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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...

Wikipedians: Why We Edit, Document, and Protect What We Know

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Wikipedians: Why We Edit, Document, and Protect What We Know ​The  immensity of human knowledge can feel like looking out over an unmapped ocean. The closer we get to any single subject, the more the horizon expands, revealing unseen paths, and hidden histories. It can feel overwhelmed by the scale of it all. ​Moving from being a passive consumer of  information to an active steward of it—particularly within the vast, interconnected ecosystem of Wikipedia and its platforms—is  deeply transformative. Engaging in the deliberate work of researching, organizing, and archiving does not just build a better encyclopedia; it reshapes the person doing the work. ​When we step onto this infinite canvas, the relationship to knowledge shifts from an overwhelming burden into a source of deep connection, creative fulfillment, and enduring purpose. ​1. Cultivating the "Neutral Calm" ​The modern information landscape is loud, fast-world, and driven by reaction. Immersing oneself...

The Act of Stepping Back: Fences, Foresight, and Nature's Regenerative Power

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  The Act of Stepping Back: Fences, Foresight, and Nature's Regenerative Power ​There is a shift occurring in the world of conservation—that is quietly moving away from the urge to dominate and build, and toward the discipline of observation. For decades, the dominant narrative of environmental restoration has been one of intervention: digging holes, nursing seedlings in plastic bags, and trying to force trees to grow where we think they belong. But across the globe, from the vast, sun-baked expanses of the African Sahel to the quiet corners of a private backyard garden, a different truth is revealing itself. ​True restoration isn’t always about planting trees. Often, it is simply about putting up fences and letting nature do the work. ​ Two Paths to the Same Canopy ​When we step back and allow an ecosystem to heal itself, we generally witness one of two remarkable phenomena. Both achieve the same goal—a vibrant, biodiverse landscape—but they operate on entirely different biolo...

The Sahel’s Underground Forest

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​The Underground Forest: The Sahel’s Hidden Potential ​Healing by Stepping Back ​ The Sahel’s Underground Forest Nature Remembers: How Fences Can Bring Back Forests ​Walking across the sun-baked campus of Gaston Berger University in Saint-Louis, Senegal, it is easy to miss the quiet battle unfolding beneath your feet. The landscape looks sparse, dominated by dry sand and scattered patches of low, green growth. If one pauses to watch, you will see local goats grazing intently on these small parcels of vegetation, nibbling the tender shoots down to the soil. ​To the casual observer, it looks like a typical semi-arid ecosystem—a bit of stubborn grass doing its best in a harsh environment. But if you look closer, a profound ecological question emerges: Are these tiny patches of green just weeds, or are they a historic forest trying to remember itself? ​The truth is, they are the latter. What looks like a fragile seedling is often the tip of an ancient forest —part of a massive, hidden ...

The Era of Active Renewal: Inside the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

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  The Era of Active Renewal: Inside the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration ​For decades, the global conversation around environmentalism has been defined by a single word: conservation . We have focused our energy on drawing lines around pristine habitats, fighting to keep healthy ecosystems from getting worse. But as global temperatures rise and wild spaces fracture, a sobering reality has set in: simply protecting what is left is no longer enough. We must actively heal what has been broken. ​This realization is the driving force behind the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030) . Co-led by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), this massive global rallying cry marks a profound shift in environmental policy. It moves humanity past passive preservation and into an era of active ecological renewal. ​ A Critical Window for the Planet ​The timeline of the UN Decade is deliberate. Running through 2030, it directly maps out what ...