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Session Submission Type: Invited Session (90 minute)
This session features papers about the circulation of sociological and social theoretical concepts and ideas across national and disciplinary boundaries; about the differences and relations between national and international optics on the history of sociology and social theory; about international processes and agencies involved in the shaping of sociology and social science through professionalization, institutionalization, and other means; and about the role of nationalism, colonialism, empire, international political movements, and globalization in shaping sociology and social thought.
Humanist Settlers: The University as a Territorial Project - Adi Livne, Visiting Assistant Prof., Jewish Studies, Middlebury College
Social Scientists Learning from History: How Their Ideas Changed the Multilateral Governance of (De-)colonization from the Mandate Commission to the Trusteeship Council - Gregoire Mallard, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
Inventing the Credential Society in Cold-War America - Mitchell L. Stevens, Stanford University
The Transnational Circulation in and of Weimar’s Sociology - Stephan Moebius, Professor of Sociology, University of Graz (Austria)