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Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Africa: Ancient Wisdom for a Changing World

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Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Africa: Ancient Wisdom for a Changing World Across the African continent, Indigenous and local communities have developed deep environmental knowledge systems over thousands of years. This knowledge, often called Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), reflects a close relationship between people, land, water, animals, forests, and climate. It is knowledge rooted in observation, experience, spirituality, memory, and survival. Traditional ecological knowledge is not simply “old ways” of living. It is a living system of environmental understanding that has allowed communities to adapt to droughts, floods, changing seasons, and ecological challenges for generations. Today, as the world faces climate change, desertification, biodiversity loss, and food insecurity, many researchers and environmental organizations are recognizing the importance of Indigenous ecological wisdom. In many African societies, knowledge about the environment was passed down throu...

Capacity Building and Indigenous Knowledge: Strengthening What Already Exists The phrase “capacity building” is often used

Capacity Building and Indigenous Knowledge: Strengthening What Already Exists The phrase “capacity building” is often used in development work, education, environmental policy, and community organizing. It is commonly defined as helping people or communities become more capable and self-reliant over time. While this definition may sound positive, it can sometimes unintentionally suggest that communities lack knowledge or ability and must be “developed” by outside experts. Many Indigenous Peoples and local communities around the world challenge this assumption. Indigenous communities have long possessed deep systems of knowledge about ecology, agriculture, healing, governance, spirituality, and sustainable living. In many cases, the issue is not a lack of capacity, but whether existing knowledge is respected, supported, and protected. Indigenous Knowledge as Living Knowledge For thousands of years, Indigenous societies have developed sophisticated understandings of: land stewardship wat...

Capacity Building as Mutual Growth and Shared Productivity

Capacity Building as Mutual Growth and Shared Productivity The phrase “capacity building” is often used in education, international development, environmental work, business, and community organizing. Many people define it as improving skills, strengthening organizations, or helping communities become more effective. While these definitions are useful, capacity building can also be understood in a deeper and more human way: as the strengthening of mutual productivity through shared learning and collective growth. At its heart, capacity building is not simply one group teaching another. It is a process where people exchange ideas, experiences, labor, and wisdom so that everyone involved becomes stronger. Beyond One-Way Teaching Western traditional models treat capacity building as a top-down process in which “experts” transfer knowledge to communities. But in many real-world situations, learning flows in multiple directions. Farmers teach researchers about local soil conditions. Elders ...

Shifting the Climate Narrative: Dakar to Host the 1st African Meetings on Environmental Justice

  Shifting the Climate Narrative: Dakar to Host the 1st African Meetings on Environmental Justice ​As global climate discourse increasingly grapples with the limitations of top-down, crisis-driven frameworks, a definitive paradigm shift is taking root on the African continent. This November, Dakar, Senegal, will become the epicenter of this transformation. From November 24 to 26, 2026 , Cheikh Anta Diop University (UCAD) will host the landmark 1st African Meetings on Environmental Justice ( Premières Rencontres Africaines sur la Justice Environnementale ). ​Moving far beyond the boundaries of traditional, insular academic symposia, this milestone event is structured as an open, intersectional forum. It marks a deliberate effort to bridge the historical gap between rigorous scientific research and grassroots civic action, cultivating a uniquely African definition of ecological equity and territorial resilience. ​Rooting Justice in African Realities ​The foundational vision of t...

Saint-Louis, Senegal, St. Louis, Missouri, and Louisiana: A Shared History Across the Atlantic

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Saint-Louis, Senegal, St. Louis, Missouri, and Louisiana: A Shared History Across the Atlantic At first glance, Saint-Louis, St. Louis, and Louisiana may appear to have little in common besides similar names. One is a historic city in West Africa, another is a major American city on the Mississippi River, and the third is a southern U.S. state famous for jazz, Creole culture, and New Orleans. Yet these places are connected through a larger historical story: the rise of the French colonial empire and the creation of an Atlantic world linking Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, and North America. The Meaning Behind the Name “Saint Louis” Both Saint-Louis in Senegal and St. Louis, Missouri were named after Louis IX of France, a 13th-century French king later canonized by the Catholic Church. Known as Saint Louis, he became an important symbol of French monarchy and Christianity. French explorers and colonial administrators often named settlements after saints and French rulers as a way of exte...

Gaston Berger University: Environmental Studies, Ecology, and the Future of Sustainability in Senegal

Gaston Berger University: Environmental Studies, Ecology, and the Future of Sustainability in Senegal In the historic city of Saint-Louis, where the Senegal River meets the Atlantic world and Sahelian landscapes stretch inland, Université Gaston Berger has emerged as one of Senegal’s important centers for environmental studies, ecological research, and sustainable development. The university is deeply connected to the environmental realities of northern Senegal. Its researchers and students study water systems, biodiversity, agriculture, climate change, wetlands, coastal erosion, and the challenges facing communities across the Sahel. Rather than viewing ecology as an isolated scientific discipline, the university approaches environmental questions as part of everyday life, public policy, culture, and economic survival. Ecology in the Sahel The region surrounding Saint-Louis is environmentally significant and environmentally vulnerable at the same time. The area contains river systems,...

Ivory in West African Trade

Ivory was part of the trade connected to Saint-Louis and the broader West African trading system, although it was not as dominant in Senegal as it was in parts of Central and East Africa. Ivory in West African Trade Before and during the colonial era, ivory from elephants was highly valued because it could be carved into: Jewelry Religious objects Piano keys Decorative art Luxury goods Knife and tool handles Ivory moved through African trade networks long before Europeans arrived. Traders transported elephant tusks through caravan routes and river systems connecting inland regions to coastal ports. When French and other European merchants established trading posts along the West African coast, ivory became one of several export commodities shipped to Europe. Saint-Louis as a Trading Port As a river and Atlantic port city, Saint-Louis became part of a larger commercial system involving: Gum arabic Gold Animal hides Beeswax Textiles Enslaved people Ivory African hunters, traders, and car...