Werner Cohn | |
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Born | 1926 Berlin, Germany |
Died | |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | New School for Social Research (PhD, 1956) |
Thesis | The Political Alignments of American Jews |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Sociology |
Sub-discipline | sociology of Jews and Romani people, political sociology |
Institutions | University of British Columbia |
Werner Cohn (1926 – October 19, 2018) was a sociologist who wrote on the sociology of Jews and of Romani people, and political sociology. He was a Professor Emeritus at the University of British Columbia.
Born in Berlin, Germany, Cohn received his BSS in Sociology from City College (New York) in 1951. He completed his MA (1954) and PhD (1956) at the New School for Social Research. He joined the University of British Columbia's Department of Anthropology and Sociology in 1960 and remained there until taking early retirement in 1986. Cohn's research focused on the sociology of Jews and small political movements, and he developed an interest in researching Romani people. He began his research on this topic in 1966/67 during a sabbatical in France. He continued with his studies of the Romani culture and language and returned to Europe meeting with Romani groups and with many well known scholars of the Romani. Over the years Cohn wrote numerous articles on the Romani in various scholarly journals and in 1973 he wrote The Gypsies which summarized his findings in the field.[1] He died in Brooklyn, New York in 2018.[2]