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The Forest Creators: How West African Farmers Defied a Century of Conservation Dogma

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​ The Forest Creators: How West African Farmers Defied a Century of Conservation Dogma ​For more than a hundred years, international environmental policy in West Africa was built upon a definitive, tragic premise: that human population growth and indigenous farming were systematically destroying the region's ancient rainforests. ​Whenever colonial administrators, botanists, and twentieth-century conservationists gazed out across the transition zones of West Africa, they saw a deeply fragmented landscape. Clusters of dense, magnificent forest stood strictly around rural villages, completely surrounded by thousands of miles of dry, open grass savanna. ​To the Western scientific eye, the conclusion was obvious: the entire region was once an unbroken, primordial jungle, and local populations had chopped, burned, and farmed it down to these tiny "relic patches." ​But in 1996, anthropologists James Fairhead and Melissa Leach published a revolutionary study, Misreading the ...

The Invisible Hand of the Ancestors: How Sacred Traditions Engineered Living Landscapes

  The Invisible Hand of the Ancestors: How Sacred Traditions Engineered Living Landscapes ​For generations, Western conservation science operated under a foundational myth: that the earth's most biodiverse landscapes—from the dense canopies of the Amazon basin to the sacred forest groves of West Africa—were "pristine wildernesses." Under this colonial framework, these ecosystems were viewed as untouched paradises that survived only because they were kept isolated from the destructive hand of humanity. ​A quiet revolution in archaeology, soil science, and historical ecology has completely upended this narrative. ​Scientists are discovering that many of the world’s most biologically rich sacred sites are not accidental remnants of wild nature. They are anthropogenic —landscapes deliberately manufactured, enriched, and architected by human hands over centuries. Rather than mere passive protectors of the wild, indigenous communities have historically acted as the literal ...

Between the River and the Ocean: Life on the Langue de Barbarie

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Between the River and the Ocean: Life on the Langue de Barbarie When people first hear about the Langue de Barbarie, they often imagine a quiet sandbar stretching along the Atlantic coast. The reality is much more fascinating. This narrow strip of land is home to thousands of people and serves as one of the cultural and economic hearts of Saint-Louis, known locally as Ndar. The Langue de Barbarie is a remarkable geographical feature. On one side lies the Atlantic Ocean, and on the other flows the Senegal River. Between these two bodies of water, communities have built homes, raised families, practiced traditions, and developed a way of life that is closely tied to the sea. A Living Peninsula Unlike many coastal sandbars around the world, the Langue de Barbarie is densely populated. Streets, houses, schools, mosques, and businesses occupy this narrow ribbon of land. Residents live with the constant presence of water, and their daily lives are shaped by the rhythms of tides, fishing seas...

Saint-Louis (Ndar), Senegal: A City of Three Worlds Connected by Bridges

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Saint-Louis (Ndar), Senegal: A City of Three Worlds Connected by Bridges Few cities in West Africa have a geography as distinctive as Saint-Louis, known affectionately by many residents as Ndar. Sitting between the Senegal River and the Atlantic Ocean, Saint-Louis is not simply one city. It is a city of islands, sandbars, waterways, fishermen, merchants, students, artists, and families whose lives have been shaped by water for centuries. Many visitors are surprised to learn that Saint-Louis is traditionally divided into three main sections: the historic Island of Saint-Louis, the Langue de Barbarie, and Sor on the mainland. These areas are connected by bridges, creating a city that feels both unified and wonderfully diverse. To understand Saint-Louis, one must explore all three. A City Born Between River and Ocean Saint-Louis occupies a remarkable position at the mouth of the Senegal River. For centuries it served as a meeting point between inland West African trade routes and Atlantic...

Shifting the Narrative: The Decolonization of African Environmental Justice in Dakar

​ Shifting the Narrative: The Decolonization of African Environmental Justice in Dakar ​For decades, global conversations surrounding climate action and environmental frameworks have felt top-heavy, dictated by elite multilateral banking boards, macro-finance institutions, and international global summits. However, a profound structural paradigm shift is currently unfolding on the continent. Moving past conventional climate diplomacy, a milestone event has been formalized to address the raw, localized realities of ecological struggle: The 1st African Meetings on Environmental Justice ( 1res Rencontres africaines sur la justice environnementale ). ​Initially slated for late November, organizers recently adjusted the official assembly timelines. The highly anticipated gathering is now firmly locked in for December 3–5, 2026 , at the historic Université Cheikh Anta Diop (UCAD) in Dakar, Senegal . By moving the dates forward by one week, the organizing committee has strategically bypas...

Toubab Dialaw: Where Art, Ecology, and Community Meet on Senegal's Coast

Toubab Dialaw: Where Art, Ecology, and Community Meet on Senegal's Coast Along Senegal's Atlantic coast, about 50 kilometers south of Dakar, lies the village of Toubab Dialaw. Visitors are often drawn by its dramatic red cliffs, ocean views, and peaceful atmosphere. Artists come for inspiration. Fishermen continue traditions passed down through generations. Musicians and dancers gather to create and perform. Yet beneath these visible attractions lies something deeper: a community quietly exploring how culture, ecology, and human cooperation can shape a sustainable future. Toubab Dialaw has become a place where art, agriculture, education, and environmental stewardship meet. A Village Between Land and Sea Like many coastal communities in Senegal, Toubab Dialaw developed around fishing. The Atlantic Ocean has long provided food, employment, and identity for local families. Each morning, brightly painted pirogues launch into the sea. Each evening, fishermen return with their catch...

Carved from the Cliffs: The Visionary Legacy of Gérard Chenet at Sobo Badé

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  Carved from the Cliffs: The Visionary Legacy of Gérard Chenet at Sobo Badé ​If you travel about 50 kilometers south of the bustling grid of Dakar, down where the dramatic cliffs of the Petite Côte begin to push against the Atlantic, you will stumble upon Toubab Dialaw . It is a quiet fishing village on the surface, but beneath its tranquil exterior lies a pulsing, decades-old current of pan-African creativity and ecological mindfulness. ​At the literal and spiritual center of this movement is Sobo Badé —a space that defies easy categorization. Part eco-hotel, part artistic laboratory, and part architectural sculpture, it stands as a testament to what happens when human design surrenders to the natural contours of the earth. ​ A Vision Carved from Stone and Shells ​Sobo Badé was founded in the 1970s by the late Haitian poet, playwright, and visionary Gérard Chenet . When Chenet arrived on these cliffs, he didn't just build a structure; he orchestrated a decades-long dialogue w...