1950s in sociology
The following events related to sociology occurred in the 1950s.
1950
1951
1952
- Sociology is banned by communist authorities in China and is labeled as a bourgeois pseudoscience.
- Hans Jurgen Eysenck's Scientific Study of Personality is published.
- Melville J. Herskovits's Economic Anthropology: A study in Comparative Economics is published.
- Robert E. Park's Human Communities is published.
- Talcott Parsons' and Edward Shils' Towards a general theory of action is published.
- Philippine Sociological Society is founded as a non-stock, non-profit professional association that is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
- Alfred Radcliffe-Brown's The Structure and Function of Primitive Society is published.
- Dorothy Swaine Thomas' The Salvage is published.
- Dorothy Swaine Thomas serves as the first woman president of the American Sociological Association.
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
- Simone De Beauvoir's The Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter is published.
- Georges Gurvitch's The Spectrum of Time is published.
- Fritz Heider's The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations is published.
- David Lockwood's Blackcoated worker : a study in class consciousness is published.
- Helen Merrell Lynd's On Shame and the Search for Identity is published.
- C. Wright Mills's The Causes of World War 3 is published.
- Gunnar Myrdal's Beyond the Welfare State is published.
- Irene B. Taeuber's The Population of Japan is published.
- Richard Titmuss' Essays on the Welfare State is published.
- Michael Young's The Rise of the Meritocracy, 1870–2023: An Essay On Education and Equality is published.
- The Jewish Journal of Sociology is established in London, Maurice Freedman becomes the first editor.
1959
Deaths
See also