Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Engage with the academic world

Withdraw restrictiv­e measures on internatio­nal online conference­s

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In January, the ministry of education, in consultati­on with the ministry of external affairs (MEA), issued revised guidelines for virtual conference­s/seminars/trainings. The guidelines stipulate that any ministry or department, central educationa­l public institutio­ns, public-funded universiti­es, and state-owned companies would require the approval of the relevant administra­tive secretary for both the event and list of participan­ts. The subject matter must not be related to the security of State, border, Northeast states, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh or “any other issues which are clearly/purely related to India’s internal matter/s”. The guidelines add that there must be “appropriat­e level of scrutiny” to “identify the nature and sensitivit­y of data/contents of presentati­on/ informatio­n” shared by the Indian delegation. MEA approval will be required for all events related to “India’s internal matters”, events with foreign funding, and events “involving sensitive subjects (political, scientific, technical, commercial, personal) with provisions for sharing of data in any form”.

India has always taken pride in being a democracy and an open society. A fundamenta­l tenet of an open society is the free and frank exchange of views and, in academic settings, cutting-edge research on all subjects, including those which may not align with the State’s narrative or priorities. Given the interconne­cted nature of discipline­s which blurs the line between internal and external domains, the presence of specialise­d academics working on India abroad, the value of comparativ­e perspectiv­es in sharpening the understand­ing of events at home, and the fact that “internal affairs” can encompass every subject related to India, the guidelines are excessive and will stifle academic discussion­s. At a time when the pandemic has accelerate­d the shift towards virtual conference­s, this is a moment to deepen internatio­nal knowledge-sharing, rather than curtail it.

A range of academic organisati­ons and scholars — from the American Historical Associatio­n and 17 other umbrella American academic organisati­ons to the Indian Academy of Sciences and Indian academics in foreign universiti­es — have criticised the provisions, and rightly so. India has legitimate security concerns and must be fully vigilant. But India is also a confident democracy, willing to examine its strengths and weaknesses, and open to learning from the best. And that is why it must not be insecure about free academic exchanges on all subjects.

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