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"The mission of the Professor Bassey Andah
Foundation is to perpetuate Professor Bassey Andah's far
reaching humanistic and scholarly ideals in the fields of
Anthropology, Archaeology, History, The Sciences and in the
Study of Man and Human Societies".
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His Education & Qualifications
Honours & Distinctions
Research interest
Publication & works
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The Professor
Bassey Andah
is in the process of establishing an African
Tourism Network. In this respect, it will work with the
Cross River State Tourism Bureau...
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Was born in Calabar on
January 6th 1942. He had his early education in
different parts of Nigeria and his secondary education
in the famous Government College Umuahia. He took his
first degree in Ibadan under the ages of the University
of London and an M Phil degree from University of
London, Institute of Archaeology and his PHD in
Anthropology, with specialisation in Physical
Anthropology from University of California, LA. he
lecture in the States, Ghana, Nigeria and carried out
extensive field work in West Africa as well as
participated in excavations in Europe.
Bassey
Andah was the third President of WAC elected at the
Congress in Delhi in 1994, and he held this position
until his death in December 1997.
Bassey, a
Nigerian, completed his doctoral studies in Berkeley in
the early 1970s and was appointed Professor of the
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology at the
University of Ibadan in 1985. He promoted and developed
a strong independent identity for the study of
archaeology in Africa, and he was critical of the
colonial context in which expatriate archaeologists had
taught and researched in Africa. In his own area of
research he focused on West Africa and issues of
Agriculture and cultivation. He was interested in the
development of cultural resources management which he
considered was a means of linking the past with the
present. For over 20 years from 1978 he edited the West
African Journal of Archaeology. Bassey was an educator
and theorist, and he published more than 70 journal
articles and chapters in books, as well as writing four
books. He co-authored six books on African archaeology.
From
the first WAC Conference in Southampton in 1986 when he
spoke out against apartheid, Bassey had been a
significant voice in WAC. He was selected to serve on
the WAC Steering Committee during 1986/87, a significant
time in the establishment of the organisation. He
actively promoted the study of African archaeology, and
at the second international Congress in 1990 he proposed
the strengthening of African representation within WAC.
Bassey was instrumental in the actions that led to the
extension of membership to South Africans, and at the
1993 InterCongress meeting, South Africa was admitted to
the WAC Councils Electoral College. As a mark of respect
for his significant contribution to African archaeology,
and to the development of WAC, the first Bassey.
Andah
Memorial Lecture was held at WAC in Cape Town in 1999.
(The
information for this summary was sourced from the
publication of the text of the Bassey Andah First
Memorial Lecture: A Tribute to the Life and work of
Professor Bassey Andah by Thurstan Shaw, Peter Ucko and
Kelvin MacDonald, Textflow Limited, Ibadan,
Nigeria 1999.
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