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100 _aGeorge, Jagan Sebastain
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245 _aNational educational policy 2020: A critique
260 _aSocial Science in Perspective
300 _a16(1), Jan-Mar, 2024: p.64-79
520 _aThe National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 aims to centralize and standardize higher education, but this paper critically examines how it serves as a vehicle for commodification and privatization, aligning with neoliberal principles. While explicit privatization may provoke resistance from stakeholders, the policy strategically incorporates New Public Management (NPM) principles to embed neoliberal reforms within governance structures, allowing for greater privatization under the guise of educational management improvements. The study highlights how the adoption of market-driven strategies, performance-based evaluations, and privatized funding models shifts the focus from public welfare to economic efficiency, leading to a system where education becomes a commodity rather than a fundamental right. By analyzing these trends, the paper critiques the underlying motivations of NEP 2020, questioning its impact on accessibility, affordability, and equity within higher education. This discussion contributes to the broader debate on how educational reforms may serve economic interests rather than the holistic development of learners and society. – Reproduced
650 _aNational Education Policy, NEP 2020, Higher Education, Centralization, Standardization, Commodification, Privatization, Neoliberal Principles, New Public Management, Market-Driven Strategies, Educational Governance, Economic Efficiency, Public Welfare, Accessibility, Affordability, Equity, Holistic Development.
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773 _aSocial Science in Perspective
906 _aEDUCATION
942 _cAR