James Courtright explored how Fulani societies across West Africa—the largest pastoralist community in the world—are responding to climate change, discriminatory governments, increasing jihadist activity and evolving dynamics within Fulani societies. James grew up between East Africa and the United States. He graduated from Denison University in 2012 and served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Kolda, Senegal for three years during which he lived with a Fulani family and worked in community agriculture. He then moved to Dakar and wrote about human rights, the environment and migration for NPR, The Christian Science Monitor and Roads & Kingdoms, among other publications. He graduated from Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs in May 2020 with a concentration in Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy, after which he returned to West Africa to work with Gambian civil society alongside the country’s truth commission.
Dispatches from James Courtright
Anatomy of a conspiracy theory
Why do so many West Africans believe France is supplying weapons to Islamist jihadists?In Ghana, accusations of rising jihadism may be making a local conflict worse
The battle for a town’s chieftaincy is changing. Politicians may be obscuring the real reasons for their own gain.Artisanal guilds remain guardians of Senegal’s traditions
Members of an old order maintain their relevance despite the decline of their livelihoods.