| 8/6/07
-- Juvenile justice expert and researcher Hunter Hurst III
has announced his plans to retire in 2008 after 34 years as
Director of the National Center for Juvenile Justice (NCJJ),
located in Pittsburgh, Pa. The NCJJ is the nation’s
only non-profit research organization concentrating solely
on the juvenile justice system and the prevention of juvenile
delinquency and child abuse and neglect. The NCJJ, with its
staff of 30 conducting legal, applied, and systems research,
is the research division of the National Council of Juvenile
and Family Court Judges.
Hunter
Hurst has served as NCJJ’s Director since the Center’s
founding in 1973, and is widely known in the juvenile justice
research field for his leadership and innovation. Before joining
NCJJ, Hurst served as Director of Intake, East Baton Rouge
Parish, Louisiana Family Court, and Director of Survey and
Planning Services for the National Council on Crime and Delinquency
in Austin, Texas. A graduate of Louisiana State University
with both B.S. and M.S.W. degrees, he has directed more than
thirty applied research studies and authored numerous publications.
According
to Judge Maurice B. Cohill Jr., of Pittsburgh, who spearheaded
the creation of the Center in the 1970s and serves as Chair
of the Center’s Board of Fellows, “Hunter Hurst,
a native of Mississippi, gave up those southern roots and
came to us in Pittsburgh in 1973 as the first director, and,
indeed, the very first staff member of the newly established
National Center for Juvenile Justice. After a nationwide search,
we concluded he was the man for the job. How right we were!
From a tiny office hidden in the Law School of the University
of Pittsburgh and with a staff of four hired by him, he has
led the Center to become the internationally known research
organization that it is today. It can truly be said that ‘after
he was made, the mold was broken.’"
NCJFCJ
Executive Director Mary V. Mentaberry says of Hunter Hurst,
“His vision, dedication and leadership in the field
of juvenile justice will be greatly missed.”
The
NCJFCJ is conducting a nationwide search for a new NCJJ director.
For more information, please click
here.
|