This book represents the first comprehensive century-long history of the
disciplinary development of sociology in Serbia in English. It provides
an overview of the constitution of sociology as an academic discipline
during the interwar period, its reinstitutionalization after World War
II in entirely new social circumstances marked by establishment of
self-management socialism in Yugoslavia, and finally its development
during the turbulent postsocialist period. Divided into five chapters,
the focus of the book is on the challenges that sociology has faced in
order to maintain its institutional position, gain adequate social
recognition, and preserve its professional autonomy. Relying on
Bourdieu's concept of the academic field and Burawoy's typology of
Professional, Critical, Public and Policy sociology, the book seeks to
answer the question of how the sociological academic field in Serbia has
been constituted, structured and restructured, and in which of these
roles sociology has dominantly appeared in different phases of its
evolution.