Please join #AltAc’s meet and greet with its second rock star:

Dr. Faye S. Taxman

Advocating for Yourself With Your Faculty Mentor

As a university professor, Dr. Taxman actively mentors students at all stages of their doctoral program. She’s helped students interested in various careers spaces gain the experiences and skills they need to succeed in any market. We’re excited for Dr. Taxman to share with us how to advocate for the specific skills you want from your faculty mentor, and where to look outside your department to develop and refine these skills.

Keywords: Advocating for Skills, Working with Faculty, Applied Research, Building a research agenda

Faye Taxman, PhD
University Professor, George Mason University
ftaxman@gmu.edu | (703) 993-8555

Faye S. Taxman, Ph.D., is a University Professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. She is a health service criminologist.  She is recognized for her work in the development of seamless systems-of-care models that link the criminal justice system with other health care and other service delivery systems and reengineering probation and parole supervision services. She has conducted experiments to examine different processes to improve treatment access and retention, to assess new models of probation supervision consistent with RNR frameworks, and to test new interventions. She has active “laboratories” with numerous agencies including Virginia Department of Corrections, Alameda County Probation Department (CA), Hidalgo County Community Corrections Department (TX), North Carolina Department of Corrections, and Delaware Department of Corrections. She developed the translational RNR Simulation Tool (www.gmuace.org/tools) to assist agencies to advance practice. Dr. Taxman has published more than 200 articles.  She is the current Principal Investigator for the National Institute on Drug Abuse ‘s Justice Community Opioid Innovation Network (JCOIN).  She is author of numerous books including Implementing Evidence-Based Community Corrections and Addiction Treatment (Springer, 2012 with Steven Belenko) and Handbook on Moving Corrections and Sentencing Forward: Building on the Record (with Pamela Lattimore and Beth Huebner, Routledge Press, 2020). She is co-Editor of Health & Justice. The American Society of Criminology’s Division of Sentencing and Corrections has recognized her as Distinguished Scholar twice as well as the Rita Warren and Ted Palmer Differential Intervention Treatment award.   She received the Joan McCord Award in 2017 from the Division of Experimental Criminology.  In 2018, she was appointed a Fellow of the American Society of Criminology. In 2019, she received the lifetime achievement award from the American Society of Criminology’s Division of Sentencing and Corrections.  She has a Ph.D. from Rutgers University’s School of Criminal Justice.

Meeting Resources

October Alt Ac Meet & Greet Rockstar Faye Taxman Recording

Taxman Speaker Questions

Taxman Session Notes