prisons and other criminal punishments, with additional interests in applied criminology, research design and methodology (quantitative and qualitative), theory development, and the production and reception of academic research. My substantive expertise focuses on law, punishment, and society; in recent years, I have become active in research groups studying how the hyper-politicization of academia is impacting research, teaching/mentorship, and public trust in universities. I am best known for my work on American prison history, my theories of penal change, my qualitative methods book, and my work exploring how political motivations have hampered academic research.

As of August 2026, I am a full professor in the Sociology Department at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. I hold a PhD in Jurisprudence and Social Policy from UC Berkeley, where I graduated in 2013; JSP is an interdisciplinary degree involving training in sociolegal studies, criminology, econometrics, history, philosophy, political science, and sociology. From 2023-2026, I served as coeditor of the Law & Society Review, the flagship journal of the Law and Society Association. From 2025-2026, I served on the Vanderbilt-WashU Commission on Scholarly Standards.

I am the author of more than 50 publications, including two books (published with Cambridge and Stanford’s university presses). My work has been featured in TIME, ABC News, WYNC, the Chronicle of Higher Education, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the BBC’s History Extra, Deutsche Welle, and Die Presse. I have delivered public lectures for the Smithsonian, Eastern State Penitentiary, and the Philadelphia Athenaeum, while my written and oral commentaries have audiences in Argentina, Austria, Canada, Chile, Germany, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Portugal, the Netherlands, Scotland, the UK, in addition to venues throughout the United States.

Separate from my university work, I serve as a consultant and occasionally an expert witness in court cases. My specializations include advising on or designing evaluation projects, conducting (quantitative and qualitative) data analysis, providing archival research on and explanations of prison history, and answering questions about penal policy (particularly prison policy and sentencing decisions).

Engagement as an HxA Member:
Presented at HxA Virtual Event, Summit, or Conference
Featured in HxA Member Story
Guest on HxA Podcast
HxA Writers Group Member or Veteran
Active Moderator of an HxCommunity
Active HxA Campus Community Co-Chair
Author of essay in inquisitive magazine or HxA's blog
Former or Current Faculty Fellow at HxA's Segal Center for Academic Pluralism
Speaker's Title and Institutional/Organizational Affiliation: Professor of Sociology, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Event Type :
Lecture/Presentation
Fireside Chat
Book Talk
Film Screening + Talk
Constitution Day Event
Classroom Visit
Workshop
Podcast
Debate or Forum
Speaking Topics - List up to 5 specific topics or titles, each separated by a semicolon: Prison History; Research Methods and Research Design; the State of Scholarship on Punishment, Law, and/or Sociology
Blackout Dates (Dates speaker is unavailable, Days/Month/Year): none
Distance Willing to Travel: Any/No Limits to Travel Radius
Scholarly Area: Social Sciences
Modality of Event : In Person and/or Virtual
Willingness to be recorded: Willing
Speaking Fee (Not including travel/lodging expenses): $1,000-$2,499 USD
Recent Appearance (1 of 5) -title, host institution, year: Summit on Open Inquiry, HxA, 2026
Recent Appearance (2 of 5) -title, host institution, year: Summit on Open Inquiry: Faculty-Led Reform to Restore Trust in Higher Education, Vanderbilt-WashU, 2026
Recent Appearance (3 of 5) -title, host institution, year: The Humanities in Crisis? A Discussion on the “State of Scholarship in the Humanities” Report, HxA, 2026
Recent Appearance (4 of 5) -title, host institution, year: A Faculty Blueprint for Higher Ed Reform, HxA, 2026
Recent Appearance (5 of 5) -title, host institution, year: The Politicization of Academic Research From Within and Without, The Chicago Forum (UChicago), 2026
Link to Speaker's Professional Website (to include sample writings and more extensive bio): ashleytrubin.com