UTAG-KNUST has strongly opposed GTEC’s proposed harmonisation of academic promotion standards across Ghana’s public universities, arguing that the policy threatens institutional autonomy and ignores critical challenges such as staffing shortages, inadequate infrastructure, and research capacity gaps. This in-depth report examines the controversy, expert perspectives, policy implications, and what the dispute means for the future of higher education in Ghana.
Trending
- Mahama Rules Out Third Term Bid: Inside the NDC Power Calculus, Constitutional Boundaries, and Succession Politics Shaping 2028
- Homosexuality, Science and Africa’s Values Debate: Fact-Checking Sam George’s Claims at the Family Sovereignty Conference
- UTAG-KNUST Battles GTEC Over University Promotion Reforms: Debate Exposes Deeper Fault Lines in Ghana’s Higher Education Sector
- Special Report: Bagbin’s Procedural Warning Exposes New Legal Risks for Ghana’s Family Values Bill
- “Stop Assisting Foreigners to Register on Ghana’s National Database” — Interior Minister Raises Alarm Over Security, Human Trafficking and Border Breaches
- Invest in Ghana’: Inside the Ghana–UK Investment Summit 2026 and the High-Stakes Push for Foreign Capital Amid Economic Transformation Goals
- “I Was Surprised When the Anti-Gay Bill Was Passed” — Speaker Bagbin’s Shock Sparks Fresh Questions Over Ghana’s Fast-Tracked LGBTQ+ Law
- Ghana–South Korea Visa Waiver Talks Signal New Economic and Diplomatic Era as Accra Pushes for Broader Global Mobility
