Note: In the references section of this commentary, UGC circulars, and
DU 2010 notification published in India guzzette is mentioned and PDF
files can be easily downloaded.

Against the backdrop of the adoption of the University Grants
Commission's professional code of ethics for university/college
teachers by the Delhi University executive committee in March 2014,
this article explores how the code is interpreted and policed, and,
therefore, acted upon as a set of rules in an institution. It also
examines the implications of the UGC-recommended code for the
integrity of academic knowledge dissemination and the academic
profession.

Suman Gupta ([email protected]) is with the English Department,
Department of Literature and Cultural History, The Open University,
United Kingdom.

The dissemination of academic knowledge at the higher education level
is necessarily structured according to governmental and institutional
strictures. However, the principles and rationales of such knowledge
are not conditional on governmental and institutional agendas - these
principles and rationales are very much wider, and are consistent in
all contexts where academic knowledge is cultivated. Such knowledge is
answerable to the peoples of the world, is in the international public
interest, and may well be compromised if curtailed by governmental and
institutional agendas. So, when new governmental and institutional
strictures are promulgated with an effect on the dissemination of
academic knowledge anywhere, it is of interest everywhere and needs to
be carefully examined to ascertain whether core academic principles
and rationales are thereby being compromised.

The University Grants Commission's (UGC) formulation of a professional
code of ethics for university/college teachers (1989),1 when Yash Pal
was the chairman, is thus of interest not just in India, but for
academia and the public internationally. Further, when this code is
adopted to the letter by the executive council of the Delhi University
(DU)2 in March 2014, that move is of interest not merely in that
institution, but more widely in India and internationally. This is
especially the case since the code in DU is effectively adopted as
coercively enforceable, contravention of which could lead to
punishment for teachers in DU colleges and faculties; ergo, it should
not be regarded as a code of good practice which encourages
self-regulation (a soft instrument of control), but as a set of rules
which can be enforced by threat of punishment (a hard instrument of
control). The mode of adoption of the code in DU sets a precedent for
a publicly-funded university's management of academic work in India
and more widely.

Two lines of enquiry arise from these considerations. First, it is
expedient now to explore the implications of the UGC-recommended code
for the integrity of academic knowledge dissemination and the academic
profession. Second, it is necessary to consider the implications of
DU's particular way of adopting that code.

Content of the UGC Code

By way of background, such a code was initially proposed by the All
India Federation of University and College Teachers' Organisations
(AIFUCTO) in 1976. In this regard the statement at the time
interestingly observed

The code should be broad enough to serve as the source of constant
reference for teachers themselves. Though its prescriptions may not be
legally enforceable, it should be morally binding on the teaching
community to follow the code.

And also,

The code should contain a section on the rights of the teachers
(quoted in Rao and Shantaram 1999: 3).

Evidently it was initially conceived as guidance for good practice,
with some concern for teachers' rights. The UGC thereafter set up a
14-member task force, with participants from AIFUCTO, to come up with
such a code, and it duly did formulate the code in question to be
adopted by the UGC in December 1988. This did not have an adequate
section on teachers' rights, but did have a preamble with a brief
statement:

Teachers should enjoy full civic and political rights of our
democratic country. Teachers have a right to adequate emoluments,
social position, just conditions of service, professional independence
and adequate social insurance.

Doubts about the pragmatics of implementing and regulating adherence
to the code meant that it was not taken up at the institutional level
till DU did so with such firmness 25 years after being adopted by the
UGC. In adopting the UGC code, DU deleted the preamble with the
statement of teachers' rights. Arguably, however, it is not just
pragmatics which calls for pause; the principles espoused in the
content of the code should also do so.

Such a code of professional ethics for higher education teachers,
particularly as a hard instrument of control within a publicly-funded
university, is extremely rare - I am not aware of any other current
example - and hence all the more noteworthy. Such codes are common in
various countries for schoolteachers (see van Nuland and Khandelwal
2006), where the knowledge area in question is more grounded in
consensus than at the higher education level. These kinds of codes are
also enjoined (occasionally in legally binding ways) on various
academic practitioner groups insofar as practice goes (lawyers,
medical workers, engineers, etc) and as the disciplinary standard
guidelines for particular areas of academic work (e g, for researchers
with human informants, authors of scholarly papers).

By and large, they work as good practice reference points, formulated
by professional bodies for professional training/education and
self-regulation by teachers and academics. Universities in various
countries also have codes of ethics for students, or contracts between
institutions and students. Generally such codes become expedient in
institutions when there are doubts about professional accountability
and quality and in geopolitically-defined territories when there is a
desire to have uniform professional standards across a sector.

Vagueness of Phrasing

If the UGC Code were read as guidance for good practice for a broad
sector, some of its content might puzzle but it would not cause much
concern. However, if it were read as a set of institutional rules,
contravention of which would be policed and could lead to punitive
measures, then its content comes across quite differently. With DU's
example in mind the latter kind of reading is now inevitable, and that
is the spirit in which the code is approached here.

Let me begin with a professional misdirection in the code seen thus.
Section II (Teachers and Students), Point (iv) reads: [Teachers
should] "Make themselves available to the students even beyond their
class hours and help and guide students without any remuneration or
reward." As a moral norm this seems acceptable; as an institutional
rule it undermines fundamental tenets of employment. The Indian Labour
Law stipulates a standard work day, requirement for rest during work,
and limits of overtime work. University/college teachers' work is
covered by labour law, but this statement in the code obscures the
fact that there is a maximum limit of teachers' work time, and,
moreover, obscures the remunerative rights of overtime.

The UGC (2010) sets some minimum teaching workload norms for teachers
(not less than 40 hours a week for 30 working weeks in an academic
year and at least five hours daily in the university/college), but no
maximum. Typically, in universities/colleges this minimum is accepted
in principle, and the maximum is negotiated by teachers/departments
within the norms of employment law along a chain of command (the
line-management). University/college employment contracts, in fact,
often tend to be cagey about specifying the maximum. Taking DU as a
case in point, college/faculty contracts (DU Ordinance XI, annexure
for University Teacher's contract; and Ordinance XII, annexure for
College Teacher's contract) stipulate "The teacher shall devote his
whole time to the service of the University/College" - whereby it is
presumably understood that this is the "whole time" that is
remunerated by the institution.

The quoted point in the code is apt to suggest that teachers should do
unremunerated work, or, at any rate, a student would be entitled to
think so by reading it, and given the vagueness about the maximum work
time in contracts so may teachers themselves - which would obviously
contradict their employment rights. Perhaps this point was meant to
suggest that teachers should expect no remuneration or rewards from
students, which is covered in any case in the Code in IV, (ii) and
specifically in teachers' employment contracts, so that it seems
supererogatory for that end. But the point is, the code does not say
so; presented as a rule this point in the code seems to suggest that
teachers should do unremunerated work.

Along not dissimilar lines, Section IV (Teachers and Authorities),
point (i) says:

[Teachers should] Discharge their professional responsibilities
according to the existing rules and adhere to procedures and methods
consistent with their profession in initiating steps through their own
institutional bodies and/or professional organisations for change of
any such rule detrimental to the professional interest.

In general, first recourse to internal procedures for amending rules
in institutions is obviously desirable and seems morally acceptable;
but understood as a rule, this point draws a line that offers no
direction beyond internal procedures and possibly affects academic
freedom and reasonable freedom of expression. So, for example, suppose
a teacher finds the enforcement of this code in DU is detrimental to
professional interests, and appeals against it through the mechanisms
available within DU and other official bodies (such as the relevant
government ministry or court). Suppose further that for whatever
reasons these recourses have no result and fail to dispel the
detrimental effect. Then, say, the teacher exercises her academic
freedom to analyse why the enforcement of this code is detrimental to
academic principles and rationalities and dissemination of knowledge,
and publishes her analysis in a publicly accessible journal or
newspaper (much as I am doing here in relative safety) - effectively,
a recourse to transparent public debate.

Could DU then take that recourse as a contravention of this point in
the code, and an actionable offence (going outside her own institution
to seek change)? Would DU's doing so be an undermining of academic
freedom, which is enjoined on this profession? For this point in the
code to work as a rule, a great deal more clarity is needed on what is
internal procedure, and how it gels (is regulated and policed itself)
with broader academic principles and rationales and public interests.

Some teachers may justifiably feel uneasy about Section I, point (ii):
[Teachers should] "Manage their private affairs in a manner consistent
with the dignity of the profession" - as a moral principle this might
be okay, as an institutional rule it gives unlimited licence to
institutional authorities to blur the boundaries of the professional
and the private. Much would depend here on how "dignity of the
profession" is defined, and since there is no definition it becomes
open to the quirks of interpretation by institutional authorities. It
could be used, for instance, by institutions to police teachers'
sexual practices, domestic arrangements, ideological subscriptions
outside the institution, tastes, and so on. Stated as a rule in the
code, this point could test the boundaries of privacy ensconced in
Indian law and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

In brief, the points picked up so far (and others can be picked in a
similar vein) present a vagueness of phrasing and openness to
deleterious interpretation which may pass muster as loose directions
towards moral self-assessment, but are unacceptable as rules which
could lead to punitive measures if contravened.

Broader Ideological Qualms

Beyond specific points, there are broader ideological qualms which
might be felt in contemplating the code. The UGC Code was a document
of its time, the late 1980s, when the notion of emancipative
postcolonial nationalism seemed obviously worthy and the potential of
majoritarian fundamentalist nationalism was perhaps yet to be widely
registered in India (arguably the latter kind of nationalism was
already making its presence felt then). This was also a period when
the domestic economy seemed of more moment than the complicated
interpenetrations of the international/global economic system. On the
nationalist front, however, circumspection would not have gone amiss
even in that decade with both contemporary Indian circumstances and
the history of ultra-nationalisms in Europe and elsewhere in view. The
code enjoins strong subscription to nationalist values on teachers:

[Teachers should] II (ix), 'Aid students to develop an understanding
of our national heritage and national goals';
VII (iii) 'Be aware of social problems and take part in such
activities as would be conducive to the progress of society and hence
the country as a whole';
VII (v) 'Refrain from taking part in or subscribing to or assisting in
any way activities which tend to promote feeling of hatred or enmity
among different communities, regions and linguistic groups but
actively work for National Integration'.

As loose statements of moral principle these sound possibly
acceptable. However, the insistent confining of higher learning to the
boundaries of nation and country is, in academic terms, limiting - the
principles and rationales of academic knowledge, as observed at the
beginning, are very much wider and suffer by such delimitation. Some
gesture towards larger than national interest - say, the interests of
humanity in general - would not have gone amiss as a moral principle
when this code was formulated; now it seems more than necessary.
Hypothetically, if an ethical principle of international import seems
to contradict one that is putatively of national import, should the
latter be given precedence over the former in teaching students? For
example, if a principle of sharing natural resources across nations
appears to be against the national interest, or if a security measure
taken in the national interest appears to contradict a universal human
right, should the teacher necessarily have to defend the national and
should the student compulsorily subscribe to the national?

And certainly, the suggestion that "national heritage" and "national
goals" and the "progress of society and hence the country" and
"national integration" can necessarily be unitarily described, in
monologically definite ways, now seems very doubtful indeed - possibly
deleterious. Assuming that now appears to be as much a denial of
diversity in and beyond India, as the singular "community" seems in
the opening point of the code: [Teachers should] "Adhere to a
responsible pattern of conduct and demeanour expected of them by the
community". Much would depend on who defines the nation and its
heritage and goals, who takes it upon themselves to speak on behalf of
the community. If that defining authority goes in a majoritarian
direction that is not ethically desirable, it cannot engender
consensus with moral justification.

An ethical code relevant to higher education teaching and learning now
has to be devoted to equipping students to engage critically with such
conundrums, to exercise rational judgment, not to predetermine the
precedence of the national interest and some monolithic notion of
community. To do the latter is to possibly open the door to
majoritarianism, disempower minorities, dumb down rational dissent and
protest. This is especially so when the code is used as a hard
instrument of control within institutions - which brings us to the
particular case of DU's adoption thereof.

DU's Adoption of the Code

The vagueness of the phrasing of the code on various points, and its
anachronistic ideological thrust, render it of doubtful value as an
ethical guidance document in any context and apt to arouse
considerable misgivings as a set of institutional rules in a
university. The vagueness of phrasing means that how it is
interpreted, policed, and therefore, acted upon as a set of rules in
an institution becomes of vital interest. It is effectively a set of
rules that are open to abuse by the administrative authorities in an
institution, if those authorities so desire.

The code was adopted by the DU executive committee (EC) in a meeting
of 6 March 2014 chaired by the vice chancellor (VC) Dinesh Singh -
incidentally, that meeting also amended the terms of VC appointments
so that a holder can seek reappointment. In the EC meeting reportedly
the code was championed by a strong majority: only four of the 23 EC
members opposed it (The Statesman 2014). The spirit of its adoption
was clear in the supplementary agenda of the EC meeting of 6 March,
which ratified the following amendments in DU Ordinances XI and XII:

Clause 1-A: The teacher shall comply with the Code of Professional
Ethics at Appendix A. Failure to comply with the said Code of
Professional Ethics will also be construed as misconduct on the part
of the teacher and he/she shall be liable to face action as may be
deemed necessary by the Vice-Chancellor and the Executive Council.
Clause 1-B: The teacher shall comply with the Code of Professional
Ethics at Appendix A. Failure to comply with the said Code of
Professional Ethics will also be construed as misconduct on the part
of the teacher and he/she shall be liable to face action as may be
deemed necessary by the Governing Body of the College.
Provided further, if the circumstances so warrant, the Vice Chancellor
may direct the Governing Body of the College to initiate action
against a teacher on the ground of misconduct, failing which the
Vice-Chancellor may take such action as provided for in the Act,
Statute and Ordinances of the University.

These stipulations strengthened prerogatives on disciplining power in
favour of DU administration at the expense of the administrations of
affiliated colleges (the kind of relationship which has a larger
significance in Indian higher education (Singh 2003)). Disciplining
powers within DU colleges have conventionally been formally vested in
the governing body (GB) of that college led by its principal; whereas
those within DU faculties and institutes and centres were vested in
the EC led by the VC, who also had ultimate oversight on college
principals.

Effectively, in this instance disciplining power has been inordinately
shifted to the judgment of one person, the VC. This does not mean that
the VC has a completely free hand (that would be unconstitutional),
but that the VC as an individual has a broad licence to act on the
basis of the code and according to his interpretation of the code,
without consequences detrimental to himself, so as to do considerable
damage to accused teachers' careers and prospects even if not to
actually have them formally punished. I do not point this out as a
matter to do with a particular VC's outlook and judgment; the case is
that the DU system in this regard has now been set up so that its
coercive mechanisms can be instantiated at the whim of any VC in
office by allowing him or her to exploit the interpretive ambivalences
of the code described above. This is a position that undermines the
democratic credentials of a university in principle and for as long as
the position obtains, and not simply as a practical possibility at
this given juncture and with the particular administration in place
now.

The DU Ordinance XI Annexure 6 (1-4)/7 lays out the process of how a
VC and EC will deal with misconduct: in brief, the VC first suspends
the teacher, then informs the EC which is responsible for
investigating the allegations (giving the accused three weeks to
respond), possibly by appointing a committee, and the EC then
determines the outcome (in case of termination of service, with three
months' notice). This process opens a small window for due process and
representation to a teacher accused of misconduct, depending on the
integrity and independence of the EC from the VC's decision.

There is inevitably a conflict of interest where the body that
formally promulgates rules is also the final arbitrator for challenges
to those rules. The point, however, is not whether a punishment will
formally be meted out or not, but the possibility of the VC suspending
a teacher on the basis of misconduct. For a teacher's career, and
indeed, personal well-being, that step is itself seriously
detrimental. So, the grounds on which a VC can suspend a teacher
pending investigation by the EC are of crucial interest. These grounds
have to be clearly defined and be at least potentially substantiable
to justify suspension. The UGC code as adopted by DU could now be
regarded as describing the grounds which the VC can cite to justify
suspending a teacher for misconduct pending investigation.

The move of adopting the UGC Code thus in DU has taken place at a
fraught juncture in that institution. A series of unpopular
restructurings - especially the shift from a three to four year
undergraduate programme structure - has been in the news for a
considerable period, with evidence of unrest among both students and
teachers. Understandably, the adoption of the code was immediately
seen as a measure by DU management to shackle teachers at this
juncture.

My interest here is in the broader ideological contours of the code
itself, and the broader ideological implications of adopting it in the
manner of DU - in terms of the wider principles and rationales at
stake which are of consequence to academics in all contexts. My
interest is also in the fact that the issues described above set a
precedent for understanding the relationship between higher education
institutional management and academic work in a general way.

>From that perspective, it is difficult to come to any other conclusion
other than that the UGC code itself, and its mode of adoption as a set
of institutional rules in DU, militate against the "dignity of the
profession" of university/college teachers wherever academic work is
pursued and taken seriously. It not only compromises the principles
and rationales of academic work in the broad sense, it also seeks in a
malevolent manner to fix those who disseminate academic knowledge -
university/college teachers - as weak and untrustworthy moral agents.

Notes

1 University Grants Commission (UGC) (1989): Report of the Task Force
on Code of Professional Ethics for University and College Teachers
(New Delhi: UGC); available at:
http://www.ugc.ac.in/oldpdf/pub/report/5.pdf

2 Delhi University, Rules, Policies and Ordinances
http://www.du.ac.in/index.php?id=28

References

Nuland, Shirley van and B P Khandelwal, ed. (2006): Ethics in
Education: The Role of Teacher Codes, Canada and South Asia (Paris:
International Institute of Education Planning/UNESCO); available at:
http://www.iiep.unesco.org/fileadmin/user_upload/Research_Highlights_Cor...

Rao, I V Subba and M V Shantaram (1999): "Ethics and Values in Higher
Education - Indian Thought and Current Scenario", paper presented in
the International Conference of University Presidents at Kyung Hee
University, Seoul, Korea, 10-13 October; available at:
http://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/bitstream/1/2025213/ 1/G16667.pdf

Singh, Amrik (2003): "Academic Standards in Indian Universities:
Ravages of Affiliation", Economic & Political Weekly, 26 July, 38:30,
pp 3200-08.

The Statesman (2014): "EC Okays Second Term for VC", The Statesman, 7
March; available at: http://www.thestatesman.net/news/43108-ec-
okays-second-term-for-vc.html

UGC (2010): "UGC Regulations on Minimum Qualifications for Appointment
of Teachers and Other Academic Staff in Universities and Colleges and
Measures for the Maintenance of Standards in Higher Education", The
Gazette of India, 18 September,
http://www.ugc.ac.in/oldpdf/regulations/englishgazette.pdf;
http://www.ugc.ac.in/oldpdf/regulations/revised_final
ugcregulationfinal10.pd


-- 
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India



Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of 
mobile phones / Tabs on:
http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to