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Events 2010February information page Marc Mauer

Marc Mauer

Marc Mauer, the executive director of the Sentencing Project, is one of the country's leading experts on sentencing policy, race, and the criminal justice system. He has directed programs on criminal justice policy reform for 30 years, and is the author of some of the most widely cited reports and publications in the field, including Young Black Men and the Criminal Justice System, and the Americans Behind Bars series comparing international rates of incarceration. His 1995 report on racial disparity and the criminal justice system led The New York Times to editorialize that the report "should set off alarm bells from the White House to city halls—and help reverse the notion that we can incarcerate our way out of fundamental social problems."

Race to Incarcerate, Mauer's groundbreaking book on how sentencing policies led to the explosive expansion of the U.S. prison population, was a semifinalist for the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award in 1999, and revised in 2006. Mauer is also the co-editor of Invisible Punishment, a 2002 collection of essays by prominent criminal justice experts on the social cost of imprisonment.

Mauer began his work in criminal justice with the American Friends Service Committee in 1975, and served as the organization's national justice communications coordinator. Since joining The Sentencing Project in 1987, he has testified before Congress and state legislatures, frequently appears on radio and television networks, and is regularly interviewed by The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and many other major media outlets. He is an adjunct faculty member at George Washington University and has served as a consultant to the Bureau of Justice Assistance, the National Institute of Justice, and the American Bar Association's Committee on Race and the Criminal Justice System. In 2005, he became executive director of The Sentencing Project.

Mauer received the Helen L. Buttenweiser Award from the Fortune Society in 1991, the Donald Cressey Award from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency for contributions to criminal justice research in 1996, the Alfred R. Lindesmith Award from the Drug Policy Alliance for achievement in drug policy scholarship in 2003, the Maud Booth Correctional Services Award from Volunteers of America in 2008, the John Augustus Award from the National Association of Sentencing Advocates in 2009, and the Margaret Mead Award from the International Community Corrections Association in 2009.

A graduate of Stony Brook University, where he received his bachelor's degree, Mauer earned his master of social work from the University of Michigan.