Публичная социология: Обзор тенденций / Телемост с Майклом Буравым ПУБЛИЧНАЯ СОЦИОЛОГИЯ: ОБЗОР ТЕНДЕНЦИЙ / Телемост с Майклом Буравым Public sociology in review / Telebridge with Michael Burawoy; Higher school of economics (Moscow, Russia) – University of California (Berkeley, USA), 18 December 2009 Майкл Буравой Выдающийся американский социолог, в настоящее время профессор Университета Калифорнии, Беркли, на XVII Всемирном социологическом конгрессе был избран президентом Международной социологической ассоциации на период 2010–2014 гг. <...> Майкл Буравой наиболее известен как автор работы «Производство согласия: Изменения в трудовом процессе в условиях монополистического капитализма» (1979). <...> Отстаивая концепцию «публичной социологии», Буравой акцентирует свое внимание на том, каким образом социология как тип знания внедряется в публичную сферу, становится общественным достоянием. <...> Среди последних публикаций: «Что случилось с рабочим классом?» (2002), «Приватное беспокойство и публичные проблемы» (2007), Калифорнии» (2008). «Публичная социология в Participants MB – Michael Burawoy, University of California NP – Nikita Pokrovsky, HSE Q – Questions from HSE MA students. 405 MB: What I want to do is to give an introduction to public sociology based on my own experience and then more abstractly so you have a sense of its genesis and then we can have a discussion about its relevance for Russia. <...> I was invited to join a boat full of Russian sociologists going down the Volga river for 10 days – it was a wonderful trip and introduced me to Russian sociology – many of these sociologists, of course, were working in large enterprises and so were very applied sociologists. 1990 was a very exciting year in the history of the Soviet Union, it was just about the end although at that time we did not know it. <...> I had been to the Soviet Union before but this was the first time I had a chance to speak to sociologists on an informal basis. <...> But I was invited in 1990 after the boycott had been lifted to go and address sociologists in South Africa. <...> What <...>