The Price of Centralisation Is the Erosion of Academic Freedom
Mr George’s article on the proposed Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan (VBSA) Bill, 2025 is not merely an appraisal of a legislative proposal; it is an eloquent defence of an idea that lies at the heart of every enlightened democracy, that universities must remain sanctuaries of free inquiry, not satellites orbiting political power. At a time when the language of reform often conceals the architecture of control, his article deserves careful reading.
The Bill is presented as an exercise in administrative efficiency, yet beneath its polished façade lurks an unmistakable impulse towards centralisation. It seeks to gather the diverse streams of Indian higher education into a single reservoir of authority. Such concentration of power may promise order, but history repeatedly reminds us that absolute control is a poor substitute for institutional wisdom. In the quest for uniformity, the Bill risks sacrificing the very diversity that has long been the lifeblood of academic excellence.
Universities are not bureaucratic departments waiting to be micromanaged from the corridors of power. They are intellectual republics where ideas contend, orthodoxies are interrogated, and truth is pursued without fear or favour.
To clip the wings of academia and then expect it to soar is to expect the impossible. Scholarship flourishes only where dissent is protected, curiosity is encouraged, and disagreement is treated not as disloyalty but as the engine of discovery.
The proposal to concentrate regulatory authority in a single institution should ring alarm bells. Putting all the eggs in one basket has seldom produced resilient institutions. What begins as coordination may gradually harden into conformity; what is advertised as accountability may quietly evolve into unquestioning compliance. Academic freedom rarely disappears overnight, it is eroded by inches rather than miles, until universities begin to toe the line instead of pushing the frontiers of knowledge.
George rightly warns that education cannot be viewed through the narrow prism of political expediency.
Governments hold office by the verdict of the electorate; universities derive their legitimacy from the relentless pursuit of truth. The two operate on fundamentally different moral foundations. One is accountable to electoral cycles; the other to intellectual integrity. When these boundaries blur, scholarship becomes vulnerable to ideology, and learning is reduced to an instrument of governance.
The gravest danger lies not in administrative restructuring alone but in the philosophy that underpins it. A nation that teaches its young what to think instead of how to think gradually mortgages its democratic future. Innovation is born from disagreement, not obedience; scientific temper thrives on scepticism, not submission. The writing is on the wall: societies that centralise thought eventually decentralise excellence.
"India’s constitutional vision rests upon pluralism, federalism, and institutional autonomy.
Its universities mirror that diversity through their varied histories, regional identities, linguistic traditions, and academic priorities. To impose a monolithic regulatory framework upon such a rich intellectual landscape is to mistake sameness for strength. One size fits all may work for administrative manuals; it is fatal to the ecology of higher education.
Mr George’s article ultimately reminds us that education is not a trophy to be claimed by governments but a trust to be safeguarded for generations.
Political power is transient; knowledge endures. Ministries rise and fall with elections, but universities shape civilizations.
To subordinate them to the preferences of the government of the day would be to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs destroying the very source of innovation in the name of controlling it.
The measure of a confident democracy is not how tightly it holds its universities, but how courageously it lets them think. If India truly aspires to be a global knowledge powerhouse, it must resist the seductive allure of excessive centralisation. The path to excellence is illuminated not by the searchlight of political control but by the enduring lamp of academic freedom.
Thank you, Mr. George, for bringing this vital issue into the public domain. Your article speaks not only through its written words but also through the profound truths that remain unspoken. Often, what is left between the lines carries greater weight than what appears in print. Those silent warnings are far more eloquent than rhetoric.
One can only hope that the Government will read both the words and the wisdom behind them, and act with foresight rather than expediency. Higher education must remain a sanctuary of academic freedom, critical inquiry, and institutional autonomy—not a casualty of political centralisation.
The future of a nation is shaped not by the power it concentrates, but by the minds it liberates. May wisdom prevail before irreversible damage is done to our universities and to the generations yet to come."
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