“…African countries show commonality in intense deforestation (Bartley and Bergesen, 1997;Burns et al, 1994Burns et al, , 2003Kick et al, 1996), low emissions quantification (Bartley and Bergesen, 1997;Prew, 2010), and colonialism (Bartley and Bergesen, 1997;Burns et al, 1994;Kick et al, 1996). These commonalities -largely precipitated by capitalism, the social system, and the environment -are realities so heavily intertwined that it is impossible to draw out or separate the effect of any one, and they were identified by the African Union when it mandated that the African Union Commission come up with a common 'African strategy' on climate change (Faiyetole and Adesina, 2017;Hahn, 2008). Carlson (2011) and Hall (1986Hall ( , 1987Hall ( , 1989 articulate world-systems theory in relation to external, indigenous-oriented phenomena as they relate to the research on frontiers, and they argue that externality is a natural unintended consequence -positive or negative -of any social system.…”