Eleanor Harriet Bernert Sheldon (March 19, 1920 – May 8, 2021)[1][2] was an American sociologist who was president of the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) from 1972 to 1979,[3] and was one of the key pioneers in the use of social indicators in sociology.[4] In the 1970s, as multinational corporations recognized the need to appoint women to their boards of directors, Sheldon became the first woman to serve on the boards of several major companies, including Citibank, Mobil, Heinz, and Equitable Holdings.[5]
Sheldon was born as Eleanor Harriet Bernert on March 19, 1920, in Hartford, Connecticut[17] to M.G. and Fannie (Myers) Bernert. She had 2 children named John Anthony Sheldon and James Sheldon Jr to James Sheldon Sr.
^Land, Kenneth C.; Ferriss, Abbott L. (2007), "The Sociology of Social Indicators", in Bryant, Clifton D.; Peck, Dennis L. (eds.), 21st Century Sociology: A Reference Handbook, Sage Publications, p. 1174 (electronic edition), ISBN9781506320212, Albert D. Biderman, Otis Dudley Duncan, Albert Reiss, Jr., and Eleanor Bernert Sheldon, who played major roles in the emergence and development of the field of social indicators in the 1960s and 1970s
^University of Chicago Magazine, vol. 69, Summer 1977, ELEANOR BERNERT SHELDON, PhD'49, was among those honored at a banquet held in honor of women directors of corporations.
Rudolph E. Morris (June 1958), The American Catholic Sociological Review 19 (2): 156–157, doi:10.2307/3709390
Clyde V. Kiser (July 1958), Asia and Future World Leadership, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 318: 199–200, JSTOR1032272
P. P. (July–September 1958), Population 13 (3): 529–530, doi:10.2307/1525447