Sheldon Glueck and Eleanor Glueck (respectively, born Aug. 15, 1896, Warsaw, Pol., Russian Empire—died March 10, 1980, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.; born April 12, 1898, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—died Sept. 25, 1972, Cambridge, Mass.) were American criminologists and researchers at Harvard Law School. This husband-and-wife team’s numerous studies of criminal behaviour and of the results of correctional treatment profoundly influenced criminal justice, both legislatively and administratively.
Sheldon Glueck went to the United States from his native Poland in 1903 and was naturalized in 1920. He studied at Georgetown University, National University Law School (LL.B.), and Harvard University (M.A., Ph.D.) and taught at Harvard from 1925 to 1963, becoming professor emeritus in 1963. Eleanor Touroff graduated from Barnard College in 1919 and entered the New York School of Social Work, from which she took a diploma in 1921. At Harvard, where she enrolled in the Graduate School of Education, she met Glueck. The two were married in 1922. The following year Eleanor Glueck received a master’s degree in education and in 1925 a doctorate. That year she became a research criminologist in the department of social ethics at Harvard. In 1928 Eleanor moved to the Harvard Law School as a research assistant in the Crime Survey; the next year her husband joined the faculty of the law school as assistant professor, and in 1930 Eleanor Glueck was given a regular faculty appointment. From 1925 they jointly researched criminal character and behavior.
Encouraged by Richard C. Cabot of the Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, the Gluecks undertook a detailed study of former inmates of the Massachusetts Reformatory, publishing their thoroughly documented findings as 500 Criminal Careers (1930), a pioneering work in the field. Follow-up studies of the same men were published as Later Criminal Careers (1937) and Criminal Careers in Retrospect (1943). The parallel study Five Hundred Delinquent Women (1934), conducted at the Massachusetts Reformatory for Women, together with One Thousand Juvenile Delinquents: Their Treatment by Court and Clinic (1934) and Juvenile Delinquents Grown Up (1940) rounded out a body of work that constituted virtually the whole of extant scientific literature on criminals, the efficacy of various penal and rehabilitative theories, and recidivism.
Subsequent books by the Gluecks included Unraveling Juvenile Delinquency (1950), in which they published their controversial Social Prediction Tables by which they claimed potential delinquents could be identified by the age of six, Delinquents in the Making (1952), Physique and Delinquency (1956), Predicting Delinquency and Crime (1959), Family Environment and Delinquency (1962), Ventures in Criminology (1964), Delinquents and Nondelinquents in Perspective (1968), Toward a Topology of Juvenile Offenders: Implications for Therapy and Prevention (1970), and Identification of Predelinquents (1972). The Gluecks shared numerous honours for their work.