ABSTRACT
Africa is generally believed to be the mother of mankind
supported both by archaeological findings [ Davidson, 1974]; and
biblical evidences [ Munroe, 2001]. The contribution of Africa to
early civilization is a clear testimony and reinforcement to this
claim. Some advancements in science and technology were first
made in Africa long before they were known in Europe. For
example, in Egypt the great engineering ingenuity of constructing
the pyramid of 250 meter by 250 meter base, the production of
paper, the development of mechanized irrigation, writing and
calendar. Also in the same ancient Egypt, advancement was
recorded in mathematics, and remarkable contribution to
architecture was made. Furthermore the Egyptian unprecedented
breakthrough in medical science in preservation of dead bodies for
thousands of years without decomposing still remains a mystery
even to the western world. The Mali empire in the 14th century was reputed to be one of the
largest, richest, and most powerful in the world. It is on record that
when Emperor Mansa of Mali visited Cairo in 1324 BC with such
a large quantity of gold, the price of gold was forced to fall
drastically and it took over twelve years after his visit for the price
of gold to recover in Egypt. The King of Ghana in the 11th century
was known to have a formidable army of 200,000 men. Among
other enviable contributions to early civilization was the Nok
Culture in Nigeria specializing in the working of terracotta.
The University of Sankore in Timbuctu was famous for her outstanding academic performance and one of the first universities in the world. Records had it that the earliest European visitors, the
Portuguese, met well organized societies in Africa. This
impression led to initial bilateral trading between Africans and
Europeans. The bilateral trading was short lived, and gave way to slavery
which led to Africans in diaspora to the tune of 12 millions able
bodied youths between 1441 and 1888.
The anguish of loss of the loved ones coupled with the deprivation
of 12 million manpower brought to a stand still development in
Africa while accelerating Europe and America in development.
African slaves developed agriculture in Britain and her principal
colony, America, and ushered in the industrialization age. This
brought about abolition of slave trade so that the African slaves
would not benefit from the new wealth production techniques. The
end of slave trade signaled the beginning of colonization in order
to remove forcefully raw materials from Africa to sustain
industries in Europe. These same people who took us out of history are now saying we
have no history; they robbed us of our wealth and say we are
synonymous with poverty; and they invaded our serenity and in
return call us salvage. It is true that colonization is abolished in Africa because it has
served it useful purpose, not because they loved us. This is
necessary to give way to another mode of depleting Africa of her
labour force. The new mode is called brain drain which is needed to
support the new economic system called knowledge economy in Europe and America.
T., E (2021). The Forward And Reverse Engineering Of Information Technology In An Emerging Economic System. Afribary. Retrieved from https://track.afribary.com/works/the-forward-and-reverse-engineering-of-information-technology-in-an-emerging-economic-system
T., Engr. "The Forward And Reverse Engineering Of Information Technology In An Emerging Economic System" Afribary. Afribary, 19 May. 2021, https://track.afribary.com/works/the-forward-and-reverse-engineering-of-information-technology-in-an-emerging-economic-system. Accessed 11 Mar. 2025.
T., Engr. . "The Forward And Reverse Engineering Of Information Technology In An Emerging Economic System". Afribary, Afribary, 19 May. 2021. Web. 11 Mar. 2025. < https://track.afribary.com/works/the-forward-and-reverse-engineering-of-information-technology-in-an-emerging-economic-system >.
T., Engr. . "The Forward And Reverse Engineering Of Information Technology In An Emerging Economic System" Afribary (2021). Accessed March 11, 2025. https://track.afribary.com/works/the-forward-and-reverse-engineering-of-information-technology-in-an-emerging-economic-system