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Indian inequality exposed as ad聽hoc lecturers bear Covid brunt

Covid wave has revealed a deadly lack of welfare and job security

Published on
May 24, 2021
Last updated
May 24, 2021
Homeless people queue for food along a road in New Delhi to show the hardship people have during Covid.
Source: Getty

Indian universities are facing mounting criticism of their response to the country鈥檚 deadly coronavirus surge, with concern focusing on the fate of insecurely employed teaching staff.

At the flagship University of Delhi, at least 35聽lecturers have died from Covid-19 in the past month, according to the Delhi University Teachers鈥 Union. Alok Ranjan Pandey, the union鈥檚 vice-president, said academics employed on an ad聽hoc basis were most at聽risk and called for medical coverage to be extended to聽them.

The union wants a hospital treating Covid patients to be opened on Delhi鈥檚 campus, and for the university to provide jobs for the families of the deceased, reported.


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Apoorvanand, a Hindi professor at Delhi, wrote in that 鈥淚ndian universities are pretending everything is normal, as the world around them is聽collapsing鈥.

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鈥淭he university authorities did not think about creating a Covid support centre on campus,鈥 he told 探花视频. 鈥淚t聽does have health centres, but they were not upgraded to deal with the pandemic.鈥

Professor Apoorvanand was one of the faculty members who helped to initiate a petition asking Delhi to set up a special fund for ad聽hoc staff.

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鈥淚n many ways, our universities have failed their teachers,鈥 he said, adding that non-permanent staff 鈥渂ear the major teaching load in the colleges, but they have no聽security and no聽benefits that come with the聽job鈥.

鈥淭he situation in the state universities is even more pathetic,鈥 Professor Apoorvanand continued. 鈥淭eachers are dying, many of them very young.鈥

Across India, there have been complaints of staff being dismissed suddenly, not being paid their salaries or being made to work through the summer to make up for lost time.

Saikat Majumdar, an English professor at Ashoka University, told THE that 鈥渢he Covid situation has definitely sharpened already existent structures of聽inequity鈥.

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鈥淭he public universities鈥 excessive reliance on ad聽hoc teachers and the exploitation of their labour has also been thrown into relief,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he main problem is the universities鈥 apparent disconnection from reality 鈥 their refusal, as聽it were, to聽take the ravages of the pandemic sufficiently into account.鈥

Managers have come under fire for pressing on with online classes and exams with little flexibility on deadlines, despite a deep digital divide and a health emergency.

鈥淢any universities forced their faculty to be on the campus [to conduct] online classes without creating infrastructure for this,鈥 Professor Apoorvanand said. 鈥淭his meant travelling long distances in crowded buses or auto rickshaws unprotected.鈥

joyce.lau@timeshighereducation.com

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