Water Get No Enemy | A Photo Essay from Lagos, Nigeria
Samuel James & Padden Guy Murphy
Samuel James is a junior at Tufts University in the combined degree program with the School of Museum of Fine Arts Boston. He is a member of the inaugural class of Synaptic Scholars of the Institute for Global Leadership, Tufts University, as well as a member of the Institute’s photojournalism and human rights group EXPOSURE. In January 2007, Samuel traveled to Lagos, Nigeria to research the megacity as his Synaptic project.
Padden Guy Murphy (A&S 2009) is Discourse’s founding editor and an IGL Synaptic Scholar majoring in International Relations and Chinese. He also co-founded the civil-military relations initiative ALLIES (Alliance Linking Leaders in Education and the Services), and is a member of Tufts University’s improvisational comedy troupe Cheap Sox. His home and family are in Great Falls, Montana.
Children retrieve water from a community borehole in Makoko. It is estimated that fewer than 5 percent of Lagosians have direct access to municipal water supplies.
A man rakes waste from a drainage canal in Badia. Throughout Lagos, stagnant canals packed with refuse and human waste result in severe overflow during flood season.