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The Uganda Journal is a biannual scholarly journal of the Uganda Society (previously the Uganda Literary and Scientific Society) with its first publication in 1934. [1] The journal's focus is on documenting and disseminating knowledge about Uganda and has been a platform for scholarly research, discussions, and insights related to various aspects of Uganda's history, culture, and society.
Since 1995, Uganda has experienced rapid economic growth, but it is not clear to what extent this positive development can be attributed to Structural Adjustment. [25] Uganda is a member of the World Trade Organization, since 1 January 1995 and a member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, from 25 October 1962. [26]
Although Uganda's official policy is to promote tariffs that cover all costs, the NWSC tariff actually covers only operation and maintenance costs. According to a 2003 published report, the second performance contract between the government of Uganda and NWSC provided for a tariff policy that in the long term covered operation, maintenance, and ...
Joe Oloka-Onyango is a Ugandan lawyer and academic. [2] He is a Professor of Law at Makerere University School of Law where he has also formerly been Dean and Director of the Human Rights and Peace Centre (HURIPEC). [3]
The International Development Association awarded Uganda US$16 million to help improve the efficiency of government-owned enterprises. [9] Funds allocated through this Public Enterprise Project would be used to pay for consultancy services and supplies and to commission a study of ways to reform public-sector administration. [9]
Hut and metallic shack next to a high voltage electricity substation. In the 1980s, charcoal and fuel wood met more than 95 percent of Uganda's energy needs. [4] In 2005 and 2006, low water levels of Lake Victoria, the main source of the country's electricity generation potential, led to a generation shortage and an energy crisis.
The Uganda Society publishes The Uganda Journal. After moving from Entebbe to Kampala in 1933, the society decided to publish The Uganda Journal with its first publication in 1934. [2] It was stated that the journal aimed "to collect and publish information which may add to our knowledge of Uganda and to record that which in the course of time ...
In March 2018, TEPU in collaboration with the German Cooperation Agency (GIZ), hired Q-Sourcing, a project management and human resource company, to carry out advanced welding training for the first 200 specialist welders destined to work on the Uganda Oil Refinery and the East African Crude Oil Pipeline, in which Total SA maintains shareholding.