Seven in 10 positions set aside for faculty members from India鈥檚 lower castes have yet to be filled, according to recently released figures from the country鈥檚 Ministry of Education.
Only 449 of 1,439 vacancies for faculty members who belong to scheduled tribes, scheduled castes or 鈥渙ther backward classes鈥 had been filled, based on figures for the year from September 2021, according to聽. The high vacancy rate comes despite a year-long government push to recruit more candidates into the jobs.聽
It also takes place amid a broader struggle to fill faculty positions at Indian central universities and聽the country鈥檚 prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), with more than 14,000 faculty posts in the country currently聽, according to reports.
Even so, recent statistics show that lower-caste faculty are highly underrepresented at India鈥檚 top institutions. At the most selective IITs and the Indian Institute of Science,听聽and more than 90 per cent of assistant or associate professors belong to privileged castes, a January report in the journal Nature found.
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Shruti Kapila, a professor of Indian history and global political thought at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, said that the situation hasn鈥檛 substantially changed in recent years despite a constitutional mandate to recruit a certain proportion of faculty from lower castes.
鈥淚ndia has a big problem on diversity and equity in higher education, particularly in the recruitment of faculty and senior leadership of institutions,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is paradoxical, because India has the largest what in the West is called 鈥榓ffirmative action鈥 programme, the reservation system.鈥
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While universities set aside spots for lower-caste students 鈥 including the聽lowest caste of Dalits, previously called 鈥渦ntouchables鈥 鈥 there needs to be more transparency on their career trajectories, she believed.
鈥淒alit students are coming and studying, but then what happens to them?鈥 asked Professor Kapila.
Suraj Yengde, a Dalit activist and a research associate in Harvard University鈥檚 department of African and African American studies, was incredulous that even after a government push, Indian publicly funded universities were so far behind on recruiting the needed number of reserved faculty.
He also wanted to know what happens聽behind closed doors. Dr Yengde recounted an anecdote about a highly published young Dalit academic at a top Indian university who, despite surpassing the qualifications needed for the job, was not given a promotion by older, upper-caste colleagues.
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鈥淵ou have cases where promotions are stalled internally,鈥 he said.
In the case of external candidates, there can be a feeling that the 鈥減erson who is applying under [a] quota is not necessarily appreciated鈥, he said.
Dr Yengde argued that institutions and the government should pay closer attention to what happens during the interview process.
A simple fix could be for universities to ensure they have diverse panels for recruiting faculty, he said.
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鈥淥nce you have more representation鈥ive them the task [to] go find and hire these people.鈥
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