Polish Sociological Association
The Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne is the main professional organization of sociologists in Poland. The PTS defines its mission as "supporting the development of sociology and popularizing sociological knowledge within society".
Currently the organization states to have approx. 1,000 members, out of which the majority are employed by universities or research institutions.
Full membership requires a degree in sociology, a related discipline, or any other discipline if the applicant has an established body of work in sociology. Undergraduate students and may register as associated members. Honorary members include James S. Coleman and Shmuel Eisenstadt.
Its seat is in Warsaw with regional offices in Białystok, Gdańsk, Katowice, Kraków, Lublin, Łódź, Opole, Poznań, Rzeszów, Szczecin, Toruń, Warszawa, Wrocław, and Zielona Góra.
The PTS publishes the quarterly English-language Polish Sociological Review. It also organizes the Polish Sociologocial Convention in irregular intervals that average about three years.
The PTS also operates a research institute offering social research services to public and private clients. The proceeds from its work contribute to the PTS budget.
History
In its present form, the PTS has had a continuous existence since 1956, but its history can be traced back to 1927, when Florian Znaniecki established the first Polish organization of sociologists under the name of "Polish Sociological Institute" '. Initially, the PIS combined the tasks of a research institute with the representation of sociologists across the country. In 1931, on the first ever national convention of sociologists in Poznań, separate professional organization under the name of Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne was created on Znaniecki's initiative. This association, one of the first of its type in Europe, co-existed with the PIS. Relatively little is known about its activities. Its first two presidents were Ludwik Krzywicki and Stefan Czarnowski. In 1935, PTS and PIS jointly organized the second Polish Sociologocial Convention in Warsaw. Both bodies existed until the outbreak of World War II in 1939. Towards the end of the war, in 1944 the PIS was reactivated in the Soviet-controlled part of the country, but not so the PTS; some of its previous tasks were reassigned to the new PIS.In 1951, sociology was declared a "bourgeois" science in Poland. All sociological university departments and institutes, including the PIS, were closed, their employees transferred to neighbouring disciplines such as philosophy or history.
After sociology had been readmitted to academic life in Poland in 1956, a group of sociologists at the universities of Warsaw and Łódź around Stanisław Ossowski set up a Sociological Section within the Polish Philosophical Association ', which became a member of the International Sociological Association .
The following year, the section transformed into an independent body, adopting the traditional name Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne. Ossowski was elected its first president, other founding board members included Nina Assorodobraj, Józef Chałasiński, Antonina Kłoskowska, Jan Lutyński, Stefan Nowak, Zygmunt Pióro, Jan Strzelecki and Jan Szczepański.
During the time of communist rule in Poland, while academic life was highly formalized, hierarchically structured, and subject to political pressure, the PTS remained fully autonomous from government intervention, making it an attractive venue for unrestricted scholarly as well as political debate. However, lack of government support also constituted a constant problem for the organizational work of the PTS; e.g., the first post-war national convention did not take place until 1965.
Conventions
The first convention had the title I Konferencja Socjologów Polskich, the second II Zjazd Socjologów Polskich. From the third event onwards, the title has been Ogólnopolski Zjazd Socjologiczny, with the addition of a vaguely defined overarching topic for papers and sessions as stated below.- 1931, Poznań - I Konferencji Socjologów Polskich
- 1935, Warsaw - II Zjazd Socjologów Polskich
- 1965, Warsaw - Obraz zmian w społeczeństwie polskim pod wpływem industrializacji i nowego ustroju
- 1969, Poznań - Teoria i badania socjologiczna a praktyka społeczna
- 1977, Kraków - Rozwój społeczeństwa polskiego a socjologia
- 1981, Łódź - Socjologia polska wobec problemów społecznych kraju
- 1986, Wrocław - Ziemie Odzyskane procesy integracji społecznej
- 1990, Toruń - Przełom i wyzwania. Teorie zmiany społecznej wobec wyzwań współczesności
- 1994, Lublin - Ludzie i instytucje. Stawanie się ładu społecznego
- 1997, Katowice - Śląsk Polska Europa. Zmieniające się społeczeństwo w perspektywie lokalnej i globalnej
- 2000, Rzeszów - Los i wybór. Dziedzictwo i perspektywy społeczeństwa polskiego.
- 2004, Poznań - Społeczne aspekty wstąpienia Polski do Unii Europejskiej
- 2006, Zielona Góra - Co nas łączy, co nas dzieli?''
Sections
- Sekcja Socjologii Pracy
- Sekcja Socjologii Wsi i Rolnictwa
- Sekcja Socjologii Nauki
- Sekcja Socjologii Dewiacji i Kontroli Społecznej
- Sekcja Socjologii Miasta
- Sekcja Antropologii Społecznej
- Sekcja Metodologii Badań Społecznych
- Sekcja Socjologii Jakościowej i Symbolicznego Interakcjonizmu
- Sekcja Socjologicznych Problemów Bezpieczeństwa Narodowego
- Sekcja Socjologii Medycyny
- Sekcja Pracy Socjalnej
- Sekcja Socjotechniki
- Sekcja Socjologii Prawa
- Sekcja Socjologii Religii
- Sekcja Historii Socjologii
- Sekcja Kół Naukowych PTS
- Sekcja Socjologii Młodzieży i Edukacji
Presidents
- 1957-1963 Stanisław Ossowski
- 1964-1968 Nina Assorodobraj
- 1969-1972 Władysław Markiewicz
- 1972-1976 Jerzy Szacki
- 1976-1983 Stefan Nowak
- 1983-1989 Janusz Ziółkowski
- 1989-1994 Antonina Kłoskowska
- 1994-1998 Antoni Sułek
- 1998-2002 Andrzej Kojder
- 2002-2005 Włodzimierz Wesołowski
- 2005- 2010 Piotr Gliński
- 2010-2017 Grażyna Skąpska
- 2017 Krzysztof T. Konecki