NLSIU Regrets Starting Public Policy Course Without UGC’s Permission

Janvi Bhambri

Updated On: February 17, 2016 12:52 pm IST

NLSIU Bangalore started a public policy course named “Master of Public Policy” in 2014, but without UGC’s permission. Now after two
NLSIU Regrets Starting Public Policy Course Without UGC’s Permission

NLSIU Bangalore started a public policy course named “Master of Public Policy” in 2014, but without UGC’s permission. Now after two years from commencement of the course, UGC is making the university regret its decisions.

NLSIU is struggling for the University Grants Commission’s (UGC) permission to allow the college to award its public policy course students the degree for which they signed up for in 2014. The law school has time until August. In NLSIU's case, 40 students took admission to the course in 2014 and 49 students took admission in 2015.

However, around four months ago, the law school informed the students of the course that it lacked permission from the UGC to award them a degree with the name “Master of Public Policy”, and if permission was not forthcoming, the degree that would be awarded to them would be an “MA in Public Policy”, where MA stands for Master of Arts.

NLSIU is taking the issue seriously and has formed a committee to convince the UGC to accept NLSIU original "Master of Public Policy"' nomenclature for the program.

NLSIU isn't the first university to not get UGC’s permission. JGLS Sonepat, The Azim Premji University and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) had also attempted offering MPP degrees in India, but after also having been denied the UGC’s permission they had changed the nomenclature for their offered post-graduate degree in public policy.

The course is taught by “distinguished academics” such as ICSSR National Fellow Prof G Hargopal, TISS Prof N Jayaram, former NLSIU registrar Prof Babu Mathew, Osmania university Prof BN Reddy and Dr Abdul Azeez from the Institute of Social and Economic Change.

“An institution such as the NLSIU should not be subject to the same standards [for degree nomenclatures] as mushrooming private universities,” adding that after the internal committee submitted its report to NLSIU vice chancellor Prof Venkat Rao this week, and the NLSIU academic council ratified the report, the law school would work with the UGC to expedite the body’s consideration of NLSIU’s case.

What UGC thinks?

In 2013 the UGC had adopted the degree nomenclature recommendations submitted by Indian Law Institute (ILI) Prof Dr Furqan Ahmad’s committee. Since then, the commission does not allow colleges to award any degrees whose name is not included in the recommended list.

The “Master of Public Policy” does not fall on the list.

A source within the UGC told Legally India that after 2013 the commission had become extremely stringent about maintaining uniformity in the application of its rules on degree nomenclatures.

“There is a list of specified degrees which the UGC has, which is essential to maintain uniformity and to maintain standards. Because when one candidate goes from one university to another, if the degree [awarded] is not on the same pattern the issue of equivalence emerges leading to a lot of difficulty. So UGC became strict with respect to adherence to uniformity,” the source commented.

“But you can make a special request to the UGC [for approval of a special nomenclature not on the UGC’s list]. It has been done in the past also. NLSIU did all this at a very late stage, after admitting students.”

“For a Masters in [any stream] the UGC has no objection. But the thing is you should honour the UGC's academic and administrative authority. You can’t try to ignore the UGC because the UGC is also doing these things to make the procedure and processes simple.”

The UGC source added that “it is not a big academic crime that [NLSIU has] done” but the fate of the degree now “depends on the attitude of the people” before whom NLSIU will present its application. Since the commission is far more strict now than it was before 2013, the result could go either way, he said.

Prof Rao commented: “I will stand by whatever the [MPP] course coordinator Prof Japhet says.” NLSIU MPP Prof S Japhet declined to comment when contacted.

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