Sarah Ssali (born 1971) is a Ugandan social scientist, researcher, and Professor of Gender and Development Studies at Makerere University. She is currently the Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic Affairs) at Makerere University, becoming the second woman to hold this position in the university's history after Lillian Tibatemwa-Ekirikubinza.
Ssali was born in Uganda. She holds a PhD in International Health Studies from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, a Master of Arts in Women's and Gender Studies, and a Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences from Makerere University.
Sarah Ssali, whose academic work also appears under the name Sarah N. Ssali, is a Ugandan academic and Professor of Gender Studies at Makerere University. Her work focuses on gender, health systems, public policy, and the political economy of health. She has held several teaching, research, and administrative roles at Makerere University, where she has been a long-standing member of the School of Women and Gender Studies.
Through her career trajectory at Makerere, she served as a lecturer, senior lecturer, and Associate Professor before becoming a Professor of Gender Studies. She also served as Dean of the School of Women and Gender Studies, where she oversaw academic programs, research development, and administrative leadership within the school. She was the Director of the Institute of Women and Gender Studies at Makerere University until her appointment as the Deputy Vice Chancellor Academic Affairs.
SsaliâÂÂs research centres on gendered dimensions of health systems, HIV/AIDS, reproductive health, and social policy, particularly in Uganda and in post-conflict or fragile settings.. She has contributed to international collaborative research funded by institutions such the World Health Organisation,as well as serve on several governing and advisory boards.
On 23 September 2025, Ssali was appointed as the Deputy Vice Chancellor Academic Affairs at Makerere University. The appointment was confirmed by Vice Chancellor Prof. Barnabas Nawangwe, who noted that she is the second woman to hold this position in the universityâÂÂs 100-year history following, Lillian Tibatemwa-Ekirikubinza.
According to a report by the East African Centre for Investigative Reporting, some university sources alleged that the search process for the Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic Affairs) position was influenced to favour Ssali. The report also noted that a petition concerning the process was submitted to the Inspectorate of Government.
During her PhD studies at Queen Margaret University between 1999 and 2003, Ssali balanced academic work while raising a young child and arriving in Scotland pregnant, as she recalled in an interview with QMU.