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March 03, 2026

Shakti with Conditions Apply

 


A woman draped in saffron, spine straight, gaze steady, trident in hand. Behind her, a towering silhouette of divinity. Around her, chants of culture, pride, resurgence. Above her, a word glows in gold: Empowerment.

And then, in smaller print, the clause that changes everything.

This is the paradox of managed emancipation. Women are elevated symbolically, sanctified in rhetoric, invoked as embodiments of strength and civilizational glory. Yet the structure within which they are allowed to exercise that strength is carefully drafted. The pedestal is high, but it is fenced.

The architecture behind this fencing is not accidental. It is sustained by an ecosystem. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh does not function merely as a cultural association. It operates as a layered network of influence, extending into politics through the Bharatiya Janata Party, into gender mobilisation through the Rashtr Sevika Samiti, and into education, tribal outreach, labour, and intellectual platforms through a disciplined web of affiliates.

Each unit appears autonomous. Each carries its own vocabulary. Yet the ideological grammar is consistent. Culture first. Continuity first. Nation as sacred inheritance.

In contemporary cultural politics, the language of Shakti has become a powerful instrument within this framework. It offers affirmation. It invokes heritage. It appeals to memory. It tells women they are not merely equal, they are divine. At first glance, this appears radical. What could be more empowering than deification?

But deification can be a sophisticated form of containment.

When a woman is framed as goddess, she is distanced from ordinary agency. Goddesses are revered, not heard. Worshipped, not negotiated with. Placed above society, yet kept away from the messy business of restructuring it. The symbolism soars. The structural reality remains intact.

The modern discourse of rights emerged from confrontation. It demanded equality before law. It challenged property regimes, workplace hierarchies, marital subordination, and inherited patriarchy. It insisted that autonomy is not a cultural concession but a constitutional guarantee. It was disruptive by design.

The model of Shakti, as advanced within ecosystem aligned platforms, is different. It does not confront the structure. It seeks to harmonize within it. It celebrates leadership, but within civilizational grammar. It encourages participation, but discourages rupture. It affirms strength, but disciplines dissent.

This is empowerment with perimeter.

The brilliance of the model lies in its aesthetic power. Who can object to strength? Who can oppose reverence? Who can critique pride in tradition without being painted as alienated from roots? The vocabulary is emotionally intelligent. It disarms resistance before resistance can articulate itself.

Yet the fine print remains.

The empowered woman is expected to embody sacrifice, restraint, and duty. She may rise, but not destabilize. She may speak, but not interrogate the foundational myths of the framework that uplifts her. She may lead, but her leadership must reinforce cultural continuity, not question it.

The distinction between reverence and rights is subtle but profound. Reverence depends on approval. Rights do not. Reverence can be withdrawn if conduct deviates from expectation. Rights cannot be revoked for ideological nonconformity. When empowerment is framed as cultural privilege rather than constitutional entitlement, it becomes conditional.

This conditionality thrives in regions where the ecosystem’s social penetration is dense. In Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and across the broader Hindi heartland, decades of grassroots consolidation have normalized this narrative architecture. Shakhas cultivate discipline. Educational institutions shape historical memory. Cultural conventions reinforce a singular understanding of identity. Tribal outreach programs reframe local identities within a larger nationalist script.

The process is incremental. The effect is cumulative.

This is how normalization works. It does not coerce. It familiarizes. It saturates public life until one narrative feels instinctive and alternatives feel disruptive. Political ideology is translated into cultural inevitability. Once internalized, dissent appears less like disagreement and more like deviation.

And reassurance is politically potent.

The ecosystem rarely relies on overt authoritarianism. It relies on familiarity. On repetition. On disciplined unanimity. Internal fractures remain private. Public messaging remains coherent. Over time, coherence becomes credibility. Credibility becomes moral authority.

But reassurance can also be anesthetic. It dulls the urgency of structural reform. If women are already goddesses, what remains to be changed? If strength is inherent, why interrogate systemic inequality? If tradition is inherently protective, why examine its exclusions?

The problem is not culture. Culture evolves. It contains multiplicities. The problem arises when culture is presented as singular and beyond critique. When a specific interpretation of heritage becomes the authoritative lens through which empowerment must pass, plurality narrows.

One sees this most sharply in discussions around patriarchy embedded within tradition itself. Managed empowerment rarely foregrounds the dismantling of deeply entrenched hierarchies in religious or social institutions. Reform is reframed as moral refinement rather than structural redistribution of power. The emphasis shifts from equality to harmony.

Harmony is a beautiful word. It implies balance, cohesion, peace. But harmony can also silence discord that needs articulation. When the pursuit of unity overrides the pursuit of justice, imbalance persists under a veneer of calm.

There is a deeper philosophical divide at play. Is freedom the capacity to act within inherited frameworks, or the authority to redefine those frameworks? Is empowerment about occupying space granted, or claiming space denied? The Shakti narrative, as operationalized within this ecosystem, leans toward the former.

It offers elevation without emancipation.

Supporters argue that civilizational continuity must be preserved. That rapid rupture destabilizes society. That identity rooted strength is more sustainable than abstract rights discourse. These arguments resonate widely. They appeal to order in a time of flux.

Yet continuity without critique can calcify into conformity. A democracy thrives on friction. It depends on the freedom to challenge not only the state but also the cultural frameworks that shape the state. When empowerment is filtered through ideological alignment, dissenting women risk being labeled deviant rather than simply different.

The irony is striking. A nation that reveres feminine divinity in mythology struggles to guarantee unqualified autonomy in reality. The goddess is invincible. The citizen is conditional.

“Shakti with Conditions Apply” is not a rejection of heritage. It is a warning against confusing symbolism with substance. Empowerment cannot be selective. It cannot celebrate strength while policing its direction. It cannot elevate women rhetorically while supervising their autonomy structurally.

True emancipation is messy. It unsettles comfort. It questions inherited certainties. It demands redistribution of power, not merely redistribution of praise. It insists that reverence without rights is ornamental equality.

The challenge before India is not whether women are strong. They are. The question is whether that strength will be allowed to define itself outside curated narratives. Whether leadership can exist without ideological sponsorship. Whether autonomy can flourish without moral gatekeeping.

A pedestal is not a platform. One elevates to immobilize. The other elevates to enable movement.

If empowerment is real, it will survive scrutiny. It will welcome interrogation. It will not fear women who question the very structures that claim to honor them.

Until then, the fine print remains.

And the trident, however sharp, will always be held within approved limits.

 

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.

 

February 12, 2026

Icons and Ironies in the Politics of Faith

 




History has a mischievous sense of humour. It delights in placing unlikely ingredients into the same political kitchen and watching later generations argue about the recipe. Few comparisons reveal this better than the public images and private ironies surrounding Savarkar, Gandhi, and Jinnah. Each became a towering symbol. Each is now packaged as a simplified mascot. And each, if resurrected, might politely decline the brochure written in his name.

Vinayak Damodar Savarkar presents the first paradox. A Chitpavan Brahmin who did not treat diet as destiny, he openly consumed meat and spoke in rational and utilitarian terms about cow protection and cow slaughter. His writings show that he approached the cow less as a divine mother and more as an economic animal. This alone is enough to make many of his present day admirers reach for selective quotation and spiritual white correction fluid. Savarkar’s personal habits were strikingly modern for his time. Anecdotes describe him as someone who enjoyed meat and fine drink, sometimes jokingly said to be paired with Zetsun whiskey, whether literally or in spirit. The larger point stands. His cultural politics was orthodox in identity but flexible in lifestyle. He separated personal conduct from political mobilisation with impressive convenience.

Savarkar was a master of ideological engineering. He understood that identity, when sharpened, becomes a political weapon more efficient than any sword. His project of Hindutva was not merely religious but civilisational and territorial. It was designed as a binding glue as well as a boundary wall. He wrote with clarity and force. He argued with discipline. He provoked with purpose. But there was also a theatrical quality to the construction. The champion of cultural purity was personally unburdened by ritual purity. The architect of Hindu consolidation was socially radical in some reforms yet rigid in civilisational definition. It is as if the chef refused to eat from the menu he so passionately marketed.

Then comes Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, who appears at first glance as Savarkar’s mirror opposite. A devout Hindu and a lifelong vegetarian, Gandhi turned personal discipline into public method. His politics wore a moral costume and often insisted that everyone else try it on. Yet Gandhi’s great disruption was not dietary but democratic. He invited disagreement. He tolerated critics. He argued in public and corrected himself in public. He spiritualised politics but also pluralised it. His Hinduism was deeply felt but rarely framed as a citizenship test.

Gandhi’s irony lies elsewhere. The most religious of the three often behaved in the most politically inclusive way. He could be stubborn, moralising, and occasionally impractical, but he did not build his politics on permanent enemies. He built it on conversion of hearts, including the hearts of his opponents. Empires prefer rebels with bombs. They find rebels with conscience extremely inconvenient. Gandhi’s method was slow, exasperating, and annoyingly humane. In a century addicted to strong medicine, he prescribed moral physiotherapy.

Muhammad Ali Jinnah completes the trio with perhaps the sharpest twist. Urbane, impeccably dressed, trained in law, and culturally Westernised, Jinnah was not known for religious orthodoxy in personal life. He enjoyed wine. Many accounts suggest he was indifferent to ritual observance. Some controversial claims even suggest dietary choices forbidden in Islam. Yet history crowned him as the great spokesman of Muslim political destiny. Nothing proves that politics is a costume party better than this transformation.

Jinnah was not a cleric. He was a constitutionalist who lost faith in constitutional guarantees. His demand for Pakistan grew not from seminary theology but from political distrust and strategic calculation. He mobilised religious identity with a lawyer’s precision rather than a preacher’s passion. The result was a religious nation argued into existence by a secular mind. It is one of history’s grand ironies that personal liberalism can sometimes produce public separation.

Here is where the satire matures. Savarkar and Jinnah, despite standing under different flags, used strikingly similar political techniques. Both converted community identity into political currency. Both warned their followers of cultural danger. Both argued that coexistence without dominance was a risky bargain. Their languages differed. Their symbols differed. Their emotional audiences differed. Their strategic grammar often did not. Each ran a campaign of civilisational anxiety with impressive intellectual packaging.

Gandhi alone refused to fully enter this marketplace of fear. He spoke of civilisation too, but as an ethical experiment rather than a guarded fortress. While the other two drafted blueprints for political separation of identities, Gandhi drafted invitations for moral coexistence. He was frequently ignored, sometimes opposed, and eventually canonised in ways that also simplify him unfairly. Saints are often edited more aggressively than sinners.

The lesson is not that one man was pure and the others were villains. The lesson is that political memory is a talented fiction writer. It removes inconvenient habits, upgrades symbolic value, and airbrushes contradictions. The meat eating nationalist becomes a mascot of ritual culture. The secular barrister becomes an icon of religious destiny. The spiritual democrat becomes a harmless statue on currency notes.

If there is humour in this, it is dry and durable. History does not just repeat itself. It also rebrands itself. And the loudest brand ambassadors are often those who have not read the full manual.

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.

 

Disclaimer : - The views expressed here are interpretive and satirical in nature, meant for discussion and reflection, not personal or religious offence.

January 30, 2026

Joining the Dots: When Ideology Pulled the Trigger on Gandhi

 




Joining the Dots: When Ideology Pulled the Trigger on Gandhi

On January 30, 1948, Mahatma Gandhi was shot dead at Birla House. The assassin was Nathuram Godse. But assassinations are never solitary acts. They are the final outcome of a long process — of ideological grooming, public incitement, moral sanction, and social rehearsal. Bullets may end a life, but ideas prepare the ground.

Gandhi was not merely murdered. He was systematically silenced.


Savarkar: The Blessing Before the Bullets

Any serious examination of Gandhi’s assassination collapses if Vinayak Damodar Savarkar is airbrushed out. The most incriminating evidence pointing to Savarkar’s role came not from conjecture, but from sworn testimony during the trial.

Digambar Badge, an arms dealer and close associate of Nathuram Godse and Narayan Apte, turned approver in the case. His statement is part of the court record and is reproduced in detail in Tushar Gandhi’s Let’s Kill Gandhi: A Chronicle of His Last Days, the Conspiracy, Murder, Investigation and Trial.

Badge testified that on January 17, 1948, barely thirteen days before the assassination, Godse suggested that the conspirators take a final darshan of “Tatyarao” Savarkar. They went to Savarkar Sadan in Bombay. Godse and Apte went upstairs, returned after five to ten minutes, and were followed by Savarkar himself, who blessed them with the words:

“Yashasvi houn ya”Be successful and return.

In Maharashtrian cultural context, such words are not casual pleasantries. They are uttered before acts of consequence — journeys, battles, or decisive missions. Badge stated that he regarded Savarkar as a devta until the end of his life. That reverence makes his testimony harder, not easier, to dismiss.

Savarkar was acquitted due to lack of corroborative evidence. But acquittal is not moral exoneration. Criminal law demands proof beyond reasonable doubt. History asks a different question: why would assassins seek Savarkar’s blessing on the eve of murder, and why would he give it?

Savarkar did not need to issue instructions. His blessing functioned as moral sanction. It told the assassins that what they were about to do was not a crime, but a duty.


 

An Ideology That Could Not Tolerate Gandhi

Savarkar’s Hindutva was fundamentally incompatible with Gandhi’s India. Gandhi believed the nation belonged equally to all its people. Savarkar believed it belonged primarily to those who fit a cultural and civilisational definition of Hindu identity. Gandhi saw non violence as moral strength. Savarkar dismissed it as weakness.

To extremist nationalists, Gandhi’s insistence on Hindu Muslim unity, his fasts to stop communal violence, and his demand that India honour its financial commitment to Pakistan were unforgivable. Gandhi was no longer a leader to be debated. He was an obstacle to be removed.


Public Incitement: When Killing Became a Slogan

By January 1948, hostility towards Gandhi had spilled openly onto the streets of Delhi. Contemporary accounts record slogans such as “Gandhi ko marne do, humko ghar do” being shouted publicly. Gandhi’s fast further enraged extremist groups who saw his moral authority as a direct threat.

On January 20, 1948, Madanlal Pahwa attempted to assassinate Gandhi with a bomb. He failed. Ten days later, Nathuram Godse succeeded.

Even before the murder, Gandhi’s death was being publicly rehearsed.

At Connaught Circus, about four kilometres from Birla House, a group of RSS men in khaki shorts, white shirts, and black caps were seen exercising vigorously and shouting slogans at the top of their voices:

“Buddhe ko marne do” — let the old man die.

The idea of Gandhi’s death had already been normalised.


RSS and the Sewak Reports: Preparing the Ground

The Sewak Reports — declassified intelligence files submitted to the court — contain transcripts of speeches made by MS Golwalkar, then Sarsanghchalak of the RSS. In early December 1947, Golwalkar addressed over 2,500 RSS volunteers in Delhi.

According to the report, Golwalkar said:

“The law cannot meet force. We should be prepared for guerrilla warfare on the lines of the tactics of Shivaji. The Sangh will not rest content until it has finished Pakistan. If anyone stands in our way, we will have to finish him too, whether it is the Nehru Government or any other government.”

And more directly:

“No power on earth can keep Muslims in Hindustan. Gandhi wants to keep them for Congress votes. But by the time elections come, not a single Muslim will be left here.”

These were not abstract speeches. They articulated the ideological logic of silencing Gandhi.

Days later, Gandhi was silenced.


The Weapon and the Act

On the evening of January 30, 1948, Nathuram Godse fired three bullets from a Beretta Model 1934 semi automatic pistol, an Italian made handgun, at point blank range. Gandhi collapsed.

Godse did not flee. He did not deny. He believed he had performed a necessary deed.


Celebration After the Murder

India mourned. But not everyone.

Investigative records and witness testimonies reveal that sweets were distributed in certain Hindu Mahasabha circles after news of Gandhi’s assassination spread. In Gwalior, a Hindu Mahasabha leader distributed sweets to party members and asked them to tune in to the radio that evening. After Gandhi was shot, sweets were again purchased and distributed among friends and family.

One individual described the killing as “a good deed,” stating that an opponent of Hindu religion had been eliminated and Hinduism would now be safe. Gandhi was referred to as an “avatar of Aurangzeb.”

Another witness recalled hearing it said openly:

“Gandhiji ko marne wala apna aadmi tha.”
The man who killed Gandhi was one of ours.

This was not madness. It was ideological approval.


Godse Was Not a Loner

Godse was not an outsider. He had been associated with the RSS, worked with the Hindu Mahasabha, and revered Savarkar as his guru. His newspaper Agrani reflected deep resentment against Gandhi and Muslims.

The claim that Godse had left the RSS before the assassination collapses under scrutiny.

On November 15, 1949, as he walked to the gallows, Godse recited the RSS prayer “Namaste Sada Vatsale Matrubhoome.” Even in death, he reaffirmed ideological belonging.

Years later, his brother Gopal Godse stated in an interview that they had never truly left the RSS and that it was like a family to them.


Golwalkar After the Assassination

Within twenty four hours of the murder, public opinion swung sharply against extremist groups. The Hindu Rashtra project collapsed overnight. Golwalkar rushed to salvage the organisation.

On February 1, 1948, he issued a statement invoking love and service, directing swayamsevaks to maintain harmony. This language stood in stark contrast to the venom directed at Gandhi weeks earlier, when he had been described as disloyal to Hindus and even threatened with being “silenced.”

The shift was tactical, not ideological.


Conclusion: An Unfinished Reckoning

Savarkar supplied the justification.
Golwalkar supplied mobilisation.
The RSS shakha supplied discipline and fraternity.
The Hindu Mahasabha supplied political direction.
Godse supplied the bullets.

The bullet was Godse’s.
The blueprint was older.

Courts deal in proof. History deals in patterns. And the pattern behind Gandhi’s murder is unmistakable.

If Gandhi’s death is to mean anything, it must compel us to confront uncomfortable truths — not with garlands or slogans, but with honesty.

Because bullets may kill a man once. Ideologies that justify them can kill a nation repeatedly.


 

 

About the Author

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.


References

1.    Appu Esthose Suresh & Priyanka Kotamraju, The Murderer, the Monarch and the Fakir, Juggernaut

2.    Tushar Gandhi, Let’s Kill Gandhi, Rupa

3.    Dhirendra K. Jha, Gandhi’s Assassin: The Making of Nathuram Godse, Penguin

4.    Justice J.L. Kapur Commission Report

5.    Sewak Reports, Intelligence Bureau Records

6.    A.G. Noorani, Savarkar and Hindutva, LeftWord

7.    Christophe Jaffrelot, The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics, Penguin

8.    Ramachandra Guha, India After Gandhi, HarperCollins

9.    Frontline magazine, interview with Gopal Godse

10. Gandhi Murder Trial records identifying the weapon as a Beretta Model 1934 pistol



Disclaimer: This piece is a historical analysis based on court records, commission reports, and established scholarship. Views expressed are the author’s interpretation of documented events and are intended solely for public understanding.

January 29, 2026

UGC Equity Regulations Between Justice and Political Optics

 

 


UGC Equity Regulations Between Justice and Political Optics

The UGC Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions Regulations 2026 have triggered intense debate across campuses and social media. Supporters describe them as long overdue protection against caste based discrimination. Critics see them as another instrument of political signalling without structural reform. To understand this controversy, one must separate three distinct questions. First, does caste discrimination in higher education exist. Second, are these regulations legally and constitutionally sound. Third, are they being used as a substitute for real investment in public education while serving political narratives.

The Context of Rohith Vemula and Institutional Failure

No serious discussion on campus discrimination can avoid the Rohith Vemula case. Rohith was not merely a student who died by suicide. His death exposed how institutional apathy, administrative targeting and political pressure can combine to crush dissenting students from vulnerable backgrounds. Similar concerns arose in the Payal Tadvi case in medical education, where harassment and isolation preceded tragedy. These incidents are not isolated emotional stories. They are indicators of systemic failures in grievance redressal, mentoring and campus accountability.

After these cases, courts, parliamentary committees and civil society repeatedly asked universities and regulators to create functional and sensitive mechanisms. The earlier UGC guidelines of 2012 asked institutions to set up grievance cells, but they were advisory and largely ignored. Many universities either created paper committees or merged them with unrelated offices. Complaints remained unresolved and administrators faced no consequences.

From this perspective, the shift from advisory guidelines to binding regulations in 2026 is not arbitrary. It is an attempt to give teeth to constitutional obligations under Articles 15 and 46, which mandate special protection for socially and educationally backward classes. In principle, this move is constitutionally legitimate and socially necessary.

What the New Regulations Change

The 2026 regulations make Equal Opportunity Centres mandatory, fix responsibility on heads of institutions, prescribe reporting mechanisms and allow UGC to impose penalties including withdrawal of grants and even recognition. Discrimination is defined broadly to include not only overt acts but also institutional practices that produce unequal outcomes.

This is a significant change in regulatory philosophy. Earlier, the burden was moral. Now, it is legal and financial. Institutions that fail to act risk losing funding and legitimacy.

Supporters argue that without enforceable consequences, universities have no incentive to reform entrenched power structures. From this angle, the regulations move social justice from sympathy to obligation.

Legal and Constitutional Concerns

However, constitutional law does not operate only on objectives. It also operates on procedure, proportionality and equality before law.

Article 14 guarantees equality before law and protection of due process. Welfare regulation cannot justify abandonment of natural justice. Critics point out that the regulations do not clearly provide safeguards against false or malicious complaints, independent inquiry structures or proportional disciplinary processes. While the intent is to protect vulnerable students, absence of procedural clarity exposes the system to legal challenges.

Courts in India have consistently held that even protective laws must not violate principles of fairness. Laws dealing with sexual harassment, domestic violence and child protection have faced judicial scrutiny when misused or when procedural safeguards were weak. The concern is not that most complaints are false, but that law must be robust enough to handle both genuine victims and wrongful accusations.

In constitutional terms, a framework that punishes institutions or individuals without transparent inquiry standards risks failing the test of proportionality. If penalties are severe but investigative capacity is weak, enforcement becomes arbitrary. That weakens both justice and legitimacy.

There is also the issue of institutional autonomy. Education is in the Concurrent List. Universities are expected to enjoy academic self governance. Excessive regulatory micromanagement can conflict with principles of federalism and university autonomy, especially when enforcement is linked to funding control.

The Misuse Debate and Public Trust

Indian society has seen how protective laws can become politically polarised. Debates around misuse of provisions in POCSO, domestic violence laws and matrimonial litigation have deeply shaped public perceptions of legal frameworks. While these laws are essential and protect millions, allegations of misuse, selective enforcement and long litigation have also generated fear and resentment.

When new campus regulations arrive without visible procedural safeguards, similar anxieties emerge. Students and faculty worry not only about discrimination but also about reputational damage, suspension and career consequences before full inquiry. In competitive academic environments, even allegations can permanently affect prospects.

This is where legal design becomes critical. Social justice cannot survive if public trust collapses. Law must protect victims without creating parallel injustice.

The Bigger Hypocrisy of Policy Without Investment

The sharpest criticism of the Education Ministry and UGC is not about intent, but about inconsistency.

Universities today face massive faculty shortages. Research fellowships are delayed. Hostels are overcrowded. Mental health services are minimal. Contractualisation of teaching staff has increased insecurity and weakened mentoring relationships. These structural issues are directly linked to student distress and isolation.

Yet, while financial support shrinks, regulatory surveillance expands. More portals, more compliance formats, more inspections, more reporting deadlines. Equity is monitored through spreadsheets while campuses struggle with infrastructure.

This creates a serious constitutional contradiction. The State cannot first weaken institutions through budget cuts and then punish them for social failures produced by that very neglect. Administrative law demands that regulators also ensure capacity building, not only enforcement.

Equity cannot be achieved by committees alone. It requires scholarships on time, faculty availability, academic freedom and support systems. Without these, regulatory pressure becomes symbolic control rather than meaningful reform.

Political Narratives and Vote Bank Framing

The political dimension cannot be ignored. For BJP and RSS aligned discourse, the debate is framed carefully. On one side, strong rhetoric against caste discrimination is used to project moral legitimacy. On the other, campus unrest is portrayed as evidence of excessive appeasement politics.

This dual narrative allows the ruling ecosystem to occupy both moral positions. Defender of social justice when needed and critic of identity politics when useful. Meanwhile, budgetary responsibility and administrative accountability remain absent from public discussion.

When students are encouraged to see each other as beneficiaries or victims of policy, attention shifts away from the failures of governance. Social conflict becomes a convenient substitute for policy accountability.

This is not accidental. Political systems often prefer cultural debates over budget debates because identity divides emotions, while financial questions expose power.

Weighing the Pros and Cons

Pros:
The regulations acknowledge historical injustice.
They impose institutional responsibility.
They move beyond symbolic guidelines.
They expand coverage to OBCs, persons with disabilities and faculty.
They align with constitutional duties of social justice.

Cons:
Procedural safeguards are unclear.
Risk of misuse and reputational harm exists.
Institutional capacity is inadequate.
Autonomy concerns remain unresolved.
Enforcement is not matched by funding.

Conclusion

The UGC Equity Regulations arise from real suffering and genuine constitutional concern. They are not illegitimate in purpose. But they are deeply flawed in design and dangerously disconnected from material realities of higher education.

Law alone cannot compensate for administrative neglect. Social justice without funding becomes surveillance. Protection without due process becomes coercion. And regulation without institutional capacity becomes theatre.

If the State is serious about equity, it must invest in universities, fill faculty posts, ensure timely scholarships and build strong counselling systems. Without that, regulations risk becoming another courtroom battle and another political slogan, not a solution for vulnerable students.

Justice requires law, but it also requires resources and sincerity. Without all three, equity becomes a talking point, not a transformation.


Author’s Introduction

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.