Roots of a struggle
FRONTLINE|January 31, 2020
The JNU students’ protest against a recent massive hike in fees is part of a larger movement against the privatisation of higher education.
DIVYA TRIVEDI
Roots of a struggle

BY THE TURN OF THE DECADE, THE ASSAULT on the higher education system that started when the Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in 2014 has become more and more brazen. Over the past year, many campuses, from Jamia Millia Islamia to Jadavpur University, have faced dastardly attacks aimed at breaking the backbone of the youth’s fierce resistance to the state. JawaharlalNehruUniversity (JNU) emerged as the symbol of all that the SanghParivarmust destroy to crush the soul of liberal higher education in India.

The latest spate of violence inflicted on the JNU campus by goons of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) was a tailpiece to the students’ movement against an unjust hostel manual and a massive fee hike.

In the larger context of the political situation in the country, the students’ movement is also a fight for the preservation of public higher education.

Over the past few years, the policy of neoliberalism and Hindutva politics have steadily eroded the principle of affordable education. This trend is evident from rapid privatisation of universities, contractualisation of jobs, exponential hikes in student fees and-secularisation of curricula. The justification made for the higher fees at JNUwas that it was needed to pay salaries to the staff. In other words, the burden of workers’ wages has been shifted to students.

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