Makerere University
Motto | "We build for the future" |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Established | 1970 |
Parent institution | Formerly the University of London and the University of East Africa |
Chancellor | Chrispus Kiyonga[1] |
Vice-Chancellor | Barnabas Nawangwe[2][3] |
Administrative staff | 3,174 (2018)[4] |
Students | 35,000+ (2018)[5] |
Location | , 00°20′06″N 32°34′03″E / 0.33500°N 32.56750°E |
Campus | Urban, 300 acres |
Website | www |
Makerere University (/məˈkɛrəri/;[6] Mak) is Uganda's largest and oldest institution of higher learning, first established as a technical school in 1922, and the oldest currently active university in East Africa.[7] It became an independent national university in 1970. Today, Makerere University is composed of nine colleges and one school, offering programmes for about 36,000 undergraduates and 4,000 postgraduates. These colleges include College of Natural Sciences (CONAS), College of Health Sciences (CHS), College of Engineering Art & Design (CEDAT), College of Agriculture and Environmental Studies (CAES), College Of Business and Management Sciences (CoBAMS), College of Humanities & Social Sciences (CHUSS), College of Computing and Information Sciences (COCIS), College of Veterinary Medicine, Animal Resources & Bio-security (COVAB), College of Education and External Studies (CEES) and Makerere University Business School (MUBS). In addition, Makerere has onother campus in Eastern Uganda Jinja City.
The main administrative block was gutted by fire in September 2020 and the cause of the fire is yet to be established.[8] The building is being reconstructed.
Makerere University is the alma mater of many post-independence African leaders, including Ugandan president Milton Obote[9] and Tanzanian presidents Julius Nyerere and Benjamin Mkapa.[10] The former president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Joseph Kabila, and former Kenyan president the late Mwai Kibaki are also Makerere alumni.
In the years immediately after Uganda's independence, Makerere University was a focal point for the literary activity that was central to African nationalist culture. Many prominent writers, including Nuruddin Farah, Ali Mazrui, David Rubadiri, Okello Oculi, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, John Ruganda, Paul Theroux, Nobel Prize laureate V. S. Naipaul, and Peter Nazareth, were at Makerere University at one point in their writing and academic careers.
Because of student unrest and faculty disenchantment, the university was closed three times between 2006 and 2016. The final time was on 1 November 2016 when President Yoweri Museveni declared it closed indefinitely.[11] The university was reopened in January 2017.[12]
History
[edit]Founding of the technical school
[edit]The trade school that became Makerere University began operating in 1921 with the first classes in carpentry, building construction and mechanics.[13] In 1922, it was founded as the "Uganda Technical College" with additional courses in the arts, education, agriculture and medicine.[13][14] That same year it was again renamed as Makerere College.[13] In 1928, the vocational classes were separated from the college and renamed Kampala Technical School.[13] In 1937 the college began offering post-secondary education certificate courses.[14]
University
[edit]In 1943, the British Protectorate government proposed the university, which led to a controversial struggle. It was described as "a plot to steal African soil for European settlement," by the Bataka Party. In response to this campaign, there was rioting in the capital of Kampala.[15]
In 1949, Makerere College was granted university status and its name became Makerere College, University of East Africa.[16] In the same year, the Bataka Party had been banned by the British Protectorate government, because of acts of riot and arson committed after a Bataka protest gathering.[17]
Unrest in the 2000s
[edit]The university was closed three times between 2006 and 2016.[18]
Beginning on 1 August 2016, the non-teaching staff went on strike demanding back pay. The strike lasted three weeks and the government agreed to pay them by the end of October; however, the government failed to make the payment.[19] This was but one more broken promise in a cycle of failed promises, strikes and more promises.[18] That strike was followed by a strike of the lecturers over unpaid incentive pay, and that strike was joined by students in solidarity. This led to President Yoweri Museveni closing the university "indefinitely".[18] Additional protests, including from parents whose children were left hanging in mid-semester, led to Museveni appointing a special commission to try to rectify the situation but with no promises of reopening. The commission's report was due in late February 2017.[11]
On 20 September 2020, the main building of Makerere University (the Ivory Tower) was severely damaged by fire,[20] allegedly following a probe by Uganda Parliament into financial mismanagement by university authorities.[21][22]
100-year anniversary
[edit]In 2022, the university celebrated its centenary since its establishment as Makerere College in 1922. The institution was granted additional land for expansion into a university by Nsibirwa, a former prime minister of the Buganda Kingdom, in 1945. Despite facing numerous challenges in Uganda's political, social, and academic history, the institution has persevered for a century.[23][24]
On October 7, 2022, a ceremony commemorating the centenary was held at Freedom Square, with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in attendance. A statue monument was unveiled at the entrance of the university's Freedom Square to mark this significant milestone in Uganda's educational sector.[25]
University rankings | |
---|---|
Global – Overall | |
CWUR World[26] | 923 (2020-2021) |
CWTS World[27] | 1159 (2020) |
QS World[28] | 951–1000 (2024) |
THE World[29] | 801–1000 (2024) |
USNWR Global[30] | =757 (2023) |
Regional – Overall | |
THE Africa[31] | =5 (2021) |
USNWR Africa[32] | 14 (2021) |
National – Overall | |
CWTS National[27] | 1 (2020) |
CWUR National[26] | 1 (2020-21) |
THE National[29] | 1 (2021) |
Organization
[edit]The University Council is the supreme governing body of the university while the Senate is the chief academic organ of the university.
Subcommittees of the University Council
[edit]- Appointments Board [33]
- Finance, Planning and Administration[34]
- Quality Assurance, Gender and ICT[35]
- Estates and Works[36]
- Staff Development, Welfare and Retirement Benefits[37]
- Students Affairs and Disciplinary[38]
- Honorary Awards[39]
- Audit[40]
Notable former and current faculty administrators
[edit]- Venansius Baryamureeba, computer scientist, former vice chancellor
- Charles Barugahare, university secretary until 2020
- William Bazeyo, former dean of Makerere University School of Public Health (2009–2017); Deputy Vice Chancellor of Makerere University, responsible for Finance and Administration, since September 2017[41]
- Hugh Dinwiddy, lecturer in literature, warden of Northcote Hall
- George Kirya, microbiologist, diplomat, academic, former vice chancellor at Makerere and former chairman of Uganda Health Services Commission
- Mahmood Mamdani, political scientist and historian
- Harriet Mayanja-Kizza, current dean of students, Makerere University School of Medicine
- Ali Mazrui, academic, historian and political scientist
- Barnabas Nawangwe, architect, academic and current vice chancellor[42][43]
- Apolo Nsibambi, former prime minister of Uganda and former chancellor of Makerere University
- Joe Oloka-Onyango, former dean of law and human rights expert
- Okot p'Bitek, poet
- John Ssebuwufu, chemist, former vice chancellor of Makerere University, current chancellor of Kyambogo University
- David Serwadda, former dean, School of Public Health
- Nelson Sewankambo, principal, College of Health Sciences
- John Ddumba Ssentamu, economist, academic and banker, former vice chancellor
- Sylvia Tamale, lawyer, academic, women's rights activist
- Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, novelist[44]
- Timothy Wangusa, author, poet, former minister of education
- David Wasawo, zoologist and educationist, former vice principal
Other academics
[edit]- Catherine Abbo, medical doctor and researcher
- Paul D'Arbela, physician, cardiologist, academic. Dean of the Mother Kevin Postgraduate Medical School, Nsambya.
- Rose Mbowa, theatre academic, playwright and actress; former head of Department of Music, Dance and Drama
- Celestino Obua, physician, pharmacologist, academic; vice chancellor of Mbarara University
- Charles Olweny, physician, oncologist, medical researcher; former vice chancellor of Uganda Martyrs University; Chancellor of Mbarara University
- Raphael Owor, medical doctor, former chancellor of Mbarara University, former professor of pathology at Makerere University School of Medicine
- Hakim Sendagire, physician, biochemist and microbiologist; dean of Habib Medical School
Notable alumni
[edit]See also: List of Makerere University academics
Political figures and government employees
[edit]- Lucy Akello, Ugandan politician, elected member of parliament for the Amuru District Women's Constituency, in the 10th Parliament
- Anita Annet Among, Speaker of the 11th Parliament of Uganda (2021–2026); Deputy Speaker 2021–2022[45]
- Samuel Awich (1973), justice of the Supreme Court of Belize[46]
- Kizza Besigye, physician, retired colonel in the Uganda People's Defence Force; opposition politician; former leader of the Forum for Democratic Change party; presidential candidate in 2001, 2006, and 2011
- Godfrey Binaisa, former president of Uganda
- Gilbert Bukenya, former vice president of Uganda
- Dora Byamukama, former member of parliament for Mwenge South,[47] former member of the East African Legislative Assembly[48]
- Kanyama Chiume, Malawian who worked for the independence of Nyasaland (now Malawi)
- Moses Ebuk, physician, neurophyiologist, former lecturer and tutor in the department of physiology at the Makerere University College of Health Sciences, diplomat; Ambassador of Uganda to the Russian Federation
- Daphrosa Gahakwa, Rwandan education minister
- Aloisea Inyumba, Rwandan minister for gender and family promotion
- Joseph Kabila, Congolese politician and president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Allen Kagina, public administrator
- Filemona F. Indire, former Kenyan ambassador, leading educator and member of parliament
- Patrick Karegeya, former Rwandan head of intelligence
- Andrew Felix Kaweesi, Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIGP) Uganda, military officer and policeman; Spokesperson of Uganda Police Force, 2016–2017
- Specioza Kazibwe, former vice president of Uganda
- Mwai Kibaki, the third president of Kenya, 2002–2013; graduated at the top of his class (summa cum laude) in 1955 with a Bachelor of Arts in economics[49]
- Samson Kisekka, former vice president of Uganda
- Benedicto Kiwanuka, first prime minister and first chief justice of Uganda
- Crispus Kiyonga, physician, minister of defense of Uganda
- Sam Kutesa, Uganda's foreign affairs minister; president of the 69th session of the United Nations General Assembly
- Henry Kyemba, minister of health under Idi Amin[50]
- Catherine Kyobutungi, executive director of the African Population and Health Research Center
- Erias Lukwago, lawyer, Lord Mayor of Kampala City
- Yusuf Lule, former president of Uganda
- Norbert Mao, former guild president of Makerere University and current president of Democratic Party
- Amama Mbabazi, former secretary general of the National Resistance Movement and former prime minister of Uganda
- Benjamin Mkapa, former Tanzanian politician and former president of Tanzania
- Jennifer Musisi, lawyer and public administrator
- Jehoash Mayanja Nkangi, government minister and former Katikkiro of Buganda (1964–1966, 1993–1994)[51]
- Apolo Nsibambi, former prime minister of Uganda and former chancellor of Makerere University
- Kayumba Nyamwasa, former Rwandan Army Chief of Staff and Ambassador to India
- Julius Nyerere, Tanzanian politician and the first president of Tanzania
- Milton Obote, two-time former president of Uganda
- Anthony Ochaya, Ugandan Minister of Planning and Economic Development under the UNLF regime, World Bank official
- Oginga Odinga, Kenyan politician, first vice president of Kenya
- Ruhakana Rugunda, prime minister of Uganda, physician, and former permanent representative of Uganda to the United Nations
- Emmanuel Tumusiime-Mutebile, governor, Bank of Uganda
- Bobi Wine (Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu), Ugandan politician, businessman, entrepreneur, philanthropist, musician, freedom fighter and actor
Film, television and radio
[edit]- Akite Agnes, Ugandan comedian and actress
- Hannington Bugingo, Ugandan comedian and actor
- Anne Kansiime, Ugandan comedian and actress
- Cleopatra Koheirwe, Ugandan actress, singer and media personality
- Teacher Mpamire, aka Herbert Mendo Ssegujja, Ugandan comedian and actor
- Morris Mugisha, actor, producer and director
- Alex Muhangi, Ugandan comedian and actor
- Housen Mushema, Ugandan actor and model
- Edwin Musiime, television host
- Rehema Nanfuka, Ugandan actress, director and producer
- Crystal Newman, Ugandan media personality, MC and motivational speaker
- Simon Kaggwa Njala, Ugandan journalist and media personality
- Gladys Oyenbot, Ugandan actress and producer
- Mowzey Radio, aka Moses Nakintije Ssekibogo, Ugandan singer
Sports people
[edit]- Moses Muhangi, president of Uganda Boxing Federation
- Henry Osinde, Ugandan born cricketer, currently Canadian fast bowler
Writers and journalists
[edit]- Christopher Henry Muwanga Barlow
- Jane Kaberuka, novelist
- Daniel Kalinaki, journalist
- Barbie Kyagulanyi, writer and activist
- Micere Githae Mugo, Kenyan novelist, poet, activist
- John Nagenda, writer, political commentator and adviser to the president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni
- Peter Nazareth, author, critic
- Michael Nsimbi, "father of Ganda literature"
- Okello Oculi, author, poet
- Charles Onyango-Obbo, journalist and political commentator
- Mark Ouma, athletics journalist and former philosophy lecturer at Makerere
- David Rubadiri, poet, novelist, diplomat
- Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Kenyan novelist
- Hilda Twongyeirwe, editor, poet, shortstory writer
- Timothy Wangusa, author, poet, former minister of education
- Elvania Namukwaya Zirimu, poet and dramatist
Scientists
[edit]- Andrew Kambugu, physician, Sande-McKinnell Executive Director at the Uganda Infectious Disease Institute
- Robert Kezaala, physician, Senior Health Advisor at UNICEF
- John William Kibukamusoke, medical academic and researcher, and one-time personal physician to Idi Amin
- Matthew Lukwiya, physician in Gulu during the 2000 Ebola outbreak
- Etheldreda Nakimuli-Mpungu, psychiatrist and epidemiologist
- Christine Obbo, socio-cultural anthropologist
- Joshua Sikhu Okonya, agronomist and entomologist.
- Thereza Piloya, pediatrician and medical academic, specializing in pediatric endocrinology and HIV/AIDS
Others
[edit]- Iddah Asin, lawyer and Johnson & Johnson executive[52]
- Nkulanga Enock, children's rights activist
- Busingye Kabumba, poet, lawyer and lecturer at law
- Laeticia Kikonyogo, lawyer and judge
- Patrick Mazimhaka, deputy chairperson of the African Union's African Commission
- Andrew Mwenda, managing director of the Independent newspaper in Uganda
- Lilian Mary Nabulime, sculptor
- Harry Nkumbula, a leader during Zambia's struggle for independence
- Olara Otunnu, former United Nations under-secretary general and special representative for children and armed conflict
- John Sentamu, Anglican Archbishop of York, England, first black Archbishop of the Church of England
- Martin Ssempa, controversial Ugandan pastor and AIDS activist
Halls of residence
[edit]As of September 2015, the halls of residence at Makerere University included the following:[53]
For men
[edit]- Livingstone Hall
- Lumumba Hall (defunct 2022)
- Mitchell Hall
- Nkrumah Hall
- Nsibirwa Hall
- University Hall
For women
[edit]- Africa Hall
- Mary Stuart Hall
- Complex Hall
For students of medicine in their final years
[edit]- Galloway House
Postgraduate Hall
[edit]- Dag Hammarskjöld Hostel
Upcountry campuses
[edit]In January 2010, the university announced the opening of two new campuses, one in the city of Fort Portal, approximately 310 kilometres (190 mi), by road, west of Kampala, and another one in the city of Jinja, approximately 85 kilometres (53 mi), by road, east of Kampala. The following courses are offered at the upcountry campuses:[54]
Eastern Campus, Jinja
[edit]- Bachelor of Science in Computer Science
- Bachelor of Information Technology
- Bachelor of Development Studies
- Bachelor of Tourism
Replacement of main building
[edit]In September 2020, a fire gutted the Main Building of Makerere University, destroying university records and the building structure.[8] A subsequent investigation by an eleven-person team could not establish a definite cause of the fire, but pointed to an electric fault as a likely cause.[55]
In August 2021, the Cabinet of Uganda resolved to break down what remained of the Main Building after the fire. A new building, which will be designed to look like the original structure, will be erected at the same location, at a budgeted cost of UGX:21 billion (approx. US$6 million).[56]
The engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract was awarded to Excel Construction Company Limited, a Ugandan company and a subsidiary of the Madhvani Group. The reconstruction process began in April 2022, starting with tearing down the structurally unsound original building, built in the 1930s and commissioned in 1941.[57]
See also
[edit]- African Geographical Review
- African Writers Conference
- East African Geographical Review
- List of universities in Uganda
- Makerere College School
- Makerere University College of Health Sciences
- Student movements in Uganda
- Islamic University In Uganda
- Makerere University Business School
- East African School of Library and Information Science
References
[edit]- ^ {{cite web| url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crispus_Kiyonga
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- ^ Tuhereze, Elias (15 September 2017). "New Makerere University Vice Chancellor Professor Barnabas Nawangwe Installed". Ms Jane Anyango, Communication Officer and Ms Ritah Namisango, SPRO. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ Mukhaye, Damali (1 January 2018). "Makerere probe discovers 16,000 ghost students". Daily Monitor. Kampala. Retrieved 1 January 2018.
- ^ Wandera, Derrick (6 April 2018). "Makerere enrolment reduces by 15,000". Daily Monitor. Kampala. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
- ^ Peter Roach, Jane Setter, John Esling, eds., Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (Cambridge University Press, 2011; ISBN 0521765757), p. 302.
- ^ Maathai, Wangari. Unbowed. ISBN 9780307275202.
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- ^ A. J. Hughes (1969). "Buganda Troubles in the 1940s". East Africa (Revised ed.). Pengiun Books. p. 158.
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- ^ Kyemba, Henry. A State of Blood, p. 21
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{{cite web}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ Grace Kenganzi, and Rose Rukundo (20 February 2014). "The stories behind Makerere University halls of residence". Daily Monitor. Kampala. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
- ^ Haywood, Katherine (5 January 2010). "Makerere VC Rolls Out 2010 Plan for Varsity". Daily Monitor (Kampala). Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ Benson Tumusiime and Patience Ahimbisibwe (23 April 2021). "Inside Makerere University fire report". Daily Monitor. Kampala, Uganda. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
- ^ The Independent (31 August 2021). "Makerere University main building to be demolished". The Independent Uganda. Kampala, Uganda. Retrieved 30 April 2022.
- ^ Jane Nafula (30 April 2022). "Makerere knocks down its iconic Main Building". Daily Monitor. Kampala, Uganda. Retrieved 30 April 2022.