This new theory of crime over the life course provides an
important foundation for rethinking criminal justice policy. It is
based on the reanalysis of a classic set of data: Sheldon and
Eleanor Gluecks' mid-century study of 500 delinquents and 500
nondelinquents from childhood to adulthood. Several years ago,
Robert Sampson and John Laub dusted off sixty cartons of the
Gleucks' data that had been stored in the basement of the Harvard
Law School and undertook a lengthy process of recoding,
computerizing, and reanalyzing it. On the basis of their findings,
they developed a theory of informal social control that
acknowledges the importance of childhood behavior but rejects the
implication that adult social factors have little relevance. This
theory accounts for both stability and change in crime and deviance
throughout the life course.
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