Centre plans to start law courses in regional languages under NEP 2020: Report
Vagisha Kaushik | March 10, 2022 | 10:40 AM IST | 2 mins read
The University Grants Commission (UGC) has begun discussions with the higher education institutions that offer law courses.
NEW DELHI: Centre is planning to introduce law courses in regional languages under the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 after introducing various courses including BTech, according to a Hindustan Times report.
The University Grants Commission ( UGC ) has begun discussions with the colleges, universities and higher education institutions that offer law programmes, officials told Hindustan Times.
Also Read | UGC Policy: Dual degrees like BSc-MBA; college merger, autonomy; multidisciplinary clusters
UGC chairperson M Jagadesh Kumar reportedly said that the commission aims to start degree programmes in Indian regional languages beginning with law programmes.
“Law is one area where our students will benefit if they study in regional languages. Lawyers can prepare documents in regional languages and also interact with their clients in their mother tongues. In local courts also, arguments take place only in the local languages…Therefore, we are parallelly discussing this with the vice-chancellors of national universities and other educational institutions. And many of them have shown a very positive attitude towards introducing courses in Indian languages for law courses,” Kumar was quoted as saying.
Also Read | Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham: MBA students placed with Rs 6.74 lakh average salary; Rs 19.17 lakh highest
In addition to this, the Centre is also mulling over introducing UG and PG programmes for science and humanities streams in regional languages, the report said.
Adding that UGC will also contribute to translation of books into regional languages by forming a panel of experts, Kumar further said, “After identifying the texts required in our degree programmes that need to be translated in Indian languages, we will hold a dialogue with national and international publishers. We will discuss with them how these books can be translated into Indian languages and printed locally in India.”
Also Read | Delhi University holds 'job mela' to provide internships, placements to students
In July 2021, the All India Council for Technical Education ( AICTE ) approved 14 engineering colleges across eight states in the country to offer select BTech courses in regional languages. The BTech courses will be taught in 11 regional languages including Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Gujarati, Malayalam, Bengali, Assamese, Punjabi and Odia.
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
]- Education Loan: PM-USP scholarships up 31.6% nationally, but J-K and Ladakh see 10.9% drop in 5 years
- Experts propose 7 spots for university townships in education ministry’s post-budget webinar
- Operation Kayakalp: ‘Jarjar’ schools in UP a blind spot – with crumbling buildings and children left behind
- Protest as ‘law and order issue’: Students note pattern of universities filing FIRs to tackle ‘disagreements’
- Maharashtra Budget: Key scholarship scheme loses 82% funds; cuts across schemes for poor students in higher ed
- Karnataka Education Budget 2026-27: No social media for under-16, AI tutors for 12 lakh, IIT-level university
- ‘Mini Sikkim’: This CM Shri school bets on merit, mountains, and morning yoga to build future leaders
- JEE Advanced 2026: Adaptive test questions ready; IIT Kanpur to pilot this year on own students first
- From CBSE to IB Board: DPS International principal on why parents want a curriculum beyond rote learning
- From carpentry labs to language classes, NEP promises big but are Indian schools ready to deliver?