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India: Academia inhibitions

EducationWorld September 2020 | International News
A report sent to the United Nations warns that greater precarity of academic employment poses a threat to academic freedom in India, with scholars on insecure contracts potentially less willing to rock the boat with critical commentary. Dr. Nandini Sundar, professor of sociology at the University of Delhi in Academic Freedom in India: A Status Report 2020, recommends that universities should better inform their leaders, faculty unions and students about freedom-of-expression rights. The report also suggests that employment contracts should include clauses protecting academic freedom, meaning that staff “will not be penalised for extramural activities”.z “It is engagement with non-academics or the extramural activities of scholars which are most commonly contested, and also the site where academic freedom comes closest to freedom of expression,” the report says. These extramural activities could include commenting in the media or acting as experts outside of campus. One important influence on academic freedom is “the political economy of teaching and learning”. “Given the increasing precaritisation of the teaching workforce (a majority of appointments are now contractual), not only is it difficult to find the time to do research but there are also serious concerns about not alienating management, senior faculty, etc, which limit free speech,” writes Prof. Sundar. Stating that about 40 percent of employees at her institution are contractual, the report cites practices such as public universities trying to impose certain “rules” on academics writing for the press or attending demonstrations. Meanwhile, some private universities require academics to get clearance before publishing research, or even opinion columns “The biggest threats to the academic freedom of an institution come from the appointment of poor leaders who, by dint of inexperience, are typically over-compliant with norms imposed from the outside while being susceptible to pressures of an unfamiliar kind,” says the report. While cases related to academic freedom have been successfully contested in India’s courts, legal challenges can be prohibitively expensive and time-consuming for teaching staff. Prof. Sundar links freedom of expression to the level of internationalisation in a higher education system. “One of the essential components of academic freedom is academic exchange,” she writes. India hosted fewer than 50,000 foreign students in 2019, while scholars from countries deemed politically unfriendly — namely China and Pakistan — may have a hard time acquiring visas. The report also outlines broader threats to academic freedom, including an increased police presence on campus, student arrests, banned events and the communications blackout in Kashmir. It recommends that the government “restore and strengthen” universities’ institutional autonomy, and that global institutions include academic freedom as an indicator in rankings. (Excerpted and adapted from Times Higher Education) Also read: Professional education freedom verdict sparks constitutional crisis Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
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