000 02889nam a22002177a 4500
999 _c38014
_d38014
020 _a9789811682551
041 _aeng-
082 _a378.54
_bCRI-
245 _aCritical sites of inclusion in India's higher education /
_cedited by Papia Sengupta.
260 _aBasingstoke :
_bPalgrave Macmillan,
_c2022.
300 _a191p.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _a Introduction.- Chapter 1 Negotiating Inclusion: Minority institutions and constitutional-legal dimensions in India.- Chapter 2 From exclusion to inclusion-the case of public madarsa education system.- Chapter 3 Language Conundrum: English language and exclusivity in Indian higher education.- Chapter 4 Invisible voices: the case of endangered languages communities.- Chapter 5 Inclusive education: Analysing the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016.- Chapter 6 Institutional barriers as hindrance to inclusion of women as members of academic community.- Chapter 7 Higher education and the question of inclusivity for LGBTQIA+ community.- Chapter 8 Interrogating neoliberal rationality and exclusivity of higher education.- Chapter 9 More technology-less access? Decoding ICT compliance in higher education.- Prologue: Placing 'inclusion' in the National Education Policy 2020.
520 _aThis book acquaints the reader to the often invisible-ized practices and policies under the rhetoric of ‘inclusion’, through theoretical and empirical analysis. It emphasizes on the complexities of education policies in a multicultural state by identifying the challenges to the idea of ‘inclusion’ illuminated through judicial interventions, policy-frameworks and everyday experiences of individuals. Higher education is imperative to empowerment in socially stratified societies marred with deep inequalities like India and many other multicultural countries. Disputes over inclusion remains a critical feature in Indian higher education sector, as it is viewed as facilitating access to economic opportunities and providing vertical mobility for individuals belonging to marginalized communities. Higher education empowers, and expands individual horizons of thought and ideas of freedom, dignity, equality, enabling individuals to participate actively in the political-sociological discourses in democratic polity. Therefore, policy makers, political theorists and educationists have been examining the question of inclusion and education as public-good. Contemporary India has witnessed an unprecedented attack on academic freedom, free exchange of ideas and expressions, challenging the very idea of inclusion and inclusiveness.
546 _aEnglish.
650 _aEducation, Higher
_zIndia.
650 _aInclusive education
_zIndia.
650 _aMinorities
_xEducation (Higher)
_zIndia.
650 _aHigher education and state
_zIndia.
942 _2ddc
_cBK