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Collegium Budapest Social Science Project
Collegium Budapest Social Science Project
newly
published |
Supported by the European Commission Collegium
Budapest,
a European Centre of Excellence, launched an ambitious project entitled 'The
State of Three Social Science Disciplines in Central and Eastern Europe' (acronym:
SSCEE). The project attracted the interest of social scientists in Western
and Eastern European countries alike and in April 2001 obtained support
from the EU Fifth Framework Programme: 'Improving Human Research Potential
and the Socio-Economic Knowledge Base' - Accompanying Measures. |
Assessing the 'state of the art' is a necessary step
towards the construction of an operational network of social scientists in
Europe on the way to integration. The rector of Collegium Budapest invited
Max Kaase (International University, Bremen) to lead the project, with the
assistance of Vera Sparschuh (in collaboration with GESIS-IZ, Berlin).
Although several efforts have been undertaken to
analyse the situation of the social sciences in CEE, a truly comprehensive
'orientation map' concerning the East European research area is still
missing. The project initiated by Collegium Budapest can therefore be
regarded as an important step towards establishing pertinent features of
this map and paving the way to the creation of an extensive overview.
In
October 2001 an interim workshop took place to unite all the participants
for a first exchange of ideas and discussion of the national reports by
discipline and country. The rapporteurs were asked to address the
following topics in their articles: analysis of the situation before the
transformation (until 1989); status and development of the discipline
1990-2000, from both the synchronic and the diachronic perspective;
thematic orientation; core theoretical and methodological approaches, core
research methods; international co-operation; funding situation; ideas
about further development.
In
January 2002 the final conference of the SSCEE project was held in
Budapest. Collegium Budapest convened scholars representing economics,
political science and sociology from ten Central and Eastern Europe
accession countries. Each country was represented by a rapporteur of the
discipline report and by a discussant from the same country and discipline.
This constellation (e. g. different institutional and generational views)
made a profound discussion possible. Representatives from other
disciplines - demography, ethnography, history, geography - also gave an
assessment of the development of their disciplines and East-West
cooperation during the last decade.
The
January conference produced a truly comparative and interdisciplinary
assessment of the state of the social sciences in Central and Eastern
Europe and contributed to creation and promotion of an integrated European
research network. It helped to link people from different countries,
institutional backgrounds and disciplines.
The two conferences were also intended to further
dissemination of ideas and results. Conference papers constituted a handbook
comprising all
country and disciplinary reports for those who are interested in the state
of social sciences in Central and Eastern Europe. The conference volume
was edited by Collegium Budapest and Informationszentrum Sozialwissenschaften. It was
published in autumn 2002 under the title “Three Social
Science Disciplines in Central and Eastern Europe. Handbook on economics,
political science and sociology (1989-2001)”. The contents of the
handbook will be made accessible on the Internet and it will be further
developed as 'work-in-progress' to serve the social science community in
Europe after the termination of the project.
GESIS-IZ has launched
a special e-mail list for all the handbook collaborators and interested
scientific community to provide an opportunity of further networking as
well as to keep the handbook collaborators informed on the internet
handbook and to support exchange of ideas and discussions concerning
social sciences in Eastern Europe.
© GESIS Wolfgang Mallock 2007-06-12
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