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Nine faculty members recognized with Presidential Awards for Faculty Excellence

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亚洲AV President has announced the recipients of the 2022 , honoring nine Mason faculty members for their work on behalf of the university, students, and the broader community.

Beginning this year, the number of awards have been increased for full-time faculty members. The faculty cited for 2022 come from five Mason schools.

鈥淗onoring faculty at various stages of their careers gives us the opportunity to recognize their exemplary achievements and the tremendous contributions they make to 亚洲AV,鈥 Washington said. 鈥淲e are proud to recognize them for their groundbreaking efforts in research, teaching, social impact, and diversity and inclusion.鈥

The Presidential Awards committee review team, which solicits nominations each year, is made up of faculty representatives, including prior award recipients, and senior leaders. The complete list of 2022 honorees is below. See prior recipients for and .

Faculty Excellence in Research

Shannon Fyfe
Fyfe

, an assistant professor of in the and a Fellow of the , brings the methodology and perspectives of her discipline to analyze a broad range of social and legal issues, including genocide, hate speech, sexual violence and consent, immigration, and mass incarceration. At Mason since 2018, Fyfe has been published in a variety of prestigious journals in several academic disciplines. Drawing upon her legal training, she has co-authored a book on the concept of 鈥渏ust war.鈥 She has been invited to present her work at lectures and conferences around the world, including Myanmar, The Hague, Japan, India, Mexico, and Cambodia. She has also established a high profile as a public philosopher, with work published by the Washington Post, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, and The Hill. Fyfe receives $2,500 toward her research efforts.

Kun Sun
Sun

Kun Sun, an associate professor in the (IST) in the and associate director of the , produces research in cybersecurity that has been widely adopted within industry and government agencies. He developed a security patch dataset that companies have used to enhance their software supply-chain security, as well as a security defense prototype on cyber decoy and deception that has been installed at the Naval Surface Warfare Center. At Mason since 2010, Sun has attracted $4.5 million in grant money from federal agencies such as the National Science Foundation, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Homeland Security. His publications have resulted in more than 3,400 citations. Sun has won two best paper prizes at conferences in his field and has been active as a mentor to PhD students. He receives $5,000 toward his research efforts.

David Weisburd
Weisburd

The Beck Family Presidential Medal for Faculty Excellence in Research: , a Distinguished Professor in the听, housed in the in the , and the founder and executive director of Mason鈥檚 , has promoted a shift in the focus of criminology from the individuals鈥 backgrounds and motivations to 鈥減lace-based policing.鈥 This has focused crime prevention efforts on specific geographic 鈥渉ot spots鈥 rather than reactive, arrest-based strategies. At Mason since 2008, Weisburd has published more than 200 articles and 30 books and has been cited more than 30,000 times; by this measurement, he is the second-most influential criminologist in the world. He is a pioneering figure in the field of experimental criminology, having founded two journals and a new division of the American Society of Criminology in this field. He has received several prestigious international awards, including the and the Israeli Rothschild Prize, and he recently became the first university professor to receive the for Outstanding Leadership in Evidence-Based Policing, from the University of Cambridge鈥檚 Institute of Criminology. Under Weisburd鈥檚 leadership, the Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy has brought in $27 million in grant funding over the past decade. Weisburd receives $10,000 to support his research efforts.


Faculty Excellence in Teaching

Steven Burmeister
Burmeister

is an assistant professor (term instructional faculty) in the in the . He joined the Mason faculty in 2016 after a nearly 40-year career as a forensic scientist, including 23 years as a field agent with the FBI. He uses his career experiences to create real-life forensic experiences for his students. In his 鈥淭race Evidence鈥 class, for example, he designed a moot court testimony assignment in which students present their analysis as an expert witness and testify in court, examined by both a prosecutor and a defense attorney, roles played by other forensic science faculty. Burmeister has collaborated with Mason鈥檚 so students can gain field experience, and he leverages his FBI connections to create research opportunities for Mason students. He receives $2,500 to support his research efforts.

Joanna Jauchen
Jauchen

is a term instructional faculty member in in the , and the associate chair of teaching and equity. At Mason since 2012, she has mentored and trained other faculty members and has been extraordinarily active in course development. Jauchen runs a weekly teaching seminar for faculty and graduate students that focuses on the principles of equitable active learning. Before the pandemic, she was already leading efforts within her department to develop online courses; after the pandemic began, she provided formal training and informal assistance to many of her colleagues as they moved their courses online. Active in the , Jauchen has developed innovative methods and authentic assessments, tailored to math education, for gauging student learning, and has written and presented about STEM equity issues. She received a Mason in 2022. She receives $5,000 toward her research efforts.

GIrum Urgessa
Urgessa

John Toups Presidential Medal for Faculty Excellence in Teaching: , an associate professor in the (CEIE) in the , came to Mason in 2007 tasked with developing a curriculum in , directing the program, teaching most of the classes in it, and promoting its enrollment growth. He has developed a passionate following among CEIE students, who describe him as a clear, stimulating, engaging instructor who takes time to know them as individuals. He has also made a point of involving both graduate and undergraduate students in his own research projects and has co-authored publications with many of them. He received the Professor of the Year award from Mason鈥檚 (2008), the University (2015), and the Chi Epsilon Cumberland District James M. Robbins Excellence in Teaching Award (2020). He wrote two textbooks on licensure preparation, has presented scholarship on the lack of diversity among faculty in his field, taught curriculum development to faculty abroad, and is supporting efforts to advance the role of diversity, equity and inclusion in workforce development in structural engineering.听 He receives $10,000 toward his research efforts.


Faculty Excellence in Diversity and Inclusion

Cameron Harris
Harris

(BA Integrative Studies 鈥06), an assistant professor in the , has co-led a year-long effort to incorporate issues relating to (DEI) into the school鈥檚 curriculum and faculty hiring process. At Mason since 2015, Harris was recognized by 鈥檚 as the Student Organization Advisor of the Year. He also is a faculty advisor to the . Harris participated in the Diversity and Inclusion Summit and the Anti-Racism Teaching Excellence committee, the latter of which resulted in the formation of an Anti-Racism Teaching Excellence implementation team, on which he also serves. Recently, he joined the social justice and advocacy working group of the initiative and has also served for three years on the leadership team of the (COACHE) project. Harris receives $2,500 for his research efforts.

Lauren Cattaneo
Cattaneo

United Bank Presidential Medal for Faculty Excellence in Diversity and Inclusion:听, a clinical/community psychologist and an associate professor in the in the , has established the (Resilience, Empowerment, Action, Change) in which she and her students use psychological research findings to help community organizations improve the lives of marginalized populations. She and two collaborators received a to create an interdisciplinary minor devoted to social justice and mass incarceration. Cattaneo teaches a class at a prison, where Mason students learn alongside incarcerated students. Cattaneo served as a faculty fellow for Diversity, Inclusion and Well-being in the Office of Faculty Affairs and Development, developing and piloting a course on 鈥淐reating a Just Society鈥 that has served as the foundation of Mason鈥檚 broader curricular efforts. She has served on the . She receives $10,000 toward her research efforts.


Faculty Excellence in Social Impact

Louise Shelley
Shelley

Earle C. Williams Presidential Medal for Faculty Excellence in Social Impact: is the Omer L. and Nancy Hirst Endowed Chair and a University Professor in the . She is also the director of the (TraCCC), which she founded when she came to Mason in 2007. Shelley has written 17 books and more than 200 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters. Her mainstream outreach efforts extend the social impact of her scholarship and inform those who can influence policy or carry out reform efforts. Shelley routinely advises congressional members and staff, as well as international organizations such as NATO, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the World Bank. After she published A Dark Commerce: How a New Illicit Economy is Threatening our Future, prominent environmental groups approached her to lead public outreach efforts on the security risks caused by transnational environmental crime. She also founded the Anti-Corruption Advocacy Network (ACAN), which fosters communication among academics, government and multinational bodies on the issue of financial corruption. This group contributed to the successful passage of the Corporate Transparency Act and the National Defense Authorization Act. She receives $10,000 toward her research efforts.