Background ,
Leonard Lewis,
Walter Kamba and
Gordon Chavunduka. In 1945, Manfred Hodson (after whom a
residence hall is now named) formed the
Rhodesia University Association, inspired by the promise of £20,000 by Robert Jeffrey Freeman for establishing such a university. Independent of the initiatives of Hodson and the Legislative Assembly, the Central African Council's Commission on Higher Education, led by
Sir Alexander Carr-Saunders (after whom another
residence is now named), recommended the establishment of a university college to serve the newly established
Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, with its first preference being to integrate with the Southern Rhodesian initiative. and in 1982 the royal charter was replaced by an act of Parliament. In December 1998, the university hosted the Eighth Assembly of the
World Council of Churches (WCC). The Assembly, the WCC's chief governing body, met in the Great Hall on the UZ campus. Hundreds of riot police arrived, clashing with the protestors, several of whom were injured and more than 50 of whom were arrested and faced up to five years in prison. The late 1980s and most of the 1990s saw a rise in
student protest, resulting in several closures and mass expulsions. Despite the ongoing tensions, the university continued to grow and the student population had reached 8,000 by 1995 Many donors, including the
Government of Sweden, which had previously been a major financer of UZ, cut or cancelled their aid. As the
economic crisis grew in Zimbabwe, UZ began to fail to recruit lecturers and professors to fill vacancies. By 2007, the shortage of staff was preventing the teaching and examination of some programmes. Problems with water and electricity supply, as well as maintenance of infrastructure became critical by the late 2000s. The university briefly opened in early 2009, but no classes were held due to strike action by lecturers. The institution was closed again in late February, following demonstrations by students against new, hard currency fees.
Controversy over fraudulent degrees The university has faced criticism for awarding a fraudulent degree to a member of the
Mugabe regime; in 2014,
Grace Mugabe was given a doctorate in sociology, only two months after being registered on the programme, although a dissertation does not exist in the university archives. On 20 November 2017, the University of Zimbabwe students boycotted writing exams citing that the former first lady Grace Mugabe's controversial PhD should be revoked. They also protested and declared that they would not write examinations until Robert Mugabe resigned. The 93 year old leader and then chancellor of the university resigned the following afternoon on 21 November 2017 as head of state and government. Many claimed that the University of Zimbabwe's students will go down in history as those who gave the Mugabe regime the 'final push' of his 37-year reign as Zimbabwe's leader. ==Campus==