Dr. Zahara Nampewo is a prominent
Ugandan human rights lawyer, academic, and gender justice advocate with over
two decades of experience in legal education, public interest litigation, and
social justice. She currently serves as the Deputy Principal at the School of
Law, Makerere University, and has been the Treasurer on the Board of
DefendDefenders since 2019. Widely regarded as a thought leader across Africa,
Dr. Nampewo is known for her expertise in academia, gender equality, access to
justice, and governance.
Reflecting on DefendDefenders’
journey, she shares: “It
is amazing how DefendDefenders has grown, emerging from a seemingly small but
original idea of working with HRDs at a conference in 2005. I see the growth
not only through the numbers of staff and programmes but also the geographical
areas of operation, as well as the numbers of people in need that have been,
and continue to be, reached. This journey, as I observe it through the
different spaces that I share with DD, is unbelievably phenomenal!”
Dr. Zahara Nampewo was born and
raised in a devout Muslim family in Kampala, where she began her academic
journey at Kitante Primary School. One memory that remains vivid from her early
childhood dates back to Primary three, during an Eid celebration in 1984. As
was her family’s tradition, she stayed home to attend prayers at the Kibuli
Mosque, an occasion she fondly describes as their version of Christmas. After
prayers, the family would typically go out for a treat before returning home to
share a special lunch. However, at the time, Eid was not recognised as a public
holiday, and school continued as usual. When she returned to school, she was
punished for her absence, an experience she recalls as deeply unfair and
formative in shaping her early awareness of exclusion and injustice.
In the secondary school she later
attended, Dr. Zahara Nampewo found a more inclusive environment that was
respectful of her Muslim faith, with the administration making necessary
accommodations. When it came time to choose her path for university, she opted
to pursue law, drawn by her strong performance and interest in the arts particularly in reading, writing, and
critical analysis. “I was naturally good at reading large volumes of books and
writing,” she recalls a skillset
that would later define her future in law and academia.
Dr. Zahara Nampewo graduated with
distinction from Makerere University School of Law in 1998, earning a place
among the top of her class. As was customary for outstanding students, she was
offered the opportunity to teach. She did briefly, however, proceeded to enrol
at the Law Development Centre (LDC), where she completed her Diploma in Legal
Practice in 1999. That same year, she began working formally with the
Foundation for Human Rights Initiative (FHRI), a pivotal step in her growing
commitment to human rights advocacy.
Her decision to focus her career
on human rights was shaped by early exposure during a transformative internship
in her second year of law school. Through a programme coordinated by the Human
Rights and Peace Centre (HURIPEC) then
led by Professor Joe Oloka-Onyango, a figure she deeply admired she was selected as one of a small
group of students trained on human rights issues before being placed at
different organisations. Zahara was placed at FHRI for a few months, where her
hands-on experience with legal aid, prison visits, and grassroots rights work
left a lasting impression. “That programme really prompted my human rights
journey,” she recalls. It was the first time I went to a prison.”
After her third year, she
returned to FHRI not as an intern,
but as a volunteer. In 1999, she transitioned into formal employment at FHRI,
working with the Legal Aid Bureau. This role exposed her to the harsh realities
many Ugandans face in their quest for justice. One encounter that stayed with her
was when a woman came seeking help for her child’s medical needs after the
father failed to provide support. “She undressed the child, and the child had
been burnt,” Zahara remembers. “You want to tell her you don’t have to but she’s already done it, and then you
go back home and this stays with you.” These emotionally intense cases left her
frequently questioning: “What can I really do?”
Yet, it was this deeply human
connection to the work that anchored her passion. “You’re not just doing a job you feel like you’re making a
difference in people’s lives,” she says. “The walk-in clients, people in the
prisons… FHRI allowed me experience so many things.” She also contributed
to shadow reports on torture, attended the African Commission on Human and
Peoples’ Rights in Banjul. During a visit to the UN Human Rights Council in
Geneva, she realised how few African voices were present in those spaces. “We
got in touch with the Uganda mission. The diplomatic attaché told us, ‘I’m
happy you’re here you can help
focus on the human rights issues,’” she recalls, observing how stretched thin
African representation was in international fora.
By 2000, equipped with hands-on
experience, growing networks, and a strong sense of purpose, she felt ready to
deepen her academic grounding. She enrolled for a master’s in human Rights.
This next step built on the practical foundation laid by her early years at
FHRI and solidified her path as both a practitioner and scholar of human
rights.
In 2000, Zahara earned a master’s
degree in human rights law in the UK, followed by a diploma in advanced human rights
from Finland in 2001. She rejoined FHRI, eventually rising to Head of Technical
and Advisory Services. Her desire to diversify her professional experiences led
her to part-time teaching at Makerere University in 2003 while managing a
project on conflict in Northern Uganda at HURIPEC.
From 2004 to 2008, she led the
Legal Aid Basket Fund at Danida’s Human Rights and Good Governance Office,
overseeing strategic litigation that culminated in landmark judgments. “The
Law and Advocacy for Women in Uganda case on the Succession and Divorce Acts is
one I still teach in my gender class,” she notes with pride. These cases
catalysed significant reforms in Uganda’s laws on women’s rights.
In 2008, she accepted a role as
Gender Justice Advisor with the UN Mission in Liberia. “I don’t know what I
expected it was ad hoc,” she
reflects. “But being away from my young daughter was the hardest part.”
After six months, she returned to Uganda.
Back in Uganda, she resumed
teaching full-time at Makerere. By 2010, she secured a Fulbright scholarship
and began her PhD at Emory University, focusing on women’s rights, particularly
the role of marriage and family in shaping women’s sexuality. Her research
highlighted the limitations of legal reform alone in dismantling patriarchal
norms: “There is still a lot society needs to do to free women. And economic
empowerment is key.”
Her leadership as Director of
HURIPEC from 2014 to 2022 solidified her influence in academia and public
policy. She coordinated field research, led institutional advocacy, and served
as Chief Editor of the Human Rights and Peace Centre Journal. She was
instrumental in shaping discourse on contested bills such as the
Anti-Homosexuality Bill and Sexual Offences Bill and pushed for meaningful
civic engagement and legal literacy through community-based legal aid clinics.
Dr. Zahara Nampewo remains deeply
committed to mentoring the next generation. “Every time someone walks out of my
office especially a girl I want to make sure I’ve said something
positive to her,” she shares. For her, the goal is clear: “In everything you
do, strive to change someone’s life and create a positive impact.” Her
influence is both personal and systemic felt
in courtrooms, classrooms, and community spaces alike.
She has published professional
papers on a range of subjects, including sexuality, decentralisation, and
access to justice. Dr. Zahara’s research is both theoretical and empirical,
with a strong focus on the lived realities of marginalised groups particularly women underscoring her deliberate positioning
as a gender activist in Uganda. Dr. Zahara’s academic contributions include
co-authoring publications on women’s rights, sexual violence, and legal reform.
A notable example is a book on marriage and divorce in Uganda, co-authored with
three female colleagues from the School of Law, which critically examines how
courts interpret and apply concepts such as physical, mental, and emotional
cruelty in divorce proceedings. “As women in academia, we must support each
other,” she affirms. “Collaborative research is how we lift one another.”
Looking ahead, Dr. Zahara Nampewo
envisions a future where gender equality is firmly embedded at all levels of
society from legal frameworks to
community practices—and where both women and men recognise their shared
responsibility in building a more just and equitable world. “It takes two
fully functional wings for a bird to soar,” she reflects. “We all stand
to benefit when everyone is included in the equation of gender equality.”
She believes that meaningful progress will come when society moves beyond
rhetoric to embrace collective action where
every individual, regardless of gender, understands that empowering women
strengthens us all. “I hope that every woman, at whatever level, gains the
negotiating power and leverage to thrive,” she adds. “That is the vision
I hold: a society where women are valued, heard, and empowered to shape their
own futures.”