Author: Flourish Itulua Abumere Organization: Staffordshire University Department of sociology Faculty of Creative Art and Technology Stoke-On-Trent. Staffordshire. I022618c@staffs.ac.uk Introduction We live in a modern society today that is powerfully perturbing nevertheless full of the most superfluous usual pledge for the future. Modern day societies are saturated with revolution and transformation which is manifested by deep social and political conflicts, nervousness and social divisions, as well as by the negative impact of modern technology on environment. How did this come about? Why are our situations of life so dissimilar from those of our forefathers? What trend will change take in the future? These questions are some of the most important worries of sociology, a field of study that always has an essential role to play in contemporary intellectual culture (Haralambos & Holborn, 2008). Sociology is one of a number of social sciences (including economics, psychology and human geography) which endeavor to elucidate, give details and understand the actions of human beings in society. Distinct from some social sciences (such as economics) it is not subject to one particular area of life such as the economy. Certainly, sociologists have studied an enormous and various sorts of topics including food, shopping, family, popular music, gender and sexuality, the body, ethnic conflict, globalization, poverty, sport, science, health, race, drug use, inequality, criminal justices, war religion, migration, death, colonialism, housework, political issues, technology,