Academic literature on the topic 'Senegalese'

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Journal articles on the topic "Senegalese"

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López Fernández, Rosalía, and José Manuel Maroto Blanco. "“Ayudarnos es parte de nuestra cultura”. Estrategias de los migrantes ante la crisis económica: El caso de la población senegalesa en Granada." RIEM. Revista internacional de estudios migratorios 7, no. 2 (October 23, 2017): 188. http://dx.doi.org/10.25115/riem.v7i2.1081.

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Los efectos de la crisis económica han tenido un profundo impacto en el conjunto de la población, aunque la repercusión para la población inmigrante extranjera en general se ha visto magnificada por una serie de condiciones de partida que ya los situaban en posiciones de vulnerabilidad social. En este texto se pretende mostrar cómo los inmigrantes senegaleses de la ciudad de Granada han sufrido igualmente los efectos de esta crisis y cómo han puesto en marcha una serie de estrategias, basadas en el sentimiento de una cultura compartida y de una identidad senegalesa, mediante las cuales han hecho frente a la desatención institucional que ha sido justificada principalmente en términos económicos. El análisis de estas estrategias pone de manifiesto la manera en la que el colectivo senegalés afronta la crisis con menores costes sociales y personales, amortiguando el impacto negativo que la reducción de recursos públicos destinados a la atención de la población inmigrante ha tenido. The effects of the economic crisis have had a profound impact on the whole population, although the impact for the foreign immigrant population has been magnified due to a serie of initial conditions which allocated them in positions of social vulnerability. This text is intended to show how Senegalese immigrants of the city of Granada have also suffered the effects of the economic crisis and how they have developed certain strategies based on the feeling of a shared culture and a Senegalese identity whereby they have faced the crisis and the institutional neglect that has been justified primarily in economic terms. The analysis of the strategies shows how the Senegalese community faces the crisis with the lower social and personal costs, cushioning the negative impact that the reduction of public resources destined to the attention of the immigrant population has had.
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Bangura, Ahmed Sheikh. "Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal." American Journal of Islam and Society 14, no. 4 (January 1, 1997): 112–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v14i4.2228.

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Senegal is one of the most stable sub-Saharan African countries. LeonardoVillal6n's book, Islamic Society and State Power in Senegal, attributes that stabilityto the forms of religious organization provided by Senegal's unique brandsof Sufism. Most Senegalese are affiliated to a marabout (Sufi leader) and aremembers of a Senegalese Sufi order. These orders remain the most pervasiveforms of social organization. Leonardo Villal6n's work, devoted to an examinationof the shape of Senegalese society, therefore focuses on its most salient feature:the forms and patterns of its religious organization.The author argues that the Senegalese Sufi orders, developed in the wake ofFrench colonialism, provide an effective mode of social organization vis-a-visthe state. They check the hegemonic ambitions of the state and give a measureof leverage to the disciple-citizens in their dealings with it. This maraboutic systemexplains much of Senegal's relative success in maintaining a dynamic balancebetween state and society. In other words, the Sufi pattern has become thebasis for the establishment of a religiously based "civil society." While this balanceremains precarious, as there are conceivable factors that can disrupt it, ithas thus far shielded Senegal from the instability and strife that continue tobedevil many African societies ...
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Leichtman, Mara. "Revolution, Modernity and (Trans)National Shi'i Islam: Rethinking Religious Conversion in Senegal." Journal of Religion in Africa 39, no. 3 (2009): 319–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006609x461456.

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AbstractThe establishment of a Shi'i Islamic network in Senegal is one alternative to following the country's dominant Sufi orders. I examine Senegalese conversion narratives and the central role played by the Iranian Revolution, contextualizing life stories (trans)nationally in Senegal's political economy and global networks with Iran and Lebanon. Converts localize foreign religious ideologies into a 'national' Islam through the discourse that Shi'i education can bring peace and economic development to Senegal. Senegalese Shi'a perceive that proselytizing, media technologies, and Muslim networking can lead to social, cultural and perhaps even political change through translating the Iranian Revolution into a non-violent reform movement.
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Fedora, Gasparetti, and Dinah Hannaford. "Genitorialitŕ a distanza: reciprocitŕ e migrazione senegalese." MONDI MIGRANTI, no. 1 (June 2009): 111–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/mm2009-001006.

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- Though the migratory experience offers opportunities for new kinds of practices, traditions, and family dynamics to develop, it also often replicates patterns and codes of behavior that already exist in the mi-grant's home culture. Senegalese migrants residing in Italy, as in other parts of the diaspora, tend to send their children to be raised by relatives in Senegal. Their motives are various and sundry: some cite the economic benefits, others the desire for the inculcation of Sene-galese values and Wolof language, still others the reluctance to have their children grow up "spoiled" as they view Italian children. For these reasons and others, Senegalese parents rarely raise their chil-dren in Italy, opting instead to leave them behind with relatives in Senegal. Yet this practice among Senegalese parents long predates contemporary Senegalese migration to Europe. Instead it follows a longstanding custom of receiving young family members into the home that draws on the fundamental Senegalese value of teranga, of-ten translated inadequately as hospitality. Teranga turns on the idea that the mother who hosts a visitor ensures that her children will find help and welcome whenever they need it. Senegalese families are duty-bound to accept even distant relatives into their homes for short, long and undetermined periods of time without question. When em-ployment or scholastic opportunities are presumed to be better in a different part of Senegal in which a relative resides, Senegalese need not think twice about presenting themselves to those relatives with full assurance of being offered a place to stay. In the migrant context, this kind of teranga works both ways. Though migrants abroad must be ready to receive their relatives in the host country at a moment's notice, they may also send home their children to be reared without fear of imposition. Thus the concept of parent-ing from afar and children "left behind" among the Senegalese is by no means an outgrowth of contemporary migratory practices. Instead it reflects a core Senegal-ese value and extends a practice that long predates Senegal's migratory history. This paper will highlight how care arrangements for children are organized in this particular Senegalese context of teranga, and how children of migrants experience the separation from their parents.Keywords family dynamics, second generations, tradition, socialization processes
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Hale, Terrel D. "The Cartesian Model and Dependency in Mitterrand's African Policy: the Case of Senegal." Itinerario 10, no. 2 (July 1986): 99–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300007579.

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Senegal's relationship with France from the very beginning was marked by dependency. Economic, political and cultural life in Senegal revolved around the metropole — the highly centralized administrative and political institutions of France located in Paris dominated the Senegalese periphery. But Senegal's dependency was not merely economic or political. French policies towards Senegal primarily aimed at intellectual and cultural goals and were in some cases economic and political liabilities to the metropole. In this respect, the Senegalese case did not correspond to traditional theories of dependency which stress the overall importance of economic interests. Furthermore, the nature of this dependency does not appear to have significantly altered, although the political orientation of the French government has changed greatly since the colonization of Senegal. The character and development of this phenomenon, along with its implications for current French policy, will be considered here in light of the French world view, with particular reference to the Cartesian ideal.
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González Jiménez, Antonio José, and Encarna Soriano Ayala. "La educación de los jóvenes de origen senegalés en España." Educatio Siglo XXI 33, no. 2 (July 29, 2015): 183. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/j/233201.

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Esta investigación surge ante la inquietud de las asociaciones de inmigrantes senegaleses<br />al observar valores, hábitos y actitudes que están adquiriendo los jóvenes senegaleses de segunda generación que distan de la cultura de sus progenitores. Para abordar este problema, se planteó los siguientes objetivos: Qué les exigen las familias senegalesas a los centros educativos españoles, qué valores, hábitos y actitudes deben conservar los jóvenes senegaleses<br />de segunda generación, cuáles se pueden elaborar entre la escuela y el colectivo senegalés y por último, identificar estrategias entre escuela/familia que favorezcan la integración de estos jóvenes. La naturaleza de estos objetivos, nos conducen al diseño de una investigación<br />etnográfica que se realiza en las asociaciones de inmigrantes senegaleses y en los comercios étnicos ubicados en Andalucía. Hemos realizado sesenta y una entrevistas semiestructuradas, dos grupos de discusión y también observación participante. Las conclusiones nos indican la necesidad de crear en las escuelas, entre las familias y la comunidad educativa, espacios positivos de socialización donde se fomenten valores, hábitos y actitudes adecuados,<br />se prepare a los alumnos a convertirse en buenos ciudadanos en la comunidad senegalesa y en la sociedad de acogida y favorecer la adquisición positiva de procesos de aculturación.
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Dell, Jeremy. "The Sound of Laïcité." Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 41, no. 2 (August 1, 2021): 185–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/1089201x-9127063.

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Abstract Sound control policies already had a long history in the French-controlled settlements of the Senegalese coast by the time the prefect of Dakar issued a decree in 1953 prohibiting the use of loudspeakers on public roads and in the open-air courtyards of private residences. Such policies aimed at silencing the nighttime recitation of poems known in the Wolof language of Senegambia as xasida (and referred to by French administrators as chants religieux). Derived from the Arabic term for “ode” (qaṣīda), such poems formed a key component of the liturgy of Senegal's expanding Sufi orders. In this same period, the first Senegalese-owned printing presses began disseminating xasida in printed form more widely than ever, and at times against the wishes of the leadership of the Muridiyya, one of Senegal's leading sufi orders. By highlighting the intertwined nature of print, public recitation, and sound control in midcentury Senegal, this article seeks to illuminate the institutional and political contexts that shaped the production and reception of specific genres of Islamic scholarship in the late colonial period.
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Weick, Daniel P. "Competition Law and Policy in Senegal: A Cautionary Tale for Regional Integration?" World Competition 33, Issue 3 (September 1, 2010): 521–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/woco2010041.

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This article surveys the development of competition policy in Senegal since 1994. It discusses the original Senegalese competition law and its early enforcement and the pre-emption of Senegal’s competition law enforcement by a decision from the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU) Court of Justice. Because Senegal had begun to develop competition law enforcement competency and the WAEMU is severely lacking in competition law enforcement resources, the pre-emption decision has been a disaster for competition policy in Senegal. Participation in WAEMU is on balance beneficial to Senegal and the Court of Justice is unlikely to revisit its opinion, so this paper examines ways Senegal may rehabilitate competition policy and promote liberal markets within the boundaries of the Court of Justice opinion. While not ideal, use of sector-specific regulations, criminal penalties for cartel behaviour, and aggressive pursuit of competition investigations with an eye to forcing WAEMU action could all provide the necessary oversight to open and preserve liberal markets. The Senegalese National Competition Commission should also undertake appropriate studies to develop a more comprehensive understanding of the Senegalese economy and the competition problems it faces.
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Craig, Michelle Huntingford, and Elizabeth Harney. "Senegalese Modernisms." Art Journal 65, no. 4 (December 1, 2006): 119. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20068504.

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Alioune Diop, Pape. "Sino-Senegalese Cooperation: An Impulse to Innovative Growth Strategies for Senegalese SMEs." International Journal Of Innovation And Economic Development 1, no. 5 (2015): 26–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.18775/ijied.1849-7551-7020.2015.15.2003.

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Since 2005, Senegal and China have developed painstaking efforts to flourish in win-win cooperation. However, the outcome of this collaboration is still under scrutiny due to several constraints in the small and medium enterprise (SME) sector. This study examined how the Sino-Senegalese cooperation could be a mean for Senegalese SMEs to grow their businesses through competitive strategies. The purpose of the study was to explore practical uses of growth strategies that may enable the Senegalese SMEs to develop sustainably. We adopted an inductive research approach by using descriptive and interpretive statistical analysis methods. We explored the data using SPSS 16.0. We can summarize the findings as follows: (1) Senegalese SMEs in China face problems related to unstable government regulations; high money transaction costs and high tax rates rather than access to finance; (2) there is a high degree of informality among SMEs in Guangzhou and Yiwu despite the relatively high level of education of the SME managers; (3) they can incorporate many growth strategies in the management of their businesses concerning the idiosyncratic pitfalls we have identified in the research. The Ansoff matrix, innovative strategic moves, and strategic networking have shown to be important tools for the Senegalese SMEs operating in China to grow steadily and sustainably. A way to grasp the originality of this thesis is that many of the major works published in this field mainly focus on China’s strategy for Africa. We find less evidence in the literature for China’s presence in a resource-independent economy like Senegal. And by doing so, they barely mention the negative impacts of this cooperation, nor do they alleviate the opportunities and strategies that can be put forward for SMEs growth.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Senegalese"

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Schiavone, Cristina. "La parole plaisante nel romanzo senegalese postcoloniale /." Roma : Bulzoni, 2001. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39043972h.

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De, Poli Emma. "The gene mapping of Senegalese sole (S. senegalensis)." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2018. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/15863/.

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The Senegalese sole (S. senegalensis) is a common flatfish, distributed over the eastern Atlantic coast from the Northern part of Senegal. Senegalese sole aquaculture has aroused great interest in the marine aquaculture in Spain and Portugal because of its relatively rapid growth rate, but it presents limits due to the poor reproduction of captive breeders in many facilities. In fact gonad development during sexual maturation results in major growth reduction, and increased susceptibility to diseases (Felip et al., 2006). Senegalese sole has 42 chromosomes and an XX/XY chromosome system for sex determination, while related species show the ZZ/ZW system. In S. senegalensis, these problems are aggravated because of the lack of knowledge concerning sex. This study fits into a detailed project of Senegalese sole knowledge, promoted by University of Cádiz, providing new information about the karyotype characterization, the chromosome structure of certain genes involved in sex determination and sexual differentiation processes, which may be relevant for improving the commercial production of this species. This piece of information not only helps to understand the development and evolutionary mechanism in vertebrates, but will also contribute to improving the production of target species for aquaculture. For this purpose, several bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones that contain candidate genes involved in such processes (Vitellogenin, Otospiralin, R-spondin-1, Steroidogenic Factor1 and Tetkin-2) were analyzed and compared, where possible, with the same genes in other species. In this study it was possible to describe a part of those four genes, using 3’ RACE method. The BAC-FISH results showed the position of different genes in different chromosome, to improve the knowledge of Senegalese sole karyotype. In particular, the localization of steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1) in the chromosome 1 that is involved in the sex determination.
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Dodgen, Justine. "Immigration and Identity Politics: The Senegalese in France." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2011. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/284.

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As immigrants arrive in a new culture, they must modify their behaviors to adapt to their host society. Through a review of current literature, I will examine the psychological and sociological aspects of immigration and the effects on migrant identity. I will argue that migrants most desire a bicultural identity, in which they retain some elements of their ethno-cultural identity while adopting some values of French society. The construction of a bicultural identity presents a challenge due to the particular philosophical foundations of the French nation-state and French culture. In the next chapter, I will analyze the challenges Senegalese migrants confront as they seek to build a bicultural identity. France’s assimilationist tradition presents an ideological barrier to successful integration and a model which must be examined to understand France’s identity politics. Resulting secondary barriers are evident in France’s social and economic policies, which have an exclusionary impact on immigrants and ethnic minorities. Senegalese migrants comprise a particularly vulnerable minority group in France, and socioeconomic pressures are especially influential on the integration of Senegalese migrants due to religious differences, the practice of polygamy, a high concentration in the service sector, and one the largest average household sizes. I will examine how France’s policies and societal behavior affect Senegalese-migrant identity and integration. In the last chapter, I will examine Senegalese perceptions of France and immigration, which are radically different from the true experiences of Senegalese migrants in France.
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Lynch, Karen. "Senegalese Diaspora in Cincinnati: Cultural Continuity and Disruption." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1544100674972147.

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Barbali, Silvana Claudia. "Coping with xenophobia : Senegalese migrants in Port Elizabeth." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2009. http://eprints.ru.ac.za/1627/.

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Sánchez, Fernández Pablo. "Growth and size variation of Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis)." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/113377.

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Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis) is a flatfish of high commercial importance in Southern Europe that has been a promising species for diversifying Mediterranean aquaculture since early 1980's. It has failed to reach successful farming development due to lack of full control over spawning, poor fry quality and high mortality during the weaning stage. Furthermore, optimization of production has not been possible due to high heterogeneity in growth rates within cultured stocks that result in high body size variance at harvest. Among the several aspects needing wider knowledge in order to reach optimization of sole aquaculture, the ongrowing stage from juveniles to the commercialization size has been overlooked until the last years. It includes the relationships between individual growth and rearing parameters as stocking density, or the size composition of stocks. It is also important to evaluate growth according to the feeding rhythms, offering feed at adequate times for this species. Not less important is to assess the genetic variability of farmed stocks, and compare it to the wild populations, as a stepping stone to link genetic traits to the performance of aquaculture stocks. The aims of this thesis were to take an individual-based approach to growth, and growth sexual dimorphism, of Senegalese sole reared at high and low densities, with different levels of initial size variation, and under different feeding strategies. Moreover, the level of genetic variability of this species was compared between farmed and wild stocks through molecular genetic markers, and their sibship relationships were also assessed. Three experiments were conducted, involving a) rearing soles under high density (180% of bottom coverage) and low density (60% of bottom coverage); b) rearing soles under the same high and low densities, but also under homogeneous or heterogeneous initial size composition; c) rearing soles under a medium/high initial density (130% of bottom coverage) fed either during nocturnal hours, similar to their natural feeding rhythms, or during daylight hours. Additionally, the genetic variability of a farmed sample was compared to its wild donor population. Stocking density affects growth of Senegalese sole in two ways. First, sudden and steep increases in density could lead to poorer or no growth of fish until re-acclimatization to new high density conditions. Second, it seems that there is a sizedependent component on how stocking density affects growth, with smaller fish (sub-adults) growth being suppressed by high stocking density. Size composition of reared Senegalese sole does not affect individual growth. Sole doesn¿t show aggressive behavior and apparently, competition between individuals is low and size independent. Grading Senegalese sole does not guarantee the improvement of growth, and if so, it would be in high density conditions. Senegalese sole females grow faster than males, but after attaining certain body weight (between 40 and 80 g). It could be hypothesized that sexual maturation may be involved in the onset of sexual growth dimorphism in this species. Besides being an eminently nocturnal species, Senegalese sole fed during the light phase may yield specific growth rates and feed conversion ratios that are comparable to those of fish fed during the dark phase, suggesting the feasibility of feeding during normal business hours in commercial facilities. There is a loss in genetic variability in a single generation of Senegalese sole rearing, as evidenced by lower values of mitochondrial haplotypic diversity and nuclear diversity in the farmed sample compared with the wild donor population. Comparing wild Atlantic and Mediterranean samples suggests a limited gene flow between the populations inhabiting these basins. An accurate knowledge of the genetic composition of farmed stocks is essential both for maintaining the cultured stocks and for potential future restocking purposes. Castelldefels 17/
El llenguado senegalès (Solea senegalensis) és un peix pla de gran importància comercial al sud d'Europa. El seu cultiu no està totalment desenvolupat, en part degut a l'alta heterogeneïtat en les taxes de creixement dins de les poblacions cultivades, que donen lloc a una alta dispersió de talles en arribar a la mida comercial. Els objectius de la tesi van ésser l'aproximació individual al creixement, i al dimorfisme sexual del creixement, del llenguado cultivat a altes i baixes densitats, amb diferents nivells de dispersió de talles inicial i sota diferents estratègies alimentàries. D'altra banda, el nivell de variabilitat genètica d'aquesta espècie es va comparar entre les poblacions de cultiu i salvatges a través de marcadors genètics moleculars, i es van avaluar les seves relacions de parentiu. Es van dur a terme tres experiments, implicant a) el cultiu de llenguado a alta densitat (180% de cobertura del fons del tanc) i baixa densitat (60% de cobertura); b) el cultiu de llenguado sota les mateixes densitats, però també sota condicions d'homogeneïtat o heterogeneïtat de talles inicials; c) cultiu de llenguado a densitat mitja/alta (130% de cobertura) alimentats durant les hores nocturnes, de manera semblant als seus ritmes alimentaris naturals, o durant les hores diürnes. Addicionalment, es va comparar la variabilitat genètica d'una mostra de cultiu amb la seva població salvatge donant. La densitat de cultiu afecta el creixement del llenguado senegalès de dues maneres. En primer lloc, els augments sobtats i pronunciats de la densitat podrien conduir a un creixement pobre o nul fins la re-aclimatació a les noves condicions d'alta densitat. En segon lloc, sembla que hi ha una component mida-dependent de com la densitat de cultiu afecta el creixement, amb els peixos més petits (sub-adults) experimentant una supressió del seu creixement degut a l'alta densitat. La composició de talles del llenguado senegalès de cultiu no afecta el creixement individual. El llenguado no mostra un comportament agressiu i, pel que sembla, la competència entre els individus és baixa i independent de la mida. La classificació de talles en el llenguado no garanteix la millora del seu creixement, i si és així, seria en condicions d'alta densitat. Les femelles de llenguado senegalès creixen més ràpid que els mascles, però després d'assolir cert pes corporal (entre 40 i 80 g). Es podria hipotetitzar que la maduració sexual pot estar implicada en l'aparició de dimorfisme sexual en el creixement d'aquesta espècie. A pesar de ser una espècie eminentment nocturna, el llenguado senegalès alimentat durant les hores de llum pot experimentar taxes de creixement específiques i ràtios de conversió de l'aliment que són comparables a les dels peixos alimentats durant les hores nocturnes, el que suggereix la viabilitat de l'alimentació durant les hores normals de treball a les instal·lacions comercials. Hi ha una pèrdua de la variabilitat genètica en una sola generació de cultiu de llenguado senegalès, com s'evidencia pels valors més baixos de diversitat haplotípica mitocondrial i diversitat nuclear de la mostra de cultiu en comparació amb la població salvatge donant. La comparació de mostres salvatges de l'Atlàntic i del Mediterrani suggereix un flux limitat de gens entre les poblacions que habiten en aquestes conques. Un coneixement exacte de la composició genètica de les poblacions de cria és essencial per al manteniment de les poblacions cultivades, i per a possibles programes de repoblació en el futur.
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Shiohata, Mariko. "Exploring the literacy environment in two Senegalese urban communities." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439026.

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Boyd-Buggs, Debra. "Baraka : maraboutism and maraboutage in the francophone Senegalese novel /." The Ohio State University, 1986. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1392894752.

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Hallaire, Juliette. "Constructing maritime geographies : the pragmatic mobility of Senegalese fishermen." Thesis, Keele University, 2015. http://eprints.keele.ac.uk/2986/.

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Senegalese fishermen have significantly expanded their mobility into the eastern Atlantic Ocean since the early 1980s. Fishermen have been crossing international maritime borders and organising long sea journeys, in part as a response to the decrease in fishing resources in Senegalese waters. From the early 2000s, they began carrying West African migrants on the maritime routes from Senegal to Spain, diversifying into irregular maritime migration or ‘people smuggling’. Fishermen’s fishing techniques and the migration flows they have facilitated are well documented. We have a good understanding, too, of the push-and-pull factors shaping these maritime migration patterns. Thus far, the social and political meanings of fishermen’s maritime mobility and cross-border movements have been comparatively neglected. This thesis argues that these mobility patterns are connected, revealing links between regional fisheries and mobilities and international migration flows that create distinctive maritime geographies. Drawing on participant observations and narratives collected in 69 in-depth interviews, my analysis explores the ways in which power and knowledge shape the at-sea experiences of Senegalese fishermen. For them, mobility is more than a response to the decrease in fish resources. By deploying their mobility, fishermen seek to recover control over their maritime and social environments. To map the maritime geographies this mobility co-creates, I examine three spaces. First, I chart the social and political mechanisms of fishermen’s mobility in Senegal, examining the gendered and local meanings of their movements. Second, I examine these mechanisms at the regional level – at the Senegal–Mauritania border and in the waters off Guinea and Guinea-Bissau. Finally, I track fishermen’s routes to the Canary Islands. By attending to fishermen’s accounts, I demonstrate the many ways in which they appropriate the ocean space, shape the geographies of maritime borderlands and rationalise their navigation. I reveal how their maritime mobility opens up multiple opportunities for fishermen to negotiate with – and reshape – the power relations that structure their social, political and natural environments.
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Kane, Mohamadou Bachir. "The Teaching of Reading in the Senegalese EFL Context." OpenSIUC, 2017. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2113.

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This study focuses on English instruction in Senegal, where English is taught as a foreign language (EFL) in middle schools and high schools. It investigates the reading comprehension strategies and tools used by Senegalese EFL instructors to meet national English education standards. It also compares them to best practices for teaching EFL reading comprehension. 54 Senegalese teachers completed a survey asking questions about their reading classes, their approaches to teaching reading comprehension, and their teacher training and professional development. The findings revealed that the surveyed teachers had strong educational backgrounds and were aware of basic reading comprehension concepts and strategies. However, some of the reading strategies widely recognized as most beneficial for EFL instruction are not widely used or widely known in Senegal because teachers are not well trained with them. Observations are made about the overall patterns of teacher strengths and weaknesses, and recommendations are given to the Senegalese government, teachers, and education officials about reading comprehension in EFL instruction. The study contributes to existing literature by shedding light on some of the aspects that make L1 reading different from L2 reading, reviewing the problems facing Senegalese EFL education, and depicting the prevailing instructional environment in this context. It also traces important educational changes that have impacted the country, from budget pressures to the recruitment of contract teachers and large classes.
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Books on the topic "Senegalese"

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(Organization), Procelos/Apl. Préparer et consommer des produits locaux tous les jours. 3rd ed. [Sénégal]: République du Sénégal, Procelos/Apl, 2007.

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Haas, Joséphine Ndiaye. CUISINE SENEGALAISE. Paris: Editions L'Harmattan, 2004.

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Diop, Birago. A rebrousse-gens: Épissures, entrelacs et reliefs. Paris: Présence africaine, 1985.

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Fauville, Daniel. Art populaire et art contemporain du Sénégal. Montigny-le-Tilleul, Charleroi: Antécédence ASBL, 1994.

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Carrère, Charles. HIVERNAGE. Paris: Editions L'Harmattan, 1999.

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Schiavone, Cristina. La parole plaisante nel romanzo senegalese postcoloniale. Roma: Bulzoni, 2001.

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Mangin, Timothy. Mbalax: Cosmopolitanism in Senegalese Urban Popular Music. [New York, N.Y.?]: [publisher not identified], 2013.

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Grabski, Joanna L. The historical invention and contemporary practice of modern Senegalese art: Three generations of artists in Dakar. Ann Arbor, MI: Bell & Howell Information and Learning Co., 2001.

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Diop, Amadou Combatine. Renaissance d'une nation africaine. [Dakar]: Diasporas noires, 2011.

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Sorel, Jacqueline. Léopold Sédar Senghor: L'émotion et la raison. Saint-Maur-des-Fossés: Editions Sépia, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Senegalese"

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Crowder, Michael. "The Senegalese." In Senegal, 96–113. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003437468-8.

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Hernandez, Andreas. "Senegalese Ecovillage Network." In The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Futures, 1–4. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51812-7_225-1.

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Hernandez, Andreas. "Senegalese Ecovillage Network." In The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Futures, 1488–91. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-87745-3_225.

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O’Brien, Donal B. Cruise. "Renegotiating the Senegalese Social Contract." In Symbolic Confrontations, 193–213. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-05532-3_10.

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Gareía-López, Ángel, María Aliaga-Guerrero, José A. Paullada-Salmerón, María Del Carmen Rendón-Uneeta, Carmen Sarasquete, Evaristo Mañanós, and José A. Muñoz-Cueto. "Neuroendocrine Systems in Senegalese Sole." In The Biology of Sole, 57–89. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, [2019] | “A science publishers book.”: CRC Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315120393-6.

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Jung, Philipp Roman. "Multinational Migration in the Global South: Complex and Non-linear Trajectories of Senegalese Migrants in Brazil." In IMISCOE Research Series, 159–78. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12503-4_8.

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AbstractA growing number of studies emphasise the non-linearity of migration. Aspirations and capabilities for multinational migration often develop or change during the migration process. These dynamics have mostly been analysed with regards to movements within the European Union or to countries in the so-called ‘Global North’. This chapter aims to broaden this focus by including movements in the context of South-South migration. It discusses multinational migration by Senegalese migrants in Brazil, which is both a destination and an origin of movements that connect a variety of countries and regions. It analyses the complex trajectories of Senegalese migrants from different social and educational backgrounds and focuses on how decisions to move again from one country to another develop and which factors influence the choice of destination. Through a multi-sited qualitative case study using interview and ethnographic methods with Senegalese migrants in four Brazilian cities – São Paulo, Praia Grande, Caxias do Sul and Passo Fundo – the research examines both already-occurred movements from Cape Verde and Argentina to Brazil and aspirations to migrate further to the ‘Global North’. The findings show that these multinational migrations are mostly driven by the desire for self-improvement – financial, professional or educational – and a hierarchy of desired destinations but also a result of suddenly emerging opportunities and mediation. The movements are facilitated through the multiple transnational ties with which Senegalese migrants are connected to different places. Furthermore, the study shows how Senegalese migrants acquire new migratory capital – for example in the form of another nationality, business activities or access to new networks – and how migration experiences influence onward migration aspirations and preparations, hereby drawing attention to the active learning process which migrants experience during their trajectory.
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Beauchemin, Cris, Kim Caarls, and Valentina Mazzucato. "Senegalese Families Between Here and There." In Migration between Africa and Europe, 423–53. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69569-3_15.

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Cantone, Cleo. "The Shifting Space Of Senegalese Mosques." In New Perspectives on Islam in Senegal, 51–69. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230618503_3.

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Diop, Layire. "The Senegalese Council for Broadcasting Regulation." In Media Ownership in Africa in the Digital Age, 177–90. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003111924-12.

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Dioh, Adrien. "Access to Social Protection by Immigrants, Emigrants and Resident Nationals in Senegal." In IMISCOE Research Series, 277–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51237-8_16.

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AbstractThe Senegalese social protection system has been designed and implemented for the exclusive benefit of workers and their families to protect them against economic and social risks which may cause a (partial or total, temporary or permanent) loss of their earning capacity or the capacity to satisfy their basic needs. The system, which is essentially financed by the contributions of workers and employers, does not include the larger part of the population which evolves in the informal sector. The relevant regulations introduced a principle of equal opportunity for all benefits offered to Senegalese and migrant workers as well as their family members. Nationality is therefore irrelevant since wage-earning remains a fundamental criterion. Nevertheless, because of the territoriality of social security laws, the various benefits provided by the system are not applicable. The system only benefits Senegalese and foreign workers residing in the national territory. Not only is it disadvantageous to nationals living abroad, but it can also hinder the return of foreign workers to their countries of origin at the end of their professional career. The situation can be improved by bilateral or multilateral social security agreements binding the different countries.
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Conference papers on the topic "Senegalese"

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Dom, Fall Momar Aly, and Karim Konate. "A survey on senegalese corporate information and technology infrastructure transformation on cloud services: The resilience of senegalese companies." In 2017 IEEE International Conference on Power, Control, Signals and Instrumentation Engineering (ICPCSI). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpcsi.2017.8392147.

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Du, Jinlian, Biaye Yaye Coumba, and Xueyun Jin. "Senegalese Food Recognition for Tourism Information Using Convolution Neural Network." In EITCE 2021: 2021 5th International Conference on Electronic Information Technology and Computer Engineering. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3501409.3501617.

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Faty, Lamine, Marie Ndiaye, Edouard Ngor Sarr, Ousmane Sall, Seny Ndiaye Mbaye, Tony Tona Landu, Babiga Birregah, Mamadou Bousso, and Fatima Toure. "SenOpinion: A New Lexicon for Opinion Tagging in Senegalese News Comments." In 2020 15th Iberian Conference on Information Systems and Technologies (CISTI). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/cisti49556.2020.9140887.

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Speciale, Teresa. "College Recruitment and Coloniality at an Elite Bilingual Senegalese Secondary School." In 2024 AERA Annual Meeting. Washington DC: AERA, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/2101407.

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Faty, Lamine, Marie Ndiaye, Edouard Ngor Sarr, Ousmane Sall, Seny Ndiaye Mbaye, Tony Tona Landu, Babiga Birregah, and Mamadou Bousso. "News Comments Modeling for Opinion Mining: The Case of Senegalese Online Press." In 2020 International Conference on Advances in Computing and Communication Engineering (ICACCE). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icacce49060.2020.9155069.

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DIA, Yoro, Cheikh Tidiane SECK, Mouhamadou Saliou DIALLO, Ousmane SALL, Mamadou Bousso, Edouard Ngor SARR, and Mamadou Lamine MBOUP. "Senegalese Road Crash Data Analysis Based On Clustering And Association Rule Mining." In DSDE '21: 2021 4th International Conference on Data Storage and Data Engineering. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3456146.3456158.

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Sarr, Adama, Cheikh Mohammed Fadel Kebe, and Abdellatif Ghennioui. "Comparative approach for global solar estimation in four typical Senegalese climatic zones." In 2020 5th International Conference on Renewable Energies for Developing Countries (REDEC). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/redec49234.2020.9163881.

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Turpin, Joe. "Uncovering the History of the Nazi Holocaust in Senegal Through Artistic and Historical Research." In Arts Research Africa 2022 Conference Proceedings. Arts Research Africa, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54223/10539/35899.

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This paper describes the author’s residency in Dakar, Senegal, where he created artworks in response to the history of anti-Semitic laws and the Sébikhotane concentration camp, established by the Vichy French Colonial Regime in West Africa. The artworks aim to inform audiences about this littleknown history and use symbolism that Senegalese people can relate to. The paper discusses the research conducted, the positive reception of the artworks, and the author’s role as an artist, researcher, and performer. The paper also provides descriptions and explanations of some of the artworks created during the residency.
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Wassa, Marie Hélène, Alassane Diop, Richard Hotte, and Ibrahima Niang. "A model of computer support to mobile learning in the senegalese educational system." In 2015 Global Summit on Computer & Information Technology (GSCIT). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/gscit.2015.7353326.

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Hermand, Jean-Pierre, LongXiang Guo, Joanne Randall, and Patrice Brehmer. "Non-destructive optical holographic imaging of microorganisms in situ off the Senegalese coast." In OCEANS 2014 - TAIPEI. IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/oceans-taipei.2014.6964569.

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Reports on the topic "Senegalese"

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Engi, D. Managing Senegalese water resources: Definition and relative importance of information needs. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), September 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/290988.

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Czajka, Leo, Florence Kondylis, Bassirou Sarr, and Mattea Stein. Data Management at the Senegalese Tax Authority: Insights from a Long-term Research Collaboration. Institute of Development Studies, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ictd.2022.020.

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As they increasingly adopt digital infrastructure, public administrations worldwide are increasingly collecting, generating and managing data. Empirical researchers are, at the same time, collaborating more and more with administrations, accessing vast amounts of data, and setting new research agendas. These collaborations have taken place in low-income countries in particular, where administrative data can be a valuable substitute for scarce survey data. However, the transition to a full-fledged digital administration can be a long and difficult process, sharply contrasting the common leap-frog narrative. Based on observations made during a five-year research collaboration with the Senegalese tax administration, this qualitative case study discusses the main data management challenges the tax administration faces. Much progress has recently been made with the modernisation of the administration’s digital capacity ,and adoption of e-filling and e-payment systems. However, there remains substantial scope for the administration to enhance data management and improve its efficiency in performing basic tasks, such as the identification of active taxpayers or the detection of various forms of non-compliance. In particular, there needs to be sustained investment in human resources specifically trained in data analysis. Recently progress has been made through creating – in collaboration with the researchers – a ‘datalab’ that now works to improve processes to collect, clean, merge and use data to improve revenue mobilisation.
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Pauw, Karl, Josee Randriamamonjy, James Thurlow, and Xinshen Diao. Senegal’s agrifood system structure and drivers of transformation. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.136790.

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Policy Research Institute, International Food. Measuring changes in the Senegal’s agri-food system. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.136677.

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Sy, Ibrahima. Community Resilience: Integrating Local Approaches into Senegal's Climate Change Adaptation Agenda. APRI - Africa Policy Research Private Institute gUG (haftungsbeschränkt)., February 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.59184/pb023.08.

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Explore the vital role of locally-led adaptation in Senegal's climate response, as highlighted in the research project 'Climate Change Adaptation: Strategies, Initiatives, and Practices,' urging national and global recognition and support for effective and transformative local climate action.
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Sy, Ibrahima. Unlocking Adaptation Potential: Insights into Senegal’s climate change policies, initiatives and local actions. APRI - Africa Policy Research Private Institute gUG (haftungsbeschränkt)., July 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.59184/ca023.001.

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This report presents findings of research on climate change adaptation policies, strategies and local actions in Senegal, West Africa. It highlights locally led adaptation (LLA) strategies, practices and lessons that can inform and guide the implementation of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and climate actions at the local and national levels.
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Mbow, Fatou, and Nafissatou Diop. Assessment of the implementation and the achievements of the 3D approach within Senegal’s National Family Planning Action Plan (NFPAP). Population Council, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh7.1008.

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Abizaid, Olga, Maguette Diop, Adama Soumaré, and Emilie Wilson. Waste Pickers Are Part of the Solution to Solid Waste Management in Senegal. Institute of Development Studies, September 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/core.2023.012.

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Waste pickers from the Bokk Diom organisation, working at Dakar’s Mbeubeuss landfill – in Senegal’s capital city –, continued to provide essential waste management services throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, contributing to public health, reducing environmental harm, and mitigating greenhouse gases. As with many, their incomes were impacted by the pandemic, especially those of women. However, the greatest threat to their incomes and livelihoods is the transformation of the waste management system, a process which they are excluded from. Drawing on research carried out with Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) during the pandemic, Bokk Diom was able to advocate on behalf of waste pickers and obtain pledges of inclusion in solid waste management (SWM) from national authorities. Bokk Diom and WIEGO are continuing in their efforts to attain a just transition for waste pickers.
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Mbow, Fatou, Leslie Dubent, Nafissatou Diop, Fatou Turpin, Bocar Daff, and Babacar Mane. Assessment of the implementation and achievements of the 3D Approach in Senegal’s National Family Planning Action Plan—Part 2: Summary Report. Population Council, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh7.1007.

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Senegal: Community education program increases dialogue on FGC. Population Council, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh16.1004.

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From 2000 to 2003, FRONTIERS collaborated with the Senegalese nongovernmental organization Tostan to evaluate the effects of a community-based education program on awareness, attitudes, and behavior regarding reproductive health and female genital cutting. The Tostan program provides modules in local languages on hygiene, problem solving, women’s health, and human rights. It was designed to improve women’s health and promote social change by enabling participants, mainly women, to analyze and find solutions to community problems. As stated in this brief, Tostan implemented the education program as part of a scale-up effort in 90 communities in the Kolda district of southern Senegal. The FRONTIERS evaluation took place as part of the project and compared changes in knowledge, attitudes, and behavior of men and women in 20 villages in the intervention area with those living in 20 nonintervention villages. Changes were measured using pre- and post-intervention surveys of women and men in the intervention and control areas and qualitative interviews with key community members. They also assessed pre- and post-intervention changes in the number of girls under 10 who had been cut.
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