• Sarah Beth Kaufman is a sociologist and critical criminologist, interested broadly in knowledge, culture, politics, and art. She worked as a mitigation specialist in New Orleans during the late 1990鈥檚, helping to secure reduced sentences for impoverished capital murder defendants, before completing a Ph.D. in sociology at New York University, where she also taught for the Bard Prison Initiative at the Bayview Women鈥檚 Correctional Facility. Students who take her classes can expect to become sharper readers, writers, and critical thinkers.

    Dr. Kaufman鈥檚 2020 book, with University of California Press, is the first systematic ethnography of death penalty trials in the United States. Taking readers inside capital courtrooms across the country, Kaufman shows that the 鈥渟uper due process鈥 accorded capital is the system鈥檚 best attempt at fair and impartial criminal sentencing, but fails to create justice. If you want to know how a courthouse in Lubbock, TX compares to one in Brooklyn, NY, she鈥檚 a good person to ask. She also co-authored the documentary theatre project, .

    • Ph.D. - New York University
    • M.A. - Tulane University
    • B.A. - Wesleyan University

    "."听Qualitative Sociology, 2019.

    鈥淭o Be Honest: Voices on Islam During the 2016 Presidential Election.鈥 A one-act play co-authored with William Christ and Habiba Noor, 2017.

    鈥.鈥澛Law & Social Inquiry: Journal of the American Bar Foundation,听2017.

    "Citizenship and Punishment: Situating Death Penalty Jury Sentencing."Punishment and Society: The International Journal of Penology聽13, 3: 333-353, 2011.聽

    "."听Social Science Research Council,听2006.

    Dr. Kaufman's publications are available聽.听听

    • Introduction to Sociology
    • Criminology
    • Deviance and Social Control
    • Sociology of Punishment
    • Sociology of Health and Illness
    • Research Methods