Leon Radzinowicz Explained

Sir Leon Radzinowicz
Order:1st
Office:Wolfson Professor of Criminology
Term Start:1959
Term End:1973
Order2:1st
Office2:Director of the Cambridge Institute of Criminology
Term Start2:1959
Term End2:1972
Birth Date:15 August 1906
Death Place:Haverford, Pennsylvania, United States
Resting Place:Ascension Parish Burial Ground, Cambridge, England
Spouse:
    Children:Two

    Sir Leon Radzinowicz, (15 August 1906 – 29 December 1999) was a criminologist and academic. He was the founding director of the Institute of Criminology at the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge.[1]

    Early life

    Radzinowicz was born on 15 August 1906 in Łódź, Congress Poland.[2] He studied law as an undergraduate student at the University of Paris and the University of Geneva. He went on to study for a doctorate at the University of Cracow. During this time, he spent a year studying under Enrico Ferri at the Institute of Criminology in Rome, Italy. Radzinowicz moved to England in 1938, having been granted funding by the Polish Ministry of Justice to study the English legal system.

    Academic career

    During World War II, Radzinowicz established the Department of Criminal Science in the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge.[3] From 1949 to 1959, Radzinowicz was Director of the Department of Criminal Science, University of Cambridge. In 1959, he founded the Institute of Criminology at the Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge.[4] In 1959, he became the first Wolfson Professor of Criminology at the Institute of Criminology. Radzinowicz made a major contribution to the study of criminology by his research in the trends of legal thought which led to modern concepts in the administration of justice which were adopted in many of the democratic countries. Among his most significant works are History of English Criminal Law (4 vols. 1948–68), In Search of Criminology (1961), The Need for Criminology (1965), and Ideology and Crime (1966). Radzinowicz also wrote an autobiography, Adventures in Criminology (1999).[5]

    Death

    On 29 December 1999, Radzinowicz died in Haverford, Pennsylvania, United States. He was aged 93.[6] He is buried with his third wife in the Ascension Parish Burial Ground in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England.[7]

    Personal life

    Radzinowicz had married three times. He married Irena Szereszewska in 1933; they divorced in 1955. He was married to Mary Ann Nevins from1958 to 1979. They had two children: Ann and William. In 1979, he married Isolde Klarmann (née Doerenburg; 11 October 1915 – 2 February 2011). Radzinowicz converted to Christianity from Judaism prior to World War II.[8]

    Honours

    In the 1970 New Years Honours, Radzinowicz was appointed a Knight Bachelor in recognition of his work at the University of Cambridge. On 24 February 1970, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II during a ceremony at Buckingham Palace. In 1973, he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA).[9] On 13 April 1999, he was appointed an honorary Queen's Counsel (QC).[10]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. http://www.crim.cam.ac.uk/about/history/ Institute of Criminology - History of the Institute
    2. Hood. Roger. Leon Radzinowicz 1906–1999. Proceedings of the British Academy. 2001. 111. 637–55. 3 May 2023. The British Academy.
    3. Web site: Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge . ART UK . ART UK . 11 February 2021.
    4. Web site: Institute History. Institute of Criminology. University of Cambridge. 2 December 2015. 2014.
    5. Web site: Sir Leon Radzinowicz . Jewish Virtual Library . Jewish Virtual Library . 11 February 2021.
    6. News: Ravo. Nick. Leon Radzinowicz, 93, Leader in Criminology. 2 December 2015. The New York Times. 10 January 2000.
    7. Book: Goldie. Mark. A Guide to Churchill College, Cambridge. 2009. 62–63.
    8. Web site: Sir Leon Radzinowicz . Jewish Virtual Library . Jewish Virtual Library . 11 February 2021.
    9. Web site: RADZINOWICZ, Sir Leon, QC (15/08/1906-29/12/1999). British Academy Fellows. British Academy. 2 December 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208094012/http://www.britac.ac.uk/fellowship/directory/dec.cfm?member=2335. 8 December 2015.
    10. News: Crown Office. 2 December 2015. The London Gazette. 55464. 21 April 1999.