German Sociological Association
The German Sociological Association (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie, DGS) organizes social scientists in Germany. It was founded January 3, 1909, at Berlin by its initiators Rudolf Goldscheid (1870–1931), Ferdinand Tönnies, Max Weber, Georg Simmel, et al. First president was Tönnies, forced out of office by the Nazis, 1933.
The DGS is still flourishing, with about 1800 members (2010).
Presidents and chairpersons of the DGS[1]
- Presidents
- 1909–1933 Ferdinand Tönnies
- 1933–1946 Hans Freyer – kept the Society dormant since 1934
- Chairpersons
- 1946–1955 Leopold von Wiese
- 1955–1959 Helmuth Plessner
- 1959–1963 Otto Stammer
- 1963–1967 Theodor W. Adorno
- 1967–1970 Ralf Dahrendorf
- 1970 Erwin K. Scheuch
- 1971–1974 M. Rainer Lepsius
- 1974–1978 Karl Martin Bolte
- 1979–1982 Joachim Matthes
- 1983–1986 Burkart Lutz
- 1987–1990 Wolfgang Zapf
- 1991–1992 Bernhard Schäfers
- 1993–1994 Lars Clausen
- 1995–1998 Stefan Hradil
- 1999–2002 Jutta Allmendinger
- 2003–2006 Karl-Siegbert Rehberg
- 2007–2011 Hans-Georg Soeffner
- 2011–2013 Martina Löw
- 2013– Stephan Lessenich
gollark: Without defined time zones fall back to basing it on the Sun's position (or extrapolated one).
gollark: On the moon.
gollark: There's a 28-day-ish day/night cycle.
gollark: No, you just have... longer hours?
gollark: Actually, come to think of it, you would probably need a pretty powerful microcontroller to hold and handle the whole database of time zone insanity.
References
- Wolfgang Glatzer: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie (DGS)
External links
- DGS - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie (in German; cf. the history in: Geschichte)
- 33rd Congress of the DGS, The Nature of Society, “Die Natur der Gesellschaft“), 2006
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.