This paper discusses Uganda’s pressing issue of youth unemployment by promoting a significant change in higher education that focuses on collective empowerment through the African philosophy of Ubuntu. Each year, over 400,000 new graduates enter the job market, but there are fewer than 100,000 formal jobs available. This creates a large gap between what education provides and what employers need, worsened by mainly theoretical teaching methods. Ubuntu emphasizes interconnectedness, mutual care, and social responsibility. It is presented as a comprehensive framework to develop graduates who are skilled, employable, and socially conscious. Through a qualitative interpretive synthesis of policy documents, secondary data, and philosophical literature, the study shows how including Ubuntu principles in curricula can improve graduates’ job prospects by fostering collaboration, ethical leadership, and community involvement. This approach connects Uganda’s higher education system with its national development goals, including Vision 2040, Agenda 2063, and the Sustainable Development Goals, particularly SDG 4 (Quality Education), SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), and SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals). By shifting the focus of education from individual achievement to national development and social unity, Ubuntu-based education addresses both the supply and demand challenges of youth unemployment. The paper concludes that incorporating Ubuntu into higher education provides a culturally relevant and sustainable way to reduce youth unemployment, promote social inclusion, and achieve Uganda’s long-term development goals.
Wasike Wasike (Wed,) studied this question.