UGC busts fake university campuses across the country The University Grants Commission (UGC) has once again pulled the alarm on an unrecognised institution masquerading as a legitimate engineering college. In its latest public notice, the regulator warned students against the Institute of Management and Engineering, located at Kotla Mubarakpur in Delhi, for offering unapproved degree programmes in violation of Section 22 of the UGC Act, 1956. The Commission has clarified that this institute is neither established under any Central or State Act nor recognised under Sections 2(f) or 3—making all degrees it offers invalid for academic or professional use. Check the UGC’s official notice here.The advisory is not an isolated caution. It is part of a continuing crackdown by UGC against a parallel shadow network of self-styled universities and degree-awarding bodies that has persisted for decades, often preying on students unaware of how to verify an institution’s recognition status.
India’s fake-degree map: Small list, stubborn problem
UGC lists 22 unrecognised entities operating as “universities”, concentrated in a handful of states. The distribution tells its own story: A dense Delhi cluster, a sizeable Uttar Pradesh contingent, and thinner scatterings elsewhere—evidence not of isolated lapses but of a repeatable business model that flourishes where oversight is diffused and verification is an afterthought.
Delhi has 9 out of the 22 listed, the highest among all. But this stat is not merely a capital-city artefact, it reflects a services market where national-level brand cues (“National”, “Institute of Technology”, “Management”, even quasi-multilateral flourishes) meet high demand and imperfect due diligence. The metropolis gives dubious operators three advantages: Anonymity in numbers, a steady flow of aspirants, and brokerage ecosystems that monetise information asymmetry.With five entries, UP represents a different route: legacy of correspondence-style or “open” branding and the repurposing of familiar academic signifiers. The formula is simple—use reassuring terms (“Parishad”, “Vidyapith”, “Open University”), sell low-friction admissions, and promise mobility. In both Delhi and UP, the product is less an education than a credential proxy aimed at employers and exam boards.The two-each in Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, West Bengal, and singletons in Maharashtra and Puducherry suggest portability: the model replicates where three conditions exist—aspirational demand, ambiguous advertising space (offline/online), and gaps between central notices and local enforcement.
Why the problem persists
Verification has never been India’s strong suit, it is treated more as a courtesy than a compulsion. The UGC has made both the recognised-university directory and the fake-university list freely accessible. Yet students, parents, and sometimes even counsellors continue to trust the brochure over the database. It’s behavioural economics at play: A combination of laziness and misplaced faith. Sponsored search results often outrank the official UGC portal, coaching agents assure “affiliation”, and the difference between a Section 2(f) and a Section 3 institution sounds like bureaucratic trivia—until a degree collapses under scrutiny. Language, meanwhile, has become the counterfeit currency of higher education. Operators of fake institutes have mastered the art of weaponising vocabulary. They talk of “industry partnerships”, “international validation”, and “autonomous status” — phrases that soothe the anxious applicant and cloak illegitimacy in aspirational jargon. None of these confer the right to award degrees; only an Act of Parliament or a Section 3 declaration does. The enforcement chain, unfortunately, moves with the elegance of bureaucracy. The UGC can ring the alarm, but the power to seal an illegal institute lies with state authorities. Between the two levels, time and paperwork do the rest. Landlords change, websites reappear, and a minor tweak in the institute’s name buys months of ambiguity. This is why deterrence rarely works. When erasing a name is cheaper than earning recognition, illegality becomes a low-risk enterprise. The problem is not the absence of regulation; it is the absence of consequences swift enough to matter. Each time the UGC updates its list, India is reminded that fake universities are not a technological failure—they are a moral one, exploiting a society that still values a degree’s prestige more than its provenance.
A student’s checklist (no jargon)
A minute of diligence can save years of damage. Treat verification as the first click, not an afterthought. Check legal status before you admire brochures, test claims before you trust ‘affiliations’, and insist on credentials you can scan, not just frame. If an institute fails any one of these tests, do not negotiate with hope—walk away.Is it a university in law? Look it up on the UGC directory and confirm it’s a university under Section 2(f)/3. If it isn’t there, stop.Is the course professionally regulated? For engineering, management, pharmacy, nursing and the like, check the relevant council (AICTE/PCI/NMC, etc.). No approval, no admission.Beware the ‘affiliation fog’ : International partner”, “industry-validated”, “autonomous”, “open and flexible” do not grant degree-awarding powers.Cross-check the credential itself: Ask whether final certificates are NAD/DigiLocker verifiable with a QR code. If it can’t be verified, it shouldn’t be trusted.Consult the UGC Fake Universities list: If the name appears there, walk away. Today’s bargain becomes tomorrow’s barrier.
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