Impact of Capacity Building Programs on Employee Performance in Private Universities in Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan
Farsheed Latifee
Khurasan University Business Administration Journal, 2025
Abstract:
This study examines the impact of capacity-building programs on employee performance in private universities within Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan. Against the backdrop of a developing higher education sector facing resource constraints and institutional challenges, the research investigates how targeted training initiatives influence faculty and administrative staff competencies, job satisfaction, and overall institutional effectiveness. Utilizing a quantitative research design, the study collected data from 226 employees across seven private universities through a validated Likert-scale questionnaire, achieving a 91.1% response rate. Findings reveal a strong positive correlation between capacity-building participation and enhanced employee performance, with 93.3% of respondents reporting improved job-related skills and 92.5% observing measurable departmental performance gains. The study identifies knowledge-sharing culture (93.8% agreement) and skill application support (89.8% agreement) as critical success factors, while noting gaps in career pathway alignment (only 38.9% strongly agreeing on role suitability post-training). These results substantiate human capital theory while highlighting contextual implementation challenges unique to Afghanistan's higher education environment. The research contributes to academic discourse by providing empirical evidence from an understudied conflict-affected region, demonstrating how strategic workforce development can mitigate institutional capacity gaps. Practical implications suggest the need for more structured post-training support systems and clearer career progression frameworks. Methodologically, the study adapts and validates a cross-cultural research instrument for fragile educational contexts. Limitations include geographical specificity and reliance on self-reported data, suggesting directions for future longitudinal and comparative studies.
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:khr:wpaper:0049
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