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The Institute of Development Studies (IDS) is a research and learning organisation affiliated with the University of Sussex in Brighton, England, and based on its campus in Falmer, East Sussex. It delivers research and teaching in the area of development studies. IDS was founded in 1966 by economist Dudley Seers who was director from 1967 until ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Institute of Development Management (IDM-Mzumbe) ... Institute of Development Studies (IDS)
The titular head of the university is the Chancellor, who is the President of Zimbabwe. The university is governed by a University Council, comprising the university's chief officers, representatives of the Senate, staff and students, nominees of the Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education and representatives form various sectors of commerce and civil society.
Zimbabwe Institute of Management; Motto: To be the leading voice and center of excellence in management and leadership development. Established: 1957: Mission: To develop and promote best practice in management and leadership through innovative market-driven products and services for business growth and sustainability. Focus: Business ...
Zimbabwe Open University (ZOU) is an open distance education university in Zimbabwe. Established in 1999, [ 2 ] ZOU is the only distance education university in the country that offers a unique opportunity for students to earn as they learn.
Sam Moyo (1954–2015) was a Zimbabwean scholar and land reform activist, the co-founder and executive director of the African Institute for Agrarian Studies (AIAS) [1] (renamed the Sam Moyo African Institute for Agrarian Studies following his death in 2015 [2]), and President of the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESIRA). [3]
Council room of the University of Zimbabwe. Portraits of former Vice-Chancellors from left to right: Robert Craig, 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. [8]
By 1 October 1991, there were 270 students, 28 academic staff, 41 administrators, and 11 support staff. On 28 October 1991, the university organized a public ceremony to install its first Chancellor Cde R. G. Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe and its first Vice-Chancellor, Professor Phinias Makhurane, and to lay the institution's foundation stone.