Alison Taylor (bishop)
Alison Taylor is a retired Australian bishop in the Anglican Church of Australia. She served as an assistant bishop of the Diocese of Brisbane from April 2013 to December 2017 and was the first female bishop in the diocese.
Prior to ordination ministry, Taylor worked as an urban planner in the 1980s, during which she led an Australian aid project to restore and categorise European-built heritage buildings in Tianjin, China. During this time, she was influenced by seeing church buildings used as factories or warehouses and realising that many locals did not have access to a church. Her work in China was interrupted by the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. She returned to Australia, to Melbourne, where she became Senior Lecturer in Urban Studies at Victoria University of Technology.
After giving birth to her daughter, Taylor commenced theological studies in 1993. Following her studies, she served in the Diocese of Melbourne, including as vicar of St John's Camberwell and as Archdeacon of Kew.
In December 2012, it was announced that Taylor would take up the position as an assistant bishop for the Southern Region of the Diocese of Brisbane, replacing Geoffrey Smith who was had become general manager of the diocese. As part of her ministry, she looked after 47 parishes stretching from the south of the Brisbane River down to Coolangatta, and she looked after 14 schools run by the Diocese.
Taylor was formally farewelled from her ministry on 2 December 2017 and was succeeded by John Roundhill. She returned to Melbourne to take up doctoral studies on the theology related to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Taylor is married to Trevor and has one daughter.