HomeNewsFG bars non-PhD varsities from honorary doctorates

FG bars non-PhD varsities from honorary doctorates

Published on


KEY POINTS


  • Education Minister Tunji Alausa unveiled FEC-approved rules barring non-PhD universities from awarding honorary doctorates.
  • All universities must now secure National Universities Commission clearance before conferring any honorary degree.
  • The Council also approved a National Research and Innovation Development Fund targeting $500 million annually for research collaboration.

Education Minister Tunji Alausa on Wednesday rolled out a federal clampdown on honorary degrees, banning universities without doctoral programs from awarding honorary doctorates and warning that vice chancellors who breach the rule will face sanctions.

Speaking at State House alongside Minister of State for Education Suwaiba Ahmed, Alausa said the policy received Federal Executive Council approval and took effect April 20. Now every university seeking to honor an individual must first secure clearance from the National Universities Commission.

Indeed, the rules also pull serving public officials into focus, with Alausa flagging the long-standing practice of dropping honorary degrees on politicians and other office holders as part of what he called the politicization of academic recognition.

No PhDs, no honorary doctorates

Specifically, Alausa said any university that does not run doctoral programs will lose the right to confer honorary doctoral degrees. Doing so, he said, will violate the law and trigger sanctions against the vice chancellor.

“Any university that is not offering PhDs cannot award honorary doctorate degrees. Doing so will amount to a violation of the law, and there will be consequences, including sanctions against the vice chancellor,” the minister said.

Moreover, the honorary degree policy hands the NUC formal authority to vet every proposed honoree before the title is conferred, in a bid to end indiscriminate awards.

Prosecution risk for fake claims

Today, Nigerians who falsely parade unverified honorary degrees risk prosecution under the new regime. Alausa said government agencies will now verify any honorary title directly with the awarding institution.

“If any individual claims an honorary degree that was not duly awarded, such a person can be prosecuted. We are determined to restore integrity to the system,” he said.

Furthermore, the minister conceded that informal use of academic titles in social settings would be hard to police, but said official communications and formal engagements will face strict enforcement.

The new policy traces its lineage to a 2012 attempt by university administrators to regulate honorary awards. However, Alausa noted that previous efforts lacked legal backing and quickly collapsed under political pressure.

Now, with FEC approval in hand, the framework gains the regulatory teeth its predecessors lacked. Additionally, the minister framed the move as part of a broader push to restore credibility to Nigeria’s higher education system, which has weathered years of accreditation rows and degree-mill controversies.

$500m research fund approved

Meanwhile, the Federal Executive Council also approved a separate memo establishing a National Research and Innovation Development Fund. Alausa said the fund is designed to mobilize $500 million annually to bridge research agencies, academia and industry.

Together, the honorary-degree policy and the research fund signal an attempt to recast the conversation around Nigerian higher education, away from prestige optics and toward measurable academic output.

Whether vice chancellors comply, and whether prosecutions actually follow, will determine the policy’s bite. Yet for now, anyone hoping to acquire instant academic gravitas through a politically arranged ceremony will find the door narrower than it has been in years.

Latest articles

SMEDAN unveils N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs

SMEDAN has unveiled a N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs, disbursing it through cooperatives and associations to boost working capital and improve loan recovery nationwide.

FG unveils 2026 push for industrial growth, trade and investment

The Federal Government plans to intensify industrial growth, trade expansion, investment and non-oil exports in 2026, focusing on turning policy into measurable economic outcomes.

AfCFTA lifts Nigeria’s intra-African trade by 21 percent to $9.02billion in 2025

Nigeria's intra-African trade rose 21 percent to $9.02bn in 2025, as the AfCFTA unlocked new export markets and lower trade barriers, an Afreximbank report says.

Nigeria sets date for next evacuation flight from South Africa

Nigeria's government will return another group of citizens from South Africa on Tuesday, ahead of anti-immigrant protests set to begin June 30.

More like this

SMEDAN unveils N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs

SMEDAN has unveiled a N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs, disbursing it through cooperatives and associations to boost working capital and improve loan recovery nationwide.

FG unveils 2026 push for industrial growth, trade and investment

The Federal Government plans to intensify industrial growth, trade expansion, investment and non-oil exports in 2026, focusing on turning policy into measurable economic outcomes.

AfCFTA lifts Nigeria’s intra-African trade by 21 percent to $9.02billion in 2025

Nigeria's intra-African trade rose 21 percent to $9.02bn in 2025, as the AfCFTA unlocked new export markets and lower trade barriers, an Afreximbank report says.