Research Domains

  • Home
  • Research Domains

Explore a wide range of academic fields and research areas from scholars across Ugandan universities. Each domain showcases original studies, dissertations, and papers that contribute to national and global knowledge.


Browse by category to discover research that inspires learning, innovation, and progress.

Education

Studies on learning, teaching, and academic growth.

Engineering

Research on innovation and practical design.

Enviromnental

Work on climate, nature, and sustainability.

Food Tech.

Health and medical research for better lives.

History

Health and medical research for better lives.

Agriculture

Agricultural related research and community engagement for societal transformation

Tourism

Tourism and ecological navigation for nature and habitat promotion

Minerals and Mining

Natural resource utilization and exploration for socail economic growth and value addition

Research Disseminations

Search - All

Mathematical relationship between Law, justice, humanity and corruption in Uganda

Category: Education, Literature | Institution: | Funder:Budget:
Author(s): Arafat Bandha (, arafatbandha163@gmail.com),


Executive Summary:

act
This paper presents a multi-disciplinary investigation into the systemic
displacement of justice and humanitarian principles by formal legal mechanisms in
Uganda, driven by endemic corruption. Drawing on institutional theory,
principal–agent models, and social contract philosophy, the study develops a
quantitative Justice Erosion Index (JEI) to measure the gap between de jure legal
rights and de facto access to justice across Ugandan institutions. Using panel data
from nationally and internationally recognised governance surveys (2005–2024),
the analysis reveals a statistically significant negative correlation (r = −0.88, p <
0.001) between the country's corruption perception score and its rule-of-law
ranking. A mathematical model incorporating bribe-payment equilibria,
case-backlog dynamics, and legal-aid accessibility demonstrates how rent-seeking
behaviour by legal actors creates a self-reinforcing cycle that structurally excludes
the poor and marginalised from due process. Findings indicate that over 68% of
court users report unofficial payments as a prerequisite for case progression, while
74% of police-service users encountered solicitation. The paper concludes with
policy recommendations anchored in institutional redesign, salary reform, and
judicial accountability frameworks.


Documents:
Uganda_Justice_Corruption_Paper-1-1.pdf


Photos:

cropped-dissemination_favicon.png
Dissemination
Support Team
Contact with us Any time!

Archives

Categories