• Latest
Are-anti-ragging-policies-enough

Are anti-ragging policies enough?

September 11, 2023
Team India to have new lead sponsor soon

Team India to have new lead sponsor soon

September 12, 2025
Centre paves way for more farmers to benefit from opium poppy cultivation

Centre paves way for more farmers to benefit from opium poppy cultivation

September 12, 2025
Iceland’s collaboration to further boost India’s Blue Economy

Iceland’s collaboration to further boost India’s Blue Economy

September 12, 2025
Coal mine workers to get insurance cover of Rs 1 crore

Coal mine workers to get insurance cover of Rs 1 crore

September 12, 2025
Litton Das

Das leads Bangladesh to win over Hong Kong in Asia Cup

September 12, 2025
GST reforms to increase demand for automobiles

GST reforms to increase demand for automobiles

September 12, 2025
Nepal prepares for interim Govt

Nepal prepares for interim Govt

September 12, 2025
CP Radhakrishnan takes oath as 15th Vice President

CP Radhakrishnan takes oath as 15th Vice President

September 12, 2025
Sergio Gor

‘India, US close to trade deal’

September 12, 2025
Trump’s-tariff-g

TARIFFS trun into TRIUMPH

September 12, 2025
modi

Continue engagement

September 12, 2025
Philanthropy powerhouses

Philanthropy powerhouses

September 12, 2025
Blitzindiamedia
Contact
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Education
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • US (New York)
    • UK (London)
    • Middle East (Dubai)
    • Tanzania (Africa)
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Education
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • US (New York)
    • UK (London)
    • Middle East (Dubai)
    • Tanzania (Africa)
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
No Result
View All Result

Are anti-ragging policies enough?

Educational institutions must check criminal behaviour early

by Blitz India Media
September 11, 2023
in Special
Are-anti-ragging-policies-enough

Ashutosh-MishraAnindita-PattanaikSEVERAL young lives have been tragically lost recently due to ragging. Many more, who do not report the problem, are scarred for life. ‘Ragging’ in India has taken a brutal, inhuman, and anti-social form leading to acts of violence, torture, and at times even death. Bullying, abusive behaviour, intimidation, physical, verbal and even sexual assaults have been condoned by society for long in the name of ragging.

Many institutions do not enforce the guidelines to curb ragging fully in letter and spirit. The refrain usually is …“Oh it’s a healthy way for seniors and juniors to interact and bond”. It is time the behaviour and actions in the name of ragging are called out for what they are – a criminal offence. Institutional authorities must be made more accountable.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

A Fictional State… When a State ran like a company

Crisis to Confidence

Toxic masculinity

For every extreme case of ragging reported, many cases go unreported and many young people suffer indignities quietly. Whereas the perpetrators, the bullies, mostly young adult boys who remain unchecked, learn the toxic masculine behaviour early. By condoning such criminal behaviour, bullies are often encouraged from a young age, and this is linked to the development of toxic masculinity at a later stage. Such behaviour when learnt and confirmed from a young age becomes a habit. This problem must be addressed in all seriousness. Boys think they ought to assert their masculinity through aggressive and violent behaviour in order to become ‘real men’.

Not enough done

To be sure, a lot of progress has been made in reducing the harmful impact of ragging following the 2009 Supreme Court judgment and the subsequent guidelines of the University Grants Commission (UGC). However, we continue to see precious young lives lost due to the menace of ragging in educational institutions.

So where are the gaps? What can be done to ensure that the social and cultural acceptance of criminal behaviour in the name of interaction (ragging) within the institutions is deterred and stopped?

Accountability needed

Generally, the steps taken against ragging are punitive in nature (i.e., in the form of imprisonment / punishment). But it is necessary to move beyond this. Liability against the acts of ragging should not be limited to the offender. Rather, accountability in the form of vicarious liability should also be imposed on institutions. Therefore, apart from creating antiragging committees, lodging an FIR, and directing the appropriate authorities, more concrete steps must be taken by institutions.

Institutions responsible

It is time for the institutions to perceive and act on the problem differently and move beyond the issue of law enforcement and focus on preventive measures. Often, institutions do not take issues seriously until much harm is done and the formal criminal justice system steps in. This is because we have the strange notion of institutional reputation, where it seems, the dignity and safety of young adults matter less than the name of the institution. After leaving the cocoon of homes and families, once they are admitted into a higher education institution, we tend to believe, that young adults are now free to choose to study and live as per their will. That the institutions will take care of their safety and dignity.

Recommendatory steps

Thus, the following are recommendatory steps should be followed by institutions.

1. Preventive measures at institutions should be more robust and all the anti-ragging provisions must be discussed openly and shared widely with parents, new students and seniors jointly. It should not remain limited to the signing of a declaration in fine print. Having anti-ragging policies in place is not enough of a deterrent. Knee-jerk rustications and suspensions are not enough. More systemic steps are needed, to prevent escalation of behaviour. For example, there must be greater checks and inspections of deviant behaviour at night, functional CCTVs in common areas, and availability of 24×7 helplines along with good quality counselling.

2. Wardens and the authorities must take more responsibility and not leave hostel management only to senior students and their council.

3. The good practice of a hostelbuddy system being implemented in some institutions must be scaled up. At times a student might not be comfortable reporting an act of ragging to the college authorities or the police. Therefore, every institution should create a system of ‘Hostel Buddies (identified senior) through which prospective students can directly approach their assigned buddy in their respective hostels against an act of ragging. This will create pressure on seniors to care for and to respond to the newcomer.

4. Training programmes must be conducted for both faculty members and students. As ragging is done on the pretext of an ‘ice breaker’, its psychological and emotional consequences remain unknown. The trauma of being harassed and tortured remains in the mind of the sufferer and becomes a reason for anxiety, depression, and suicide.

5. As we move from a retributive to a rehabilitative form of punishment, efforts should be made to understand the psyche of the offender. Institutions need to identify bullies and take early correctional measures. Institutions must engage counsellors in a more meaningful way to tackle this problem. The aim of punishment should be to reform the character of the offender and to restore him / her to a constructive place in society through a combination of treatment, education and training.

6. Parents also must engage and prepare their children, especially boys when they leave home, that the values of ‘real men’ are kindness, maturity, compassion and empathy. Parents must counsel their children regularly to seek help early and not to take too much pressure on themselves. No institution is worth the life of a young person.

7. Finally, the Draft Ragging Bill 2019 needs to be made into a law.

Protect the vulnerable

Overall, the culture and environment in our educational institutions must promote dignity and self-respect.

Help teach students kindness, respect for diversity, compassion and adjustments to a diverse range of human emotions. Institutions have the responsibility to protect the vulnerable at all times. Parents send their children to educational institutions for them to become educated and evolved human beings.

Institutions must drop their obsession with facilities, ranks, percentiles, placements and packages. They will be measured by how many truly evolved human beings they have produced and how they serve society. Nothing less is expected from our higher institutions.

Because even if one life of a young adult is destroyed or scarred due to the negligence of the institutions – it may just be another number for the institution – but remember for the family, it is one too many.

Previous Post

Of Uzbeks, Uyghurs and Caucasus extremists

Next Post

Planting A Memory

Related Posts

A-Fictional
Special

A Fictional State… When a State ran like a company

September 12, 2025
MiG
Special

Crisis to Confidence

September 5, 2025
Supreme Court's big question to animal lovers...
Special

Long struggle with RABIES

August 29, 2025
DRDO's
Special

DRDO’s policy pivot ignites defence sector

August 21, 2025
UP's arsenal of PROSPERITY
Special

UP’s arsenal of PROSPERITY

August 14, 2025
modi-ji
Special

PM Modi highlights achievements in space, science

July 31, 2025
Please login to join discussion

Recent News

Team India to have new lead sponsor soon

Team India to have new lead sponsor soon

September 12, 2025
Centre paves way for more farmers to benefit from opium poppy cultivation

Centre paves way for more farmers to benefit from opium poppy cultivation

September 12, 2025
Iceland’s collaboration to further boost India’s Blue Economy

Iceland’s collaboration to further boost India’s Blue Economy

September 12, 2025
Coal mine workers to get insurance cover of Rs 1 crore

Coal mine workers to get insurance cover of Rs 1 crore

September 12, 2025
Litton Das

Das leads Bangladesh to win over Hong Kong in Asia Cup

September 12, 2025
GST reforms to increase demand for automobiles

GST reforms to increase demand for automobiles

September 12, 2025
Nepal prepares for interim Govt

Nepal prepares for interim Govt

September 12, 2025
CP Radhakrishnan takes oath as 15th Vice President

CP Radhakrishnan takes oath as 15th Vice President

September 12, 2025
Sergio Gor

‘India, US close to trade deal’

September 12, 2025
Trump’s-tariff-g

TARIFFS trun into TRIUMPH

September 12, 2025
modi

Continue engagement

September 12, 2025
Philanthropy powerhouses

Philanthropy powerhouses

September 12, 2025

Blitz Highlights

  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Insight
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports

International Editions

  • US (New York)
  • UK (London)
  • Middle East (Dubai)
  • Tanzania (Africa)

Nation

  • East
  • West
  • South
  • North
  • Hindi Edition

E-paper

  • India
  • Hindi E-paper
  • Dubai E-Paper
  • USA E-Paper
  • UK-Epaper
  • Tanzania E-paper

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Contact
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap

©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Blitz Highlights
      • Special
      • Spotlight
      • Insight
      • Education
      • Sports
      • Health
      • Entertainment
    • Opinion
    • Legal
    • Perspective
    • Nation
      • East
      • West
      • North
      • South
    • Business & Economy
    • World
    • Hindi Edition
    • International Editions
      • US (New York)
      • UK (London)
      • Middle East (Dubai)
      • Tanzania (Africa)
    • Download
    • Blitz India Business

    © 2025 Blitz India Media -BlitzIndia Building A New Nation