Senegal

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Also known as: République du Sénégal, Republic of Senegal

Senegal, country in western Africa. Located at the westernmost point of the continent and served by multiple air and maritime travel routes, Senegal is known as the “Gateway to Africa.” The country lies at an ecological boundary where semiarid grassland, oceanfront, and tropical rainforest converge; this diverse environment has endowed Senegal with a wide variety of plant and animal life. It is from this rich natural heritage that the country’s national symbols were chosen: the baobab tree and the lion.

The region today known as Senegal was long a part of the ancient Ghana and Djolof kingdoms and an important node on trans-Saharan caravan routes. It was also an early point of European contact and was contested by England, France, Portugal, and the Netherlands before ultimately coming under French control in the late 19th century. It remained a colony of France until 1960, when, under the leadership of the writer and statesman Léopold Senghor, it gained its independence—first as part of the short-lived Mali Federation and then as a wholly sovereign state.

Quick Facts
Senegal
See article: flag of Senegal
Audio File: National anthem of Senegal
Also Known As:
République du Sénégal
Republic of Senegal
Head Of Government:
Prime Minister: Ousmane Sonko2
Capital:
Dakar
Population:
(2024 est.) 18,504,000
Head Of State:
President: Bassirou Diomaye Faye
Form Of Government:
multiparty republic with one1 legislative house (National Assembly [165])
Official Language:
French
Official Religion:
none
Official Name:
République du Sénégal (Republic of Senegal)
Total Area (Sq Km):
196,712
Total Area (Sq Mi):
75,951
Monetary Unit:
CFA franc (CFAF)
Population Rank:
(2023) 69
Population Projection 2030:
19,909,000
Density: Persons Per Sq Mi:
(2024) 243.6
Density: Persons Per Sq Km:
(2024) 94.1
Urban-Rural Population:
Urban: (2022) 47.6%
Rural: (2022) 52.4%
Life Expectancy At Birth:
Male: (2023) 67.7 years
Female: (2023) 70 years
Literacy: Percentage Of Population Age 15 And Over Literate:
Male: (2021) 68%
Female: (2021) 45%
Gni (U.S.$ ’000,000):
(2023) 29,421
Gni Per Capita (U.S.$):
(2023) 1,660
  1. A second legislative house, the Senate, was created in 1999, abolished in 2001, reinstated in 2007, and abolished again in September 2012.
  2. Post of prime minister was abolished in May 2019. The National Assembly voted in December 2021 to reinstate the position, but it was not filled until September 2022.

Although Senegal traditionally has been dependent on peanuts (groundnuts), the government has had some success with efforts to diversify the country’s economy. Even so, the country suffered an economic decline in the 20th century, owing in some measure to external forces such as the fall in value of the African Financial Community (Communauté Financière Africaine; CFA) franc and the high cost of debt servicing, as well as to internal factors such as a rapidly growing population and widespread unemployment.

Almost two-fifths of Senegal’s people are Wolof, members of a highly stratified society whose traditional structure includes a hereditary nobility and a class of musicians and storytellers called griots. Contemporary Senegalese culture, especially its music and other arts, draws largely on Wolof sources, but the influences of other Senegalese groups (among them the Fulani, the Serer, the Diola, and the Malinke) are also evident. Wolof predominate in matters of state and commerce as well, and this dominance has fueled ethnic tension over time as less-powerful groups vie for parity with the Wolof majority.

The most important city in Senegal is its capital, Dakar. This lively and attractive metropolis, located on Cape Verde Peninsula along the Atlantic shore, is a popular tourist destination. Although the government announced plans to eventually move the capital inland, Dakar will remain one of Africa’s most important harbours and an economic and cultural centre for West Africa as a whole.

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Senegal is home to several internationally renowned musicians and artists. Other aspects of Senegalese culture have traveled into the larger world as well, most notably Senghor’s espousal of Negritude—a literary movement that flourished in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s and that emphasized African values and heritage. Through events such as the World Festival of Negro Arts, first held in Senegal in 1966, and institutions such as the Fundamental Institute of Black Africa (Institut Fondamental d’Afrique Noire; IFAN) and the Gorée Island World Heritage site, Senegal honours Senghor’s dictum "We must learn to absorb and influence others more than they absorb or influence us."