James Scott Brown: Difference between revisions

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”’Affiliations and Recognition”’

”’Affiliations and Recognition”’

* ”’International Health Sciences University / Clarke International University”’:<ref name=”:1″ /> Brown’s role as [[vice-chancellor]] linked him to the institution’s early expansion before its later name change and leadership transitions.

* ”’International Health Sciences University / Clarke International University”’:<ref name=”:1″ /> Brown’s role as [[vice-chancellor]] linked him to the institution’s early expansion before its later name change and leadership transitions.

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 07:44, 18 December 2025

James Scott Brown is an academic administrator known for serving as the Vice-Chancellor of the International Health Sciences University(IHSU), a private university in Kampala, Uganda. The institution since renamed Clarke International University (CIU),is a licensed degree-awarding university focused on health sciences, public health, business, and related disciplines. [1][2][3]

Education and Early Career

Details of Brown’s early life and education are not widely documented in available public sources, though his academic background includes a medical degree (MB BCh BAO) completed in 1979.[1]

Vice-Chancellor of International Health Sciences University

Brown was appointed Vice-Chancellor of International Health Sciences University (IHSU), a private university in Kampala that began admitting students in 2008 and later rebranded as Clarke International University in 2018.[1][4]

The University was initially founded in 2008 as part of the international Medical Group network and licensed by the Uganda National Council For Higher Education(NCHE). It grew from a nursing school into a multidisciplinary private university offering undergraduates, diploma, and postgraduate programmes in health sciences, public health, business and related fields.[5]

While Brown’s exact years in office are not specified in accessible evergreen sources, alumni records from Queen’s University Belfast note his appointment at IHSU leadership.[1]

Contributions and Legacy

As Vice-Chancellor, Brown played an administrative leadership role during a formative period in the university‘s development, helping to establish its academic reputation and governance structures. IHSCU/CIU later expanded its programmes and physical pressure under subsequent leadership, including a rebranding and diversification of course offerings beyond health sciences.[2][5]

Affiliations and Recognition

References

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