UGC Equity Regulations 2026

Syllabus: Social empowerment.

Context and Supreme Court Intervention

  • Supreme Court stayed UGC (Promotion of Equity in HEIs) Regulations, 2026.
  • Court termed provisions ambiguous and prone to misuse.
  • Notice issued to Centre; legal scrutiny initiated.
  • UGC Regulations, 2012 restored temporarily.

Background of Equity Regulations

  • UGC framed anti-discrimination regulations in 2012.
  • Aim: Promote equity and prevent campus discrimination.
  • Discrimination defined broadly across social identities.
  • Included denial of access, segregation, undignified treatment.
  • Covered caste, religion, language, gender, disability, ethnicity.

Institutional Mechanisms Introduced

  • Mandated Equal Opportunity Cells in universities.
  • Required appointment of anti-discrimination officers.
  • Created structured grievance redressal frameworks.

Trigger for Regulatory Revision

  • Suicides of Rohith Vemula (2016) and Payal Tadvi (2019) raised concerns.
  • Families sought stricter enforcement before Supreme Court.
  • UGC constituted committee to review framework.
  • 2026 regulations emerged from this review.

Key Features of 2026 Regulations

  • Expanded definition of discrimination.
  • Covered unfair treatment against students, faculty, staff.
  • Grounds included caste, religion, gender, disability, race.

Core Controversy: Caste-Based Definition

  • Defined caste discrimination only against SC, ST, OBC members.
  • Triggered opposition from unreserved categories.
  • Critics argued it presumes perpetrators from general category.
  • No penalties prescribed for false complaints.

Supreme Court’s Legal Concerns

  • Case: Mritunjay Tiwari vs Union of India.
  • Court framed substantive constitutional questions.
  • Questioned need for separate caste-based definition.
  • Examined nexus with regulation objectives.
  • Raised concerns over impact on sub-classification debates.

Constitutional Principles Involved

  • Article 14: Equality before law, equal protection.
  • Article 15: Prohibits discrimination on listed grounds.
  • Enables special provisions for SCs, STs, OBCs.
  • Reflects balance between formal and substantive equality.

Legal and Policy Perspectives

  • Government can recognise specific discrimination categories.
  • Caste discrimination considered structurally asymmetric.
  • Linked to historic deprivation and exclusion.

Way Forward Indicated

  • Campuses should minimise caste identity conflicts.
  • Regulations require stakeholder consultation and refinement.
  • Strong enforcement essential to protect vulnerable groups.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top