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Mkurtar F A N E N David
  • ID 7 Area A Ibrahim Dabo crescent ABU Zaria kaduna state Nigeria.
  • +234 7050678641
This paper emphasize the past ways of life of Ungwan Katafawa people in terms of agriculture, economy, industrial revolution which highlights that they were iron smelters, professional barbers, and farmers, this paper also emphasize on... more
This paper emphasize the past ways of life of Ungwan Katafawa people in terms of agriculture, economy, industrial revolution which highlights that they were iron smelters, professional barbers, and farmers, this paper also emphasize on their settlement pattern and burial system this deployed the highest level of cognitive theory for the reconstruction of Ungwan Katafawa culture.
This work is not actually an individual work but this work was done by CampB Team Red department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies ABU Zaria Nigeria, this work emphasize alot on Ungwan Katafawa abandoned settlement. The priority of this... more
This work is not actually an individual work but this work was done by CampB Team Red department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies ABU Zaria Nigeria, this work emphasize alot on Ungwan Katafawa abandoned settlement. The priority of this research is educate the public on this past ways of life of Ungwan Katafawa people and their relationship with their natural environment through the material evidence recovered on this site, this research has a strong background of Ungwan Katafawa people.
World-system theory is a macrosociological perspective that seeks to explain the dynamics of the "capitalist world economy" as a "total social system". Its first major articulation, and classic example of this approach, is associated with... more
World-system theory is a macrosociological perspective that seeks to explain the dynamics of the "capitalist world economy" as a "total social system". Its first major articulation, and classic example of this approach, is associated with Immanuel Wallerstein, who in 1974 published what is regarded as a seminal paper, The Rise and Future Demise of the World Capitalist System: Concepts for Comparative Analysis. In 1976 Wallerstein published The Modern World System I: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century. This is Wallerstein's landmark contribution to sociological and historical thought and it triggered numerous reactions, and inspired many others to build on his ideas. Because of the main concepts and intellectual building blocks of world-system theory-which will be outlined later-, it has had a major impact and perhaps its more warm reception in the developing world.