Centre notifies new criteria for IIM directors' post
Press Trust of India | November 13, 2023 | 10:22 PM IST | 2 mins read
Earlier, the criteria used to be a “distinguished academic with PhD or equivalent” and the division for the degrees were not mentioned.
NEW DELHI: The Centre has notified new norms for the appointment of directors of Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), making it mandatory for applicants to have first class degrees in both Bachelor's and Master's, along with a PhD or equivalent from a reputed institute.
Also, the President will now be a "visitor" to the prestigious B-schools with powers to appoint chairperson of the board of governors, appointment and removal of directors and dissolving the board for not performing duties or complying with visitor's directions.
Under the new rules, the eligibility for appointment as an IIM director now will be having a "distinguished" academic record with "first class degree in both Bachelor's and master's level, and with PhD or equivalent from a reputed institute". Earlier, the criteria used to be a "distinguished academic with PhD or equivalent" and there was no mention of the required division for the degrees.
Also read | IIM Ranchi aims to be ‘globally-oriented, locally-responsive’ with new MBA curriculum: Director
Recently, there was a controversy over the appointment Dheeraj Sharma as IIM-Rohtak director as he had a second division in his bachelor's. As per the new norms, the visitor will have the final say in the appointment of the director of any IIM. The visitor shall nominate one of the names recommended by the board and send it to the board for appointment.
"Provided that where the visitor is not satisfied with the names recommended by the board, he or she may ask the board to make fresh recommendations. If the visitor is not satisfied with the panel of names recommended by the board, the board shall get a fresh panel of three names recommended through the same search-cum-selection committee or a fresh search-cum-selection committee," the notification said.
Earlier, the board was solely responsible for the appointment of the director. The concept of a visitor in IIMs had first found a mention in the draft of the present act released by the Centre in 2015. However, IIMs had resisted it saying that it would "put a question mark on their said autonomous powers". It was later removed from the final bill. The president of India is the visitor of all the central universities and IITs and appoints their vice-chancellors and directors. Under the new norms, the visitor will now have the power to dissolve the board, at any time, under three circumstances -if the visitor is of the opinion that the board is unable to discharge the functions, is persistently defaulted in complying with any direction given by the visitor under this act, and in the public interest. Earlier, no such clause for the dissolution of the board was there.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Delhi University plans study-abroad programme for UG students, scholarships for some
- Hostel Life: Bad food, dirty toilets, sky-high fees – the truth about higher education’s crumbling backbone
- No UGC framework, no scope of AI-free assignments; teachers rethink class assessment with viva voce
- Assam Women’s University: From handful of students to robots in village schools, AWU is just getting started
- Teacher Training: Deemed university on paper, NITTTRs lose ground as AICTE, MMTTCs muscle in on domain
- CBSE mandatory 3rd language rule leaves Sanskrit as only R3 option at many pvt English-medium schools
- Mofussil to Markets: SNDT Women’s University is taking fashion design boom to the Maharashtra hinterlands
- Promised, but missing: Five years on, National Digital University reduced to a budget item, with no funds
- Amravati University drops Marathi novel on Covid lockdown from syllabus; ‘targeting literature,’ says author
- JNU, TISS Mumbai, BHU: Student unions vanish from universities with elections scrapped, councils taking over