GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
University of Yangon

University of Yangon

Public flagship arts, sciences, and law university in Myanmar

MyanmarFounded 1920Higher Education, Public Research, National Institution Building, Civic Formation, Academic Freedom, and Democratic Memory
61
MIXED

of 100 · unstable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

61/100

Raw Score

52/85

Confidence

66%

Evidence

Broad

About

The University of Yangon is Myanmar's oldest flagship university, with deep public value in education, research, national leadership formation, and civic memory, but its integrity and resilience record is constrained by repeated state intervention, campus repression, closures, and the post-2021 military-coup crisis.

The institution shows durable public-good contribution through education, research, civic formation, and national leadership pipelines. Its strongest signals are public education, civic memory, and reform aspirations toward autonomy and revitalization. Its main limits come from decades of authoritarian pressure, including loss of autonomy after 1962, closure and fragmentation after student protest movements, and 2021-era suspensions and boycott pressure affecting staff and students.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview40%(10/25)
Contribution to Others43%(13/30)
Personal Discipline90%(9/10)
Reliability100%(9/5)
Stability Under Pressure73%(11/15)

Long public educational contribution and civic memory are strong; integrity and care are constrained by recurring military/state pressure, loss of autonomy, closures, and the post-2021 higher-education crisis.

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 moral mission4/5

Strong public mission around national education, responsible citizens, research, and civic formation.

Accountability language3/5

Official reform materials emphasize autonomy, governance, integrity and responsibility, but implementation evidence is uneven.

Mission conduct alignment3/5

A century of public education supports mission alignment, while political constraints limit present observability.

Contribution to Others

Education access and public benefit4/5

Oldest flagship university with long public benefit in education and leadership formation.

Research for societal needs3/5

Official record describes research modernization and applied work for Myanmar development; outcome evidence is partial.

Student and staff wellbeing2/5

Student and staff welfare has been repeatedly harmed by state pressure, closures, and post-2021 coercive conditions.

Community and civic contribution4/5

Campus history is strongly tied to anti-colonial, civic, and democratic public life.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint3/5

Institutional reform language supports responsible and autonomous learning, but external coercion complicates assessment.

Common good obligation4/5

Public identity is deeply connected to national service and education for public benefit.

Ethical practice rhythm2/5

Routine public evidence of ethical systems, complaint handling, and independent accountability is thin under current conditions.

Reliability

Transparency and public reporting3/5

Official pages provide history, departments, staffing and enrollment snapshots, but current transparent reporting is limited.

Financial and governance reliability2/5

Governance is public and rector-led, but autonomy and reliable independent oversight remain constrained by national politics.

Academic freedom protection2/5

Long record of state restriction, closures, and post-coup pressure prevents a higher integrity score.

Stakeholder complaint and correction2/5

Evidence of durable, independent complaint and correction systems is limited in public sources.

Stability Under Pressure

Institutional continuity5/5

The university has survived war, authoritarian rule, restructuring, closures, and renewed crisis.

Crisis response and reform3/5

The 2010s revitalization agenda is a recovery signal, but the 2021 coup severely destabilized the reform path.

Adaptation and future capacity3/5

International partnerships and ongoing programming show capacity, but current political risk remains severe.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1878

Rangoon College established as an affiliated college

The institution traces its origins to Rangoon College, established as an affiliated college of the University of Calcutta.

Created an early institutional base for modern higher education in Myanmar.

medium
1920

University of Rangoon formed and student strike becomes national memory

University College and Judson College merged into Rangoon University in 1920, while student opposition to the University Act became a major anti-colonial strike.

The university became a center of higher learning and civic-political consciousness.

high
1962

Military coup era begins with campus repression and loss of autonomy

After the 1962 coup, university autonomy was revoked, student protest was violently suppressed, and the student union building was destroyed by the military.

Academic autonomy and campus civic life were severely weakened under military rule.

severe
2021

Anti-coup protests and mass pressure on university staff and students

After the February 2021 coup, protests occurred at or near the University of Yangon, and reporting documented mass suspensions and boycott pressure across Myanmar universities, including reported suspensions at Yangon University.

The university's educational mission was again placed under severe political and security pressure.

severe

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

1962 military coup and campus crackdown

1962

Autonomy was revoked after the coup and the student union building was destroyed after student protest.

Response: The university continued under centralized control; long-term autonomy and civic life were weakened.

negative

2021 coup-era higher-education crisis

2021

Students and staff faced protest, boycott, suspension, and safety pressure under military rule.

Response: The official university record shows continuity, while independent reporting indicates deep disruption and coercive conditions.

mixed_negative

Progression

crisis years

Loss of autonomy, violent suppression, department separation, and repeated closures reduced institutional integrity and care.

declining

current stage

The 2010s brought reform goals, but the 2021 coup reintroduced severe academic-freedom and welfare pressure.

unstable

early years

From Rangoon College to Rangoon University, the institution combined higher learning with anti-colonial civic identity.

improving

growth years

The post-independence period strengthened the university's role as a premier Southeast Asian institution.

improving

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Durable role as Myanmar's oldest flagship university and a major source of national leadership, arts, sciences, law, and research capacity.
  • Strong civic-memory record through student-led anti-colonial and democratic movements connected to the campus.
  • Official reform language emphasizes autonomy, responsible citizenship, research modernization, international collaboration, and service to national renewal.

Concerns

  • Repeated state and military pressure weakened autonomy, campus safety, and academic freedom across multiple periods.
  • Post-2021 evidence points to severe operating pressure, staff/student boycott dynamics, and unresolved legitimacy and safety concerns.
  • The university is both an institution of public learning and a site repeatedly pulled into Myanmar's political conflicts.

Evidence Quality

5

Strong

4

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad

Draft institutional profile based on public evidence; not a judgment of private belief or hidden intention.