The University Grants Commission (Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions) Regulations, 2026 mark an important institutional intervention in Indian higher education. The stated objective is to address discrimination and to ensure dignity and equal opportunity for all students and faculty who belong to the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes. The 2026 Regulations are rooted in constitutional principles of equality and dignity. They aim to make higher education institutions accountable for discriminatory practices that have long been normalised. Equity here is not a concession. It is a constitutional obligation. Any serious commitment to democracy requires institutions to confront exclusion rather than deny it. Yet, the regulations have triggered intense opposition, particularly from caste privileged groups, and have now been stayed by the Supreme Court.This resistance reveals more about entrenched privilege than about genuine concerns over fairness. This resistance is neither new nor spontaneous. As Narayana Sukumar, in his book Caste Discrimination and Exclusion in Indian Universities, based on an empirical study of Indian universities, demonstrates, higher education institutions have long functioned as sites where caste hierarchies are reproduced under the appearance of neutrality and academic objectivity. Drawing on interviews across central and state universities, Sukumar shows that discrimination is rarely overt; instead, it is embedded in everyday academic practices – such as evaluation, supervision, fellowship allocation, and administrative decision-making. What appears as institutional impartiality often masks what he calls the “social cosmology of merit,” a framework that normalises exclusion while disavowing responsibility for it.Rising evidence of discrimination and beyond casteEmpirical data contradict claims that caste discrimination is exaggerated or rare. Complaints of caste-based discrimination in universities and colleges have increased by 118.4% over the last five years. Reported incidents rose from 173 cases in 2019-20 to 378 cases in 2023-24. Between 2019–20 and 2023–24, the UGC received 1,160 complaints from Equal Opportunity Cells and SC/ST Cells across 704 universities and 1,553 colleges. While 90.68% of these cases were marked as resolved, pending cases increased sharply, from 18 in 2019–20 to 108 in 2023–24. Year-wise data also shows a steady rise: 182 cases in 2020–21, 186 in 2021–22, and 241 in 2022–23, followed by a sharp increase in 2023–24. These numbers indicate not the absence of discrimination, but its persistence and growing visibility. The increase is often explained as greater awareness of grievance mechanisms. Even if this is partly true, it does not weaken the case for regulation. Awareness does not create discrimination. It only exposes what already exists.A key misrepresentation of the 2026 Regulations is that they are framed only around caste. In reality, the regulations seek to address discrimination in higher education broadly. They recognise that exclusion operates through multiple, overlapping structures. Caste remains central in the Indian context, but the framework is meant to create institutional responsibility against discrimination as such. Opposition from ‘upper-caste’ groups, therefore, appears misplaced. If the regulation targets discriminatory practices rather than identities, resistance can only stem from anxiety about scrutiny. If one does not discriminate, there should be little reason to fear accountability.The flawed logic of opposition and fear of losing dominanceCritics argue that the regulations can be misused. This logic is deeply flawed. Every law carries the possibility of misuse. This has never been a sufficient reason to withdraw legal protections. The demand to dilute or abandon the regulations on this basis reflects an attempt to preserve existing power relations. Such arguments shift attention away from victims of discrimination and toward hypothetical false complaints. This inversion is telling. It suggests that protecting privilege has become more important than addressing documented harm.The anxiety around “misuse” closely mirrors what Ajantha Subramanian identifies as the ideological defence of merit in elite institutions. In her book The Caste of Merit, Subramanian shows how merit is not a neutral measure of ability but a historically produced discourse that converts inherited caste privilege into apparently objective academic excellence. Elite institutions, particularly in science and technology, present themselves as casteless spaces while simultaneously rewarding forms of cultural capital disproportionately accessible to ‘upper-caste’ groups. Within this framework, accountability mechanisms are perceived as threats because they expose the fiction of meritocracy itself. Opposition to regulation thus becomes a defence of an inherited advantage masquerading as achievement.The scale and intensity of protests against the regulations point to a deeper anxiety. For centuries, ‘upper’ caste groups have exercised disproportionate control over educational spaces. Leadership positions in universities continue to be dominated by privileged castes. Any attempt to regulate these spaces threatens the authority inherited. The question then becomes unavoidable: if discrimination is not being practised, why such fear? Why does a mechanism meant to ensure fairness provoke street protests and media outrage? The answer lies in the discomfort of being questioned, monitored, and held accountable.Structural limits and institutional silenceAt the same time, the regulations are not without limitations. Caste based discrimination is not clearly defined in the text. This lack of precision allows room for narrow interpretations that may protect perpetrators rather than victims. Discrimination in academic spaces is often subtle, institutional, and cumulative. Without a clear definition, such practices can be dismissed as subjective or insignificant. Another serious concern is the composition of grievance redressal committees. The regulations empower the institution’s head to constitute these committees. Given the social composition of institutional leadership, this raises questions of neutrality and fairness. Data tabled in the Lok Sabha in July 2023 showed that there were only 1 SC, 1 ST, and 5 OBC vice-chancellors among the 45 central universities in India. Marginalised students and faculty are often required to seek justice from authorities who may never have experienced caste-based exclusion and may fail to recognise its everyday forms.Despite rising complaint numbers, caste discrimination remains severely underreported. Fear of retaliation, social isolation, and academic consequences discourages victims from coming forward. Introducing additional deterrents in the name of preventing false complaints would deepen this silence. It would strengthen institutional power rather than protect vulnerable groups. The sharp rise in pending cases also suggests that resolution on paper does not always translate into substantive justice. Procedural closure should not be confused with transforming campus culture.Democratic aspirations and social equalityIn a democratic republic, equality is not a zero-sum game. Safeguards for marginalised communities do not amount to persecution of the privileged. Yet, the opposition to the UGC Regulations treats equity as a threat. This response exposes how deeply caste privilege is embedded in the social imagination. Resistance to these regulations mirrors earlier opposition to affirmative action and social justice measures. Each time, claims of merit and fairness were mobilised to defend existing hierarchies. The present moment is no different.The UGC Regulations, 2026, represent a limited but necessary step toward addressing discrimination in higher education. They acknowledge a reality that data, testimonies, and lived experiences have long established. The backlash against them does not demonstrate their failure. It demonstrates their necessity. The focus should be on strengthening these regulations. Clear definitions of discrimination must be provided. Grievance committees must include mandatory representation from marginalised communities. Institutional accountability must move beyond symbolism.Ravi K. Bharmouri and Ganesh Gaigouria are Research Scholars at Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi.This piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire – and has been updated and republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.