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Home Opinion Ideas

Fixing India’s Broken Research Ladder

R. K. Uppal by R. K. Uppal
February 18, 2026
in Ideas
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R. K. Uppal

India stands at a decisive moment in its knowledge journey. With one of the youngest populations in the world and an expanding higher education system, the country produces thousands of postgraduate and doctoral scholars each year. These young researchers carry intellectual ambition, resilience, and a desire to contribute to national progress. Yet beneath this impressive demographic dividend lies a reality marked by structural constraints, mounting pressure, and uncertain futures. Over the last decade, India has significantly increased enrolment in doctoral programmers. Universities, central institutions, and private campuses alike have expanded their research intake. On paper, this growth signals academic vibrancy. However, the expansion has not been matched by proportional improvements in infrastructure, funding, or career pathways. The result is a widening gap between aspiration and opportunity.
For many young scholars, the journey begins with passion. They choose research not for immediate financial gain but for intellectual fulfilment and the hope of shaping ideas, technologies, and policies. Soon, however, they confront a system that tests endurance more than creativity. Delays in fellowship disbursement, cumbersome administrative procedures, limited laboratory facilities, and inadequate access to international journals remain persistent issues in several institutions. Scholars in rural and state universities often face even greater challenges due to uneven resource distribution. Financial insecurity is perhaps the most immediate concern. Fellowships from national agencies provide essential support, but procedural delays frequently disrupt scholars’ lives. For those from modest socio-economic backgrounds, such interruptions can mean borrowing money, taking part-time work, or depending heavily on family support. Research demands concentration and continuity; financial instability undermines both. Unlike corporate careers that promise early returns, the research path requires long years of dedication without guaranteed employment at the end.
Career uncertainty compounds this pressure. While the number of Ph.D. graduates has risen steadily, permanent academic positions have not grown at the same pace. Recruitment processes are often prolonged, irregular, or constrained by budgetary limitations. Many young scholars accept ad-hoc, guest, or contractual appointments with modest salaries and little job security. The dream of becoming a regular faculty member increasingly resembles a distant possibility rather than a predictable outcome.
Simultaneously, the culture of performance metrics has intensified. Academic advancement today is closely tied to publications, citation counts, indexing standards, and performance indicators. While accountability and quality assurance are essential, the overemphasis on quantitative measures can distort priorities. Young researchers feel compelled to publish quickly and frequently, sometimes at the cost of depth and originality. The rise of predatory journals and superficial output is a symptom of systemic pressure rather than individual failure. When numbers overshadow impact, scholarship risks losing its soul.

“While India’s young researchers are exceptionally talented and driven, their success depends on structural reform. By building a supportive framework that connects ambition with tangible opportunities, institutions can transform current professional uncertainty into a clear, promising future for the next generation of scientists.”

The mental health dimension of this crisis deserves urgent attention. Doctoral research is inherently demanding; it involves long hours of solitary work, intellectual uncertainty, and repeated revision. Add to this financial stress, supervisory conflicts, family expectations, and competitive job markets, and the emotional burden becomes heavy. Yet counselling facilities, peer-support structures, and formal mentoring systems remain underdeveloped in many campuses. Silence around academic stress continues to prevail, even as burnout quietly spreads.
However, the narrative is not entirely pessimistic. India’s research ecosystem is evolving. National initiatives promoting innovation, start-up incubation, and interdisciplinary research have opened new possibilities beyond traditional academia. The growing integration of Artificial Intelligence, data science, biotechnology, and sustainability studies has expanded the scope of research applications. Industry–academia collaboration, though still developing, offers pathways for translating research into products and services. Digital access to global knowledge networks has also reduced intellectual isolation.
The challenge, therefore, is not a lack of talent but a misalignment of structure and support. Young researchers do not seek privilege; they seek predictability, fairness, and recognition. Timely fellowship payments must become non-negotiable. Research grants should be accessible and transparent, especially for scholars in state and rural universities. Recruitment processes need clarity and regularity so that doctoral graduates can plan their futures with dignity.
Equally important is rethinking evaluation systems. Instead of rewarding sheer volume of publications, institutions must priorities originality, societal relevance, and ethical scholarship. Collaborative and interdisciplinary work should be encouraged rather than constrained by rigid departmental silos. Supervisors must be trained not only as subject experts but also as mentors capable of guiding young scholars through academic and professional uncertainties.
India’s aspiration to become a global knowledge leader depends not merely on increasing enrolment figures but on nurturing research excellence with integrity. Young researchers represent the intellectual backbone of this ambition. They are potential innovators, policy analysts, educators, and entrepreneurs. If their early careers are marked by insecurity and disillusionment, the nation risks losing a generation of thinkers to frustration or alternative professions.
An ecosystem that values research as a long-term national investment—rather than a degree-producing mechanism—can transform this landscape. Stability in funding, transparency in appointments, emotional support systems, and meaningful industry linkages can restore confidence. The objective should be clear: to convert talent into impact, curiosity into innovation, and academic perseverance into societal advancement. India’s young researchers possess brilliance and determination in abundance. What they require is a supportive architecture that aligns ambition with opportunity. If reforms are pursued with sincerity and urgency, their uncertain futures can become pathways of promise. The choice lies not with them alone, but with the institutions and policies that shape their journey.
(The author is Principal, Guru Gobind Singh College of Management and Technology, Gidderbaha, Punjab. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)

[email protected]

R. K. Uppal

R. K. Uppal

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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