I'd also add that the no data is available on the percentage of
disabled faculty teaching in 43 Indian Central universities. I hope
that in the next hearing of the Sambhavana vs UGC the Apex Court will
ask for the disabled faculty data from the government. Please keep
note of this news item.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1160201/jsp/frontpage/story_66893.jsp

Basant Kumar Mohanty



New Delhi, Jan. 31: Only seven out of every 100 hundred teachers in
colleges and universities across the country were from the Scheduled
Castes last year. Those from the Scheduled Tribes were even worse off,
numbering only 2 per cent.

The grim statistics - included in a government report released last
month -leap to relevance against the backdrop of the suicide of Rohit
Vemula, the research scholar in the University of Hyderabad.

Suggestions have been made that the young man may not have taken his
life had his concerns been addressed by teachers who empathise with
the sensitivities of students from disadvantaged sections.

The chances of Dalit teachers making committees that look into
disciplinary issues are remote because the numbers are stacked against
such a probability.

According to the report released last month, only 1.02 lakh - or 7.22
per cent - of the 14.1 lakh teachers in 716 universities and 38,056
colleges in the country were Dalits, while tribal communities
accounted for just 30,000 or 2.12 per cent.

The faculty figures fall far short of the national population of
Scheduled Castes (16.6 per cent) and Scheduled Tribes (8.6 per cent).

In Bengal, the percentage of SC/ST teachers, according to the All
India Survey on Higher Education Provisional Report for 2014-15, was
even less - 6.27 per cent Dalit and 0.93 per cent from the Scheduled
Tribes.

Referring to Rohith, Prof. Sudhakar Babu, convener of the university's
SC/ST Teachers' Forum, said a Dalit member on a panel that looked into
an alleged assault on the Hyderabad campus "would have demanded a
proper probe".

It was this sub-committee that had recommended that Rohit and four
others be punished, setting off a chain of events that culminated in
the tragedy on January 17.

The sub-committee had no SC/ST member but did co-opt a Dalit
professor, Prakash Babu, the dean of students' welfare. But Prakash
Babu, Sudhakar Babu said, did not protest the sub-committee's decision
as he was present in his official capacity, not as a Dalit
representative.

Several academics and activists echoed Sudhakar Babu, saying
universities, mostly staffed by upper-caste teachers, were more likely
to ignore the concerns of students from socially disadvantaged
segments.

Dalit rights activist Gurindar Azar said teachers from other
communities, who have seldom faced discrimination, "fail to feel the
problems of Dalit and tribal students, most of whom are
first-generation learners and are low on confidence".

Prof. Kancha Ilaiah, who writes on Dalit rights issues, said faculties
dominated by upper castes often ganged up against Dalit and tribal
students.

Rohith's fellowship money, Ilaiah said, was blocked for seven months
for no reason other than harassing him. The University of Hyderabad is
yet to release his dues of about Rs 1.75 lakh.

University sources cited red tape, saying Rohith had been getting a
junior research fellowship when he qualified for a CSIR fellowship in
the second year, which led to confusion over which scholarship money
he should get. The university wrote to higher education regulator UGC
and, in the process, the money got delayed, the sources claimed.

Ilaiah hinted that if it were a case involving an upper-caste scholar,
the whole system would have come forward to help.

Official sources cautioned against rushing to judgement on the basis
of the faculty figures. They pointed out that half of the nearly
39,000 institutions are privately managed and are thus out of the
quota system.

But government-run universities and colleges are legally bound to
reserve 15 per cent teacher posts at all levels for Dalits and 7.5 per
cent for Scheduled Tribes.

Delhi University executive council member Abha Dev Habib said that of
the 813 faculty members, only 63 (7.7 per cent) were Dalits and 24
(less than 3 per cent) were from tribal groups. "Our teacher
association has written to the HRD ministry and the UGC about
non-implementation of reservation in DU. But no action has been
taken," Habib said.

The question of poor representation of SC/STs in faculty has been
raised in Parliament several times. Every time, the government has
said posts have remained vacant because of non-availability of
suitable candidates in these categories.

But some academics said the word "suitable" was being used
subjectively and discriminately at the interview level to shut out
candidates from the disadvantaged sections, leaving the posts vacant.

Ilaiah cited his own example to point out how he too had suffered in
an upper-caste dominated system when he taught in Hyderabad University
in 1998. His application for a professor's post, he recalled, was
ignored while another teacher with fewer publications was considered
because "she was from an upper caste".

It was only in 2011 that professor posts were brought under
reservation - one of the reasons for the poor Dalit representation in
the pool from which vice-chancellors are eventually chosen.

Sources in the human resource development ministry confirmed that none
among the 43 central universities in the country had a Dalit
vice-chancellor. Only one - the Indira Gandhi National Tribal
University in Amarkantak, Madhya Pradesh - had a VC from an ST
community, Professor T.V. Kattimani.

There are no overnight solutions. P.S. Krishnan, a former secretary to
the erstwhile welfare ministry with experience on reservation matters,
pointed out that the only solution was to ensure that the pool was
widened.

"The pool is limited because implementation of reservation at all
levels of teaching posts is much less than the norms. Among all the
serving SC/ST teachers, the majority are in the category of assistant
professors," he said.

"Even if some people are selected, they face hurdles in promotion. The
government and institutions need to sincerely follow the quota
policy," Krishnan said.





-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU


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