A determined military officer, Elsie Pokuaa Manu, overcame intense academic, professional, and battlefield challenges to earn her PhD from the University of Ghana, graduating as the only woman in her class while rising through the ranks of the Ghana Armed Forces.


Against remarkable odds, Elsie Pokuaa Manu, a disciplined military officer, has earned a PhD from the University of Ghana, graduating as the only woman in her class.
At the start of her doctoral journey, Elsie was a Lieutenant in the Ghana Armed Forces, fully aware that combining military service with a PhD would demand exceptional resilience. She found herself in a class of eight men, constantly navigating pressure, stereotypes, and the challenge of proving her competence in male-dominated environments.
While fulfilling active military duties during the week, Elsie devoted her weekends to teaching, research, and academic work. Rest was rare, yet she persevered—successfully passing promotion exams from Lieutenant to Captain during her studies.
Her responsibilities expanded further as she undertook the Elsie Initiative Cadre at the Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College and trained at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre. Each achievement added to an already demanding schedule.
When the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted academic life, Elsie adapted to virtual learning and supervision without slowing down. During the same period, she passed another promotion exam, advancing from Captain to Major.
She later completed the grueling Young Officers Course—a six-month combat and tactical program designed to test physical endurance, mental strength, and emotional stability. Shortly after, she was deployed to Lebanon on a United Nations peacekeeping mission.
Deployed in a volatile conflict zone amid heightened regional tensions, Elsie lived under constant uncertainty, sleeping in bunkers and enduring limited contact with loved ones. Still, she refused to abandon her doctoral research. After a year-long deployment, she returned to Ghana exhausted but determined.
Despite military promotions, global disruption, frontline deployment, and moments of deep fatigue and self-doubt, Elsie completed her PhD. Reflecting on her journey, she described her achievement not just as personal success but as proof that resilience knows no gender.
She dedicated her degree to women who often stand alone in professional spaces—those who work twice as hard to be seen as equals while balancing societal, cultural, and career expectations.
Elsie Pokuaa Manu’s story stands as a powerful reminder that discipline, purpose, and perseverance can triumph over even the most demanding circumstances.
SOURCES: ALLSCHOOL, SCHOLARSHIP REGION
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