02-04-94 Ron Huff to Direct Public Policy School HUFF TO DIRECT OHIO STATE'S PUBLIC POLICY SCHOOL COLUMBUS -- C. Ronald Huff has been named director of The Ohio State University School of Public Policy and Management, one of the nation's leading schools of public affairs and public administration. The Ohio State Board of Trustees appointed Huff Friday (2/4) to the post through June 1997. Huff, a nationally known specialist on crime and criminal justice policy, is director of the Criminal Justice Research Center at Ohio State and a professor who teaches courses on criminal and juvenile justice and human relations. He has written or co-written eight books, including The Gang Intervention Handbook, published last year; and the 1990 book Gangs in America, as well as more than 50 scholarly papers and monographs. "We're delighted that a scholar of Dr. Huff's stature is willing to take on leadership responsibilities," said Joseph A. Alutto, dean of the College of Business. "He has a unique blend of commitment to scholarship and public service that is essential to the programs within the School of Public Policy and Management." Former director Astrid E. Merget, senior adviser to Donna Shalala, secretary of health and human services, said of Huff: "He has great intellectual skill, a marvelous personal style of leadership and a grasp of the trends going on in our field. He has the support and confidence of the faculty, staff, students and alumni." A faculty member for 20 years, 15 at Ohio State, Huff said his new post provides a challenge to be more involved in the leadership and management of the school. "The most important thing is having the confidence of my colleagues," he said. "To have them vote for me as director of the school is very gratifying." The school has been ranked consistently among the top 15 out of the 220 schools of public policy and management in the country by rating organizations and among the top eight public institutions. Huff said, "We have a very competent staff, high quality faculty and very bright students. It's a tough combination to beat. We've developed a remarkable degree of integration, both intellectually and operationally." The Ohio State school has 10.4 full-time-equivalent faculty members and 200 students, 33 in the doctoral program and the rest about evenly divided among two master's degree programs: the Master of Arts for professionals in the field and the Master of Public Administration for full-time students without significant management or policy experience. The faculty have attracted many grants to research issues for federal, state and local government agencies. The school offers a number of other public services including workshops for first-year legislators, policy round-table discussions, and continuing education programs for practicing public administrators and managers. "The school's programs demonstrate the university's commitment to helping federal, state and local governments with their problems. This is especially important here in Ohio's capital city," he said. Huff has taught at the University of California at Irvine and Purdue University; worked in corrections, mental health and children's services; and served as a consultant to such agencies as the U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, the FBI National Academy and the State of Hawaii, and to Price Waterhouse. His recent honors include the Donald R. Cressey Award for Significant Contributions to Criminology and Justice from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency and the Paul Tappan Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Field of Criminology from the Western Society of Criminology. Huff has a doctorate in sociology from Ohio State, a Master of Social Work degree from the University of Michigan and a bachelor's degree in psychology from Capital University. Huff succeeds Merget who is working on integrating services in the Department of Health and Human Services and other agencies and developing strategies for implementing recommendations from the National Performance Review for reinventing government. Merget has a leave of absence from Ohio State and plans on returning to the faculty in 1995. The School of Public Policy and Management began 25 years ago as a division in the college and acquired its current status in 1974. # Contact: C. Ron Huff, (614) 292-4544. Written by Tom Spring. [Submitted by: REIDV (reidv@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 04 Feb 1994 15:27:20 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.