ABSTRACT

This classic book, available in paperback for the first time, is based on a 1962 study of the American Chemical Society, one of the great U. S. scientific societies. The society has a membership educated in the fundamental scientific field of chemistry, whose knowledge and talents are essential to modem industrial civilization. Without chemistry, we would have neither automobiles, nuclear devices, nor all the varied products essential to our modern way of life.Chemists are caught up in the dynamic changes in our society. The explosive advance of scientific knowledge leads to increasing specialization until experts in one field may have little in common with those in another. Also, as the knowledge and skills of chemistry are incorporated in the workaday world of industry, more and more trained chemists spend their days in routine application and organization of their skills and knowledge.The unique element of this study is its assessment of the role and function of a professional society for its members. Not much is known of how professionals feel about their societies, what they expect of them, or how they function for their members.Such studies assume increasing importance as the trend toward professionalization incorporates more specialized skills and as the members of these professions look increasingly to their societies for assistance in establishing their rights and privileges vis-a-vis the rest of society. This remains a unique effort at professional ethnography.

part I|48 pages

A Science Profession

chapter chapter ii|13 pages

How the Study was Made

chapter chapter iii|9 pages

Chemistry in its Organizational Context

chapter chapter iv|13 pages

Major Groups within Chemistry

part II|89 pages

The Chemist's Work World

chapter chapter v|24 pages

Recruitment into Chemistry

chapter chapter vi|31 pages

Careers for Chemists

chapter chapter vii|18 pages

The Chemist's Work Morale

chapter chapter viii|14 pages

How Others See Chemists

part III|91 pages

Professional Status and Professional Society

chapter chapter ix|31 pages

Imageries of Professional Status

chapter chapter xi|18 pages

The Symbolization of Homogeneity and Diversity

chapter chapter xii|13 pages

A Concluding Note on Professions