GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
KU

Kabul University

Public national university

AfghanistanFounded 1932Higher Education, Public Research, and National Professional Training
52
MIXED

of 100 · unstable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

52/100

Raw Score

44/85

Confidence

64%

Evidence

About

Kabul University is Afghanistan's flagship public university, with deep national educational value and repeated recovery after war, but its current alignment is heavily constrained by Taliban-era higher-education restrictions, especially the exclusion of women from university study.

The record shows long public-service value, post-2001 rebuilding, expanded faculties and graduate programs, and continuing research-journal activity. The central current failure is the de facto higher-education environment in which women have been barred from universities and academic autonomy is constrained.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview36%(9/25)
Contribution to Others33%(10/30)
Personal Discipline70%(7/10)
Reliability100%(9/5)
Stability Under Pressure60%(9/15)

Historical educational value and resilience are offset by severe current exclusion of women, limited autonomy, and constrained rights conditions.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Public mission clarity4/5

Official materials present Kabul University as Afghanistan's main public higher-education institution.

Moral framework visible3/5

Strategic language emphasizes Islamic rulings, national interests, social needs, and educational service.

Mission decision alignment2/5

Current exclusion of women contradicts broad public-good education.

Contribution to Others

Education access contribution4/5

Long-term expansion shows major social contribution.

Gender and vulnerable access1/5

Women have been barred from universities since 2022 under de facto policy.

Community and public benefit3/5

Public university training and research provide broad civic value.

Harm mitigation for stakeholders2/5

Public evidence of effective protection against current exclusion is weak.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint2/5

Official values invoke Islamic and national values, but current exclusion limits this signal.

Service obligation3/5

The university's public role shows durable service obligation.

Disciplined institutional practice2/5

Strategic planning and journals show discipline, while disruption limits the score.

Reliability

Transparency of public record3/5

Official history records civil-war destruction and prior Taliban-era exclusion of women.

Governance reliability2/5

De facto political control limits reliable academic self-governance.

Academic quality systems3/5

Accreditation, quality references, journals, and program expansion support moderate quality signals.

Rights consistency1/5

Gender exclusion contradicts equal educational access.

Stability Under Pressure

Recovery after war4/5

The university rebuilt after civil war and post-2001 institutional damage.

Continuity under security pressure3/5

The university continued after the 2020 attack and ongoing insecurity.

Self correction capacity2/5

There is limited public evidence that the university can correct current exclusionary conditions under de facto authority.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1932

Medical Faculty establishes Kabul University foundation

Official history identifies November 1932 and the Medical Faculty as the origin of Afghanistan's first higher-education institution.

Created the foundation for modern public higher education in Afghanistan.

high
1946

Establishment Law formalizes academic administration

Official history describes the 1946 establishment law as the foundation of the university's academic and administrative activities.

Provided a formal legal and administrative basis for Afghanistan's public university system.

high
1996

Female students and professors excluded under Taliban rule

Official history states that after the Taliban captured Kabul in 1996, female students were not allowed to study and female professors lost their jobs.

Marked a major rights and access failure in the operating environment.

high
2001

Post-2001 rehabilitation expands access and programs

After 2001, official history reports growth to 22 faculties, 101 departments, 23 master's programs, two PhD programs, national accreditation, online systems, and 25,000 students.

Rebuilt a large public higher-education institution and expanded access, including reported female student participation up to 41 percent before later restrictions.

high
2020

Armed attack on Kabul University kills students and staff

Al Jazeera reported at least 22 people killed and 22 wounded in an hours-long attack on Kabul University, claimed by ISIL.

Inflicted severe trauma and deepened insecurity around education.

high
2022

Women suspended from universities across Afghanistan

The UN in Afghanistan condemned the Taliban de facto authorities' decision to close universities to female students until further notice and called for immediate reversal.

Removed half the population from university education and sharply weakened the university's social-care and rights alignment.

high

Draft institutional profile based on public evidence; observable institutional conduct only, not hidden intention.