Context:
The Supreme Court intervened in rising cases of student suicides in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) and issued nine directives to Central and State governments to strengthen institutional accountability, student well-being, and faculty capacity.
Key Highlights:
Judicial Intervention / Policy Directions
• Supreme Court invoked Article 142 to ensure complete justice.
• Issued nine directives, including mandatory suicide tracking and institutional reforms.
• Seven directives focus on record-keeping, reporting, and monitoring mechanisms in HEIs.
• Ordered filling of vacancies in Registrar, Vice-Chancellor, and faculty posts.
Data & Institutional Concerns
• Many public HEIs report nearly 50% faculty vacancies.
• Example: University of Madras functioning with half its sanctioned teaching strength.
• Delays in Vice-Chancellor appointments, often linked to disputes over Governor’s powers.
Stakeholders Involved
• Supreme Court of India
• Ministry of Education & State Education Departments
• University Grants Commission (UGC)
• Governors (as Chancellors of State Universities)
• Students, faculty, and administrative staff
Significance / Concerns
• Links student distress to financial hardship, social injustice, and academic pressure.
• Highlights impact of privatization and declining public investment in higher education.
• Stresses need for robust public institutions to achieve Viksit Bharat goals.
• Concerns regarding political interference, corruption, and delayed recruitment processes.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Article 142
- Empowers the Supreme Court to pass decrees/orders necessary for doing complete justice.
- University Grants Commission (UGC)
- Statutory body under UGC Act, 1956.
- Regulates standards of higher education in India.
- Governor as Chancellor
- In many States, Governor functions as ex-officio Chancellor of State universities.
- Student Suicide & Mental Health
- Linked to stress, discrimination, financial vulnerability.
- National bodies like NCRB track suicide data.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Governance & Social Justice (GS 2)
- Student suicides as failure of institutional accountability.
- Need for inclusive campuses free from caste, gender, and economic discrimination.
- Education Sector Reforms
- Faculty shortages weaken academic standards and mentorship.
- Transparent and time-bound recruitment aligned with UGC norms.
- Mental Health & Welfare Mechanisms
- Institutionalized counselling systems, grievance redressal, and anti-discrimination cells.
- Federal Tensions
- Governor–State government conflicts affecting university governance.
- Way Forward
- Mandatory mental health audits in HEIs.
- Filling vacancies through transparent digital recruitment systems.
- Strengthen funding to public universities.
- Regular suicide data publication for evidence-based policy.
UPSC Relevance:
GS 2 – Governance, Social Justice, Education Reforms
Prelims – Article 142, UGC, Constitutional Provisions on Education
