02075nam a22001577a 4500999001900000008004100019100002600060245006400086260002800150300003200178520155100210773002801761906001401789942000701803952010701810 c524603d524603240102b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aChauhan, Abha 947495 aHundred years of sociology in India: Mapping the trajectory aSociological Bulletin  a72(3), Jul, 2023: p.247-261 aHundred years is not a very long time in the journey of any discipline. Yet, sociology in India seems to have covered a considerable distance in a comparatively short time as the country witnessed unprecedented incidents in the 19th and 20th centuries of colonial rule, the rise of nationalism leading to India’s independence and subsequent efforts at development and nation-building. The works of the British administrators, orientalists, missionaries, and Western scholars earlier, and of the Indian pioneers and other sociologists soon after provided fertile ground for the establishment of sociology in India. The first department of sociology and civics was started in 1919 at Bombay University and since then there has been no looking back as the subject has been established well in the country, academically, and professionally. Besides the role of educational institutions and government bodies, the Indian Sociological Society (ISS) set up in 1951 provided a platform for scholars from across the country and outside to discuss, debate, share and write about contemporary issues. As the context of Indian society changed, the subject matter, methods, theoretical perspectives and debates around the discipline also went through a transformation. This article is an attempt at mapping the trajectory of 100 years of sociology in India and discerning its status as an academic discipline, as well as its relevance for policy-making, and for society at large.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00380229231172093  aSociological Bulletin  aSOCIOLOGY cAR 00102ddc40709399658aIIPAbIIPAd2024-01-02h72(3), Jul, 2023: p.247-261pAR130435r2024-01-02yAR