Sociology in Eastern Europe: Trends and Prospects release_5luh4bhxkfdmxlvnib43rrccka

by Bogdan Denitch

Published in Slavic Review: Interdisciplinary Quarterly of Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies by Cambridge University Press (CUP).

1971   Volume 30, Issue 02, p317-339

Abstract

The Seventh World Congress of Sociologists in Varna, Bulgaria, held in September 1970, marked a major stage in the development of social science, particularly sociology, in the one-party states of Eastern Europe. Taking place in the most orthodox country of an increasingly diverse bloc, the congress was characterized by the largest and best-organized participation to date of sociologists from Eastern Europe. One country in the area—Albania—did not participate at all; and Yugoslavia, which is probably the country with the most developed social science community and institutions, had a notably small delegation. Yet the fact is that for prestige reasons, if no other, the East European countries and the Soviet Union did their best to show the state of their current development of sociology. This was shown in both quantitative and qualitative terms. Most delegates presented papers.
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