(adapted from one of my term papers this past year)
Benin is a
small country located in sub-Saharan West Africa. It is bordered by Togo to the west, Nigeria
to the east, Burkina Faso and Niger to the north, and the Bight of Benin to the
south. It has a landmass of
approximately 42,000 square miles and a population of 9.1 million as of 2011, making
it one of the most densely populated countries in West Africa. Its history is closely linked with the slave
trade as it is located on what was once known as the ‘slave coast’ due to the
large number of slaves that were captured and shipped to the New World from the
region during the 18th and 19th centuries. When the slave trade ended in 1848 Benin,
then the Kingdom of Dahomey, became a protectorate of France. It was not until 1960 that Dahomey officially
gained its independence from France, transitioning into a period of political
instability marked by a series of military coups. In 1975 it was given its current name, The
Republic of Benin. In 1990 Benin was the
first African country to successfully transition from a dictatorship to a
pluralistic political system and it continues to enjoy a stable and democratic
government to this day. French remains
one of three national languages, which also include the local languages of Fon
and Yoruba along with a number of regional tribal languages.
Nearly 70
percent of Benin’s population relies on subsistence farming as their main
source of income. In total agriculture
accounts for 32 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and cotton alone makes
up 40 percent of the country’s total exports.
Palm oil is the country’s second largest export. Moreover, thirty percent of Benin’s total
land area is under agricultural production, an increase of 4.4 percent in the
decade between 1990 and 2000.
Additionally, the country is highly dependent on livestock production,
which accounts for 7.3 percent of Benin’s GDP, or $76 million per annum. Domesticated livestock species under
production, listed in order of prevalence, include sheep and goats (2 million),
cattle (1.6 million), poultry (1.2 million), and pigs (300,000) and 16 percent
of Benin’s total landmass is under pasture.
Thirty-three percent of the population falls under the international
poverty line of $1.25 per day.
As of the 2002
census, the most popular religions in Benin are Roman Catholicism, Islam, and Vodun (or Voodoo). Vodun is an animistic religion, i.e. one in
which plants, animals and even inanimate objects are thought to be imbued with
a spiritual essence. It was outlawed in
the country soon after Benin gained independence from France, but has since
been declared an official religion (in 1996) and is now openly practiced.
There are two
national parks in Benin. Pendjari
National Park located in the northwest corner of the country on 681,000 acres
and W National Park that follows the Niger River through Niger, Benin and
Burkina Faso in a ‘W’-shaped path. Over
1.3 million acres of the latter park lie in Benin proper. Both parks are buffered by hunting
zones. Additionally, both Pendjari and W
have areas within them that are recognized as Ramsar sites of wetland
importance due to the fact that they contain a representative and rare example
of natural wetlands within the region and their preservation is seen as
necessary for conserving the biodiversity of the area. National parks are extremely important for
protecting the vast number of wildlife species, and their habitats, present in
Benin, which include lions, African elephants, hippopotami, African buffalo,
warthogs, olive baboons, and Nile crocodiles, among others. So excited to go visit them!