Soroti District Woman MP and Former Mak Guild President, Hon. Anna Ebaju Adeke (R) with fellow Master of Laws Graduands on Day 1 of the 71st Graduation Ceremony, 17th May 2021, Freedom Square, Makerere University.
A total of 25 Master of Laws and 286 Bachelor of law graduands were part of the 12,550 graduands awarded degrees and diplomas of Makerere University in various disciplines during the 71st Graduation ceremony that ran from 17th to 21st May 2021 at Freedom square.
The ceremony was presided over by the Chancellor Makerere University and the Minister of Education and Sports, Mrs Janet Kataaha Museveni was chief Guest.
In a statement read by Hon. Dr. John Chrysostom MuyingoĀ the State Minister for Higher Education, Hon. Janet Kataaha Museveni congratulated the graduands, the staff of Makerere University and the parents for the efforts put into preparing the students despite the COVID 19 challenges.Ā She said Government is committed to continue investing in ICT infrastructure as one of the ways to ensure that distance learning is entrenched as an option in teaching.Ā She further congratulated Makerere University for the groundbreaking research over the past period which was transitioning the University into realizing its objective of being research led.
She pledged Government commitment towards continued support to Makerere University, which she described as a pioneer in higher education in the country trough mobilizing funds for salaries and other support.
The Chancellor Prof. Ezra Suruma congratulated Makerere University for the distinguished awards in the past year which he said, had consolidated the universityās global reputation as a leading research institution. He paid special recognition to staff and faculty for the excellent work done in preparing the students until their graduation. He expressed optimism, that the graduating students would have a transformative impact on the future of Uganda, the East African region and the entire Universe.
The Management of Makerere University School of Law (SoL) has noted with concern a communication circulating regarding a purported Bachelor of Laws (LLB) programme pre-entry examination coaching and training scheduled to commence on 5th January 2026 at SoL Main Building.
No such training has been approved, sanctioned, or authorized by the School of Law. The SoL does not and will never conduct such trainings. The individuals behind the advert are fraudsters. You contact them at your own risk.
Kampala, Nov. 20, 2025 – Justice Egonda urged Makerere University scholars to spearhead a thorough review of Ugandaās 1995 Constitution and to design a national scoreboard to evaluate constitutional office holders. He said academiaāparticularly the School of Lawāshould draft a model constitution to guide national discussions on governance and judicial independence.
Court of Appeal Judge, His Lordship Martin Stephen Egonda made the call delivering a keynote address at a conference to commemorate the World Philosophy Day at Makerere University on 19-20 November 2025.
Justice Egonda warned that Ugandaās constitutional order is deteriorating requiring urgent reforms, urging academia to take lead. He called for two major initiatives: a comprehensive review of the 1995 Constitution and the creation of a national performance scoreboard to evaluate the performance of constitutional officeholders. Egonda argued that universities have the expertise to guide constitutional reform, design a model constitution, and generate independent performance data to strengthen accountability.
His Lordship Martin Stephen Egonda makes his remarks during the World Philosophy Day Celebrations at Makerere University.
He also called for clear, measurable indicators to assess judgesā and public officialsā performance, noting that current Judiciary reports lack qualitative depth. He advised that Universities can provide independent data and constitution-based metrics. He stressed that such a scoreboard would create awareness about compliance with constitutional obligations, fight abuse of public trust and defend the Constitution by promoting obedience to constitutional mandates. āTo sum it up, it would be an act of exacting accountability from holders of constitutional and public offices,ā he said.
Justice Egonda cited serious constitutional failuresāespecially within the Judiciaryāhighlighting extreme delays in criminal appeals where some inmates completed long sentences before their appeals were heard. He highlighted the systemic dysfunction in case management, unreliable digital judicial systems, leadership vacuums in the Judiciary.
Justice Egonda highlighted a recent judicial review in Kabale, where the Deputy Chief Justice held an open session with stakeholders. A representative from Ndorwa Main Prison reported that 20 inmates had waited months for High Court judgments, with no mechanism to address the delay. Initial checks of the judiciaryās computerized management system showed no pending judgments. However, after updating records following the prisonās submission, officials confirmed the existence of stalled criminal cases and pending judgments, particularly due to transfers of trial judges.
Hon. Miria Matembe addressing the participants.
Panelists responded with broader reflections. Dr. Miria Matembe warned that Uganda now has a āconstitution without constitutionalism,ā arguing that power has been captured and constitutional safeguards eroded, including Parliamentās independence. She urged citizens to reclaim constitutional power, confront corruption, and defend truth even at personal cost.
Professor Chris Mbazira praised Egondaās condor but emphasized that constitutional reforms alone are inadequate without accompanying political transformation. He said Ugandaās hybrid regimeāwhere informal power overrides formal institutionsāmust be dismantled for true constitutionalism to take root.
Hon. Loice Biira Bwambale (Right) with other panelists as Prof. Robert Wamala (Left) makes his remarks.
Former Constituent Assembly delegate Hon. Loice Bwambale urged Ugandans, especially youth, to take responsibility for preserving constitutional gains and addressing unresolved issues such as regional representation and land questions. She called for election of principled leaders, civic engagement, and careful review of entrenched constitutional provisions tied to public participation.
Overall, the plenary discussions underscored that restoring constitutionalism in Uganda requires institutional accountability, political reform, citizen activism, and renewed respect for constitutional principles. Specific issues raised during discussion included:
Accountability necessary for elective positions and offices
Introduction of term limits for all elective positions
Ugandans have been conditioned to accept a mediocre leadership model
The elites including researchers and academia advised to inspire the general population to get involved in constitutionalism
Sensitization and civic education for members requiring more information. It was noted some
members have given up hope for any change
A National dialogue for all Ugandans. The recommendations be cascaded to the population
and for appreciation by the population who think constitutionalism doesnāt concern them
Reflect the disintegration of our neighbours like Sudan for lessons to Ugandans
Commitment by the leaders to hand over power peacefully
Each of us ask what role everyone can play
Dr. James Nkuubi one of the panelists.
The 2025 World Philosophy Day conference at Makerere University concluded with strong calls for renewed constitutional reflection, ethical leadership, and civic responsibility as Uganda marks 30 years of the 1995 Constitution.
Delivering closing remarks, UNATCOMā Dr. Pauline Achola, emphasized philosophyās role in promoting peace, ethical reasoning, and sustainable development. She urged continued examination of the constitutionās gains and gaps and reaffirmed UNESCOās commitment to supporting commemoration of the World Philosophy Day dialogue in Uganda.
Dr. Pauline Achola, UNATCOM, delivering her speech.
In his speech, Bernard Nkone of Konrad Adenauer Stiftung highlighted major achievements under the 1995 Constitutionāhuman rights, separation of powers, gender equality, and civic participationāwhile warning that challenges such as corruption, political polarization, and limited access to justice persist. He stressed empowering youth to protect democratic values.
Prof. Robert Wamala ā Director Research and Innovations, represented Prof. Sarah Ssali -Deputy Vice Chancellor/Academic Affairs Makerere University. Reading her speech, he underscored philosophyās importance in fostering ethical leadership and active citizenship. He urged participants to translate conference discussions into policy influence and civic engagement.
Prof. Robert Wamala with Hon. Ken Lukyamuzi and Hon. Loice Biira Bwambale (To his Left), officials and awardees of certificates.
The conference ended with recognition of student representatives from the Makerere University Philosophersā Society, emphasizing youth contribution in national dialogue.
Zaam Ssaliand Jane Anyango are Communication Officers for School of Law & CHUSS respectively.
Makerere University School of Law (SoL) held its orientation meeting for the Master of Laws (LLM) 1st year students on the 13th August 2025 in the SoL Auditorium. SoL leadership, Department of Academic Registrar (AR) and Makerere University Directorate of Graduate Training facilitated the meeting.
In his address to the students, Dr. Busingye Kabumba ā Head, Human Rights and Peace Centre and SoL Graduate Studies Coordinator welcomed the LLM students to Makerere University and SoL. āI wish to remind you that one plus one equals two, the students must do their bit and we as staff pledge to do our bit. I encourage you to attend classes, handle all assignments on time, and it is my hope that you comply with the University policiesā, Dr Busingye Kabumba advised.
He implored the students to hit the ground running and be committed to their studies. āSoL has organised that proposal defence is in year one ā semester two so that students have working drafts by year two, this will allow you to finish the programme on timeā, he said. Dr. Busingye Kabumba referenced a precedent where a student completed his LLM within one and half years at SoL, which showed that completion in less than two years is possible with commitment.
Dr. Zahara Nampewo.
āIt is my honour and pleasure to welcome you through the gates of Makerere; I also congratulate you on your admission to LLM, we had so many applicants but we only admitted 124. You donāt choose Makerere but she chooses you. You are lucky to be taught by the legal brains at SoL, all recognized academics in their areas of specialtyā, Dr. Zahara Nampewo ā Deputy Dean, SoL said in her welcome remarks.
Dr. Nampewo advised the students thus, āThis is a 2-year (4 semester) study programme, consider this to be day one of your new story book, you have been admitted in 2025 and it is our hope that you will be graduating in January 2028ā.
She further added, āYou have your reasons as to why you are enrolling for the LLM and which you wish to fulfill, I therefore take this opportunity to underscore the importance of hard work, determination and resilience. Take the LLM as a full-time engagement, allow us to teach you and help us to help youā.
Part of the audience that attended the orientation.
Dr. Nampewo encouraged the students to partake in the various opportunities at SoL besides academics, specifically highlighting the summer schools that students have attended in Europe with support from partners. She also told the students to note that Makerere is a sexual harassment free institution; exclusivity, equal opportunity, gender balance are core values of the University.
Highlighting that SoL has an open-door policy, students were advised to talk to their lecturers for support when challenges arise. āNothing is insurmountable, every journey starts with a small stepā, Dr. Nampewo said.
In his remarks, the Dean-SoL, Assoc. Professor Ronald Naluwairo welcomed the LLM students to Makerere University and congratulated them on the admission to our distinguished LLM programme. He said, āLLM is quiet demanding but doable, a level of commitment and resilience is required. I urge you to attend all your classesā.
Assoc. Professor Naluwairo told the students, regardless of whichever law school you attended for your Bachelor of Laws (LLB), you are now at a Centre of Legal Excellence, work and support one another. āOn behalf of SoL, we commit total support to ensure that you succeed in your studies, I also urge you to take responsibility, read and be willing to workā, the Dean advised.
Associate Professor Ronald Naluwairo.
Dr. Mike Barongo, Deputy Registrar in Charge of ICT Division, represented the Academic Registrarā Department; welcoming the students, he said āthis is a great place to be, a premier law schoolā. He explained to the students what the role of the ARā Department entails, including application, admission, registration, custody of student records and graduation.
Dr. Barongo highlighted key tasks for new students: activation of students portal, enrolling for recognition as a student, generating payment reference numbers. He advised that where challenges are experienced, the School Registrars are available for support as well as a Support Centre at the College of Computing and Information Sciences (CoCIS) by Makerere University Directorate of ICT.
āKeep your eyes on the goal of why you are here, leave with a masterās degreeā, Mr. Laban Lwasa, SoL Registrar told the students. He congratulated them on their excellent performance which earned them a place on the LLM programme. Elucidating the role of the registrar, he said, āWe receive you, track your performance, walk with you till graduation and issue your transcript after graduationā. He explained that until they enroll, they arenāt students and they should do so as soon as possible. Mr. Lwasa also clarified the documents required for registration including full admission letter, payment receipts, LLB transcript and certificate, birth certificate and valid ID.
Dr. Dan Ngabirano and Dr. Diana Ahumuza Ateenyi, both faculty at SoL also spoke to the LLM students. They reiterated the message of hard work, commitment, support of others and resilience. They also encouraged the students to understand the elective course-units available to them and the faculty specialisations which will inform their choice of dissertation supervisors.
Associate Professor Julius Kikooma.
In his address to the students, Assoc. Professor Julius Kikooma, Director-Graduate Training welcomed scholars to Makerere University, a place of knowledge, discovery and transformation. He said, āwe are thrilled to have you join our vibrant and dynamic community of scholars at one of Africaās leading research universities. Your decision to pursue graduate studies here reflects your courage to lead, your passion to learn, and your desire to contribute meaningfully to your field and to society at largeā.
Assoc. Professor Kikoma reminded the students that graduate studies are more than a degree, it is a lifeblood of a nationās vitality and driver of its socio-economic transformation. He added, āgraduate research is a strategic national asset, not just about producing knowledge for knowledgeās sake but generating insights, innovations and solutions that: respond to pressing societal challenges and inform evidence-based policyā.
The author addresses 1st year LLM Students.
He encouraged the students that as they make choices for their dissertations to select topics that will contribute to Ugandaās Vision 2040 and the forthcoming National Development Plan IV.
A question-and-answer session followed where students sought clarifications on presentations from the various speakers.