Humanity & Society

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Background and history

At the 1976 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association (ASA), the founding organizational meeting of the Association for Humanist Sociology was held. [1] [8] The president of the ASA, Alfred McClung Lee, having run into resistance against his efforts to reform the ASA, organized the formation of the AHS to be distinct and outside of the structure of the ASA. The first issue of The Humanist Sociologist newsletter was published later that year, and the first issue of the Humanity & Society journal was published in 1977, the only issue published that year. Beginning in 1978, the journal was published quarterly.

With the journal's focus outside of mainstream sociology, article themes have included "human liberation", "unity and coalition building", "analysis of oppression and inequality", "studies of specific minority and disadvantaged minority groups" and "social change". [8]

The journal would also inform potential contributors that, "authors of articles will be asked to include information as to the primary moral and/or value commitments, as well as their commitments to any particular sociological paradigm ... [and] 'domain assumptions' that undergird their analyses." [1]

The first editor of the journal was sociologist Charles P. Flynn. Although Al and Betty Lee never exercised control or edited the journal, it reflected their concern for issues of injustice, human suffering and social activism. [1] The quarterly The Humanist Sociologist newsletter was initially developed and edited by Richard H.Wells. [9]

A review of the first two years of Humanity & Society published in the Contemporary Sociology journal described how it seeks "to redraw the domain of sociological discourse, theoretically, philosophically, substantively, or ethically. They challenge the status quo and the dominant tendency of current publications. Thus they are more difficult to evaluate by conventional standards." According to this review, the journal and a couple journals like it show that the field of humanistic and interactionist sociology are active fields of inquiry, after neglect on the part of the major journals in sociology. The journal was described as having opened up previously restricted channels for qualitative sociologists to publish their empirical work. [10]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Marginality and Dissent in Twentieth-Century American Sociology: The Case of Elizabeth Briant Lee and Alfred McClung Lee; John F. Galliher, James M. Galliher; SUNY Press, 1995; Pgs. 103-106
  2. humanistic sociology; A Dictionary of Sociology. Encyclopedia.com; January 5, 2017
  3. Humanity & Society; SAGE Publications overview; August, 2014
  4. Sociology for whom?; Alfred McClung Lee; Oxford University Press, 1978; Pg. 61-62
  5. The Humanity & Society Distinguished Paper Award; Association for Humanist Sociology website; retrieved 2016
  6. Radical Sociologists and the Movement: Experiences, Lessons, and Legacies; Martin Oppenheimer, Martin J. Murray, Rhonda F. Levine; Temple University Press, 2008; Pgs. 15, 37-42
  7. The Humanist Sociologist; Association for Humanist Sociology website; retrieved 2016
  8. 1 2 Public Sociology: The Contemporary Debate; edited by Lawrence T. Nichols; Transaction Publishers 2011; Pgs. 41-72
  9. Sociology for People: Toward a Caring Profession; Alfred McClung Lee; Syracuse University Press, 1990; Pgs. 202
  10. Review: Thoughts On Five New Journals And Some Old Ones; Malcolm Spector, Robert R. Faulkner; Contemporary Sociology Vol. 9, No. 4, July, 1980, Pgs 477-482; American Sociological Association