The Federal Government of Nigeria has taken decisive action to restore the integrity of academic honors, issuing a sweeping directive that prohibits recipients of honorary degrees from using the prestigious title ‘Dr.’ in any official, academic, or professional setting.
The announcement was made on Wednesday by the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, where he addressed State House correspondents following a Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.
The irony of the setting was not lost on observers: a directive aimed at curbing the misuse of academic titles being delivered from the very seat of federal power where such abuses have, by the government’s own admission, been most rampant.
Speaking with visible concern, Minister Alausa painted a troubling picture of how a tradition rooted in academic excellence had been systematically degraded over recent years.
“The recent trend we’ve seen with the award of honorary degrees has revealed a growing abuse and politicization of this academic privilege,” the minister told journalists.
“We’ve seen awards being used for political patronage and for financial gain, as well as the conferral of awards on serving public officials, which, as part of the ethics of honorary degree awards, should not happen.”
His words echoed what many academics and observers have long whispered in corridors: that the honorary doctorate, once a rare and meaningful gesture of institutional recognition bestowed upon individuals of extraordinary public distinction, had gradually become a transactional commodity handed out at convocations with alarming frequency to politicians, businessmen, and benefactors whose primary qualification appeared to be the size of their donation or the weight of their political office.
Effective immediately, individuals who hold honorary degrees from Nigerian institutions will no longer be permitted to prefix their names with the title ‘Dr’ in official, academic, or professional contexts.
Under the new rules, honorary degree recipients must instead spell out the full honorary designation after their names, a distinction that regulators hope will draw an unambiguous line between earned academic credentials and ceremonial recognition.
The practical implications are significant. Countless business cards, letterheads, official correspondence, and public profiles bearing the ‘Dr’ prefix will need to be reviewed and, where necessary, corrected. Government institutions, parastatals, and regulatory bodies are expected to enforce the directive within their respective domains.
The reaction from Nigeria’s academic community has been largely one of quiet relief. Many career academics, who spent years in grueling doctoral programs, have long expressed frustration at watching the title they worked painstakingly to earn become indistinguishable from one conferred at a fundraising dinner.
The honorary doctorate, in its truest form, is a noble tradition observed globally, from Harvard to Oxford, as a means of acknowledging exceptional contributions to society.
The abuse of its associated title, critics argue, has not only diminished its value in Nigeria but has also cast a shadow over the credibility of the country’s tertiary institutions on the international stage.
While the directive has been broadly welcomed, questions linger over enforcement. Nigeria has no shortage of policies that exist robustly on paper but struggle to find traction in practice.
The Ministry of Education is yet to release a comprehensive implementation framework, and it remains to be seen whether the directive will be backed by legislative or regulatory teeth.
What is clear, however, is that the federal government has drawn a line in the academic sand. Whether that line holds will depend not merely on policy but on the political will to enforce it—even when the offenders are, as they so often are, the very people seated closest to power.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Federal Government of Nigeria has banned honorary degree holders from using the title ‘Dr.,’ requiring them instead to display their full honorary designation after their names.
Driven by years of rampant abuse where the title was traded for political favors and financial gain, the directive aims to restore the integrity of genuine academic achievement.
While the policy is a welcome and overdue step, its true test lies not in the announcement, but in enforcement.



















