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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Stark Reality: Fewer Than 250 Transgender Teachers in India's Vast Higher Education Landscape
India's higher education sector stands as one of the largest in the world, with over 1,600 universities and more than 45,000 colleges serving millions of students. Yet, amidst this expansive network, the presence of transgender faculty remains shockingly minimal. Provisional data from the All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE), as incorporated into the University Grants Commission's annual reports, reveals that in the 2022-23 academic year, only 233 transgender individuals were employed as teachers out of a staggering total of 16,07,839 faculty members nationwide.
This critical shortage not only deprives institutions of diverse perspectives but also deprives transgender students—who number fewer than 1,500 across colleges and universities—of vital role models and mentors. The disparity is even more glaring when contrasted with India's transgender population, estimated at around 4.88 lakh in the 2011 census, a figure widely believed to be an undercount due to stigma and misreporting.
Legal Foundations and Policy Evolution
The journey toward transgender inclusion in Indian higher education is rooted in landmark judicial and legislative milestones. The Supreme Court's 2014 National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) vs. Union of India judgment was pivotal, recognizing transgender persons as a 'third gender' and directing governments to provide reservations in education and public employment akin to Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST). This ruling affirmed transgender individuals' right to self-identify their gender and mandated affirmative action to address historical marginalization.
Building on this, the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019, prohibited discrimination in education and employment, requiring educational institutions to establish grievance redressal mechanisms and provide inclusive facilities like gender-neutral restrooms. The University Grants Commission (UGC), the apex body for higher education, issued guidelines in 2019 urging universities to create sensitization cells, offer scholarships, and ensure barrier-free access. Despite these frameworks, implementation remains patchy, with many states yet to notify specific reservation percentages or conduct targeted recruitments.
Recent Supreme Court interventions, such as the 2025 ruling in the Jane Kaushik case—where a Gujarat school was held accountable for withdrawing a job offer from a qualified transgender teacher—reiterate the judiciary's role in enforcing accountability. These developments signal progress, yet the faculty numbers tell a different story.
Barriers Impeding Transgender Entry into Academia
Several interconnected challenges explain the persistent shortage. Transgender rights advocate and associate professor Karthik Bittu Kondiah notes that exclusion often begins at recruitment: "Trans persons may have certificates and documents with different names or genders—admission or recruitment systems sometimes assume these are fraudulent applications and screen them out at an early stage."
Social stigma compounds these issues. Kondiah further explains, "People don’t want to take a chance on having a trans employee because of ideas of social and professional respectability." Once hired, transgender faculty face microaggressions, lack of institutional support, and external pressures, leading to high attrition. A 'leaky pipeline' effect is evident: low enrollment of transgender students (rising modestly from 302 in 2020-21 to around 1,500 by 2022-23) translates to fewer PhD aspirants and ultimately faculty.
- Discrimination in Hiring: Arbitrary rejections based on gender identity, despite qualifications.
- Inadequate Infrastructure: Absence of gender-neutral facilities and counseling services.
- Family and Societal Rejection: Low literacy rates (around 46% for transgenders vs. 74% general population) limit educational attainment.
34 - Lack of Data: AISHE's provisional tracking is recent and incomplete, hindering targeted policies.
Pioneers Breaking Barriers: Stories of Resilience
Amid the gloom, trailblazers offer hope. In June 2025, Dr. N. Jency made history as Tamil Nadu's first transgender woman to earn a PhD and secure an assistant professor position in English at Chennai's Loyola College. Overcoming family abandonment and societal ridicule, Jency's journey—from a rural background to academic excellence—highlights personal grit. Yet, she advocates for reservations, noting their absence in Tamil Nadu's faculty recruitments.
Earlier, Manobi Bandyopadhyay became India's first transgender college principal in 2015 at Krishnagar Women's College, West Bengal. Though she resigned after 18 months citing uncooperative staff, her appointment inspired many. In December 2024, K.N. Renuka Pujar was named the first transgender guest lecturer at Vijayanagara Sri Krishnadevaraya University, Karnataka, signaling incremental change in the south.
These cases, though rare, demonstrate that qualified transgender candidates exist but face systemic blocks. More such appointments could normalize inclusion and mentor emerging scholars.
Implications for Students and Institutional Diversity
The faculty shortage reverberates through classrooms. Transgender students, already underrepresented (less than 1,500 in higher education), lack mentors who understand their struggles, exacerbating dropout rates and mental health issues. Diverse faculty enriches pedagogy, fosters innovation, and models inclusivity—essential in a country pushing for 'Viksit Bharat' by 2047.
Without representation, curricula often overlook gender diversity, perpetuating biases. Institutions miss out on unique insights from transgender academics in fields like sociology, psychology, and literature, where lived experiences add depth.
Government Responses and Gaps in Execution
The Ministry of Education and UGC have mandated transgender cells in universities, but compliance varies. States like Karnataka introduced 1% horizontal reservations in 2021, yet utilization is low. Tamil Nadu Teachers Recruitment Board recently filled 2,708 posts without a single transgender hire, prompting demands for quotas.
Supreme Court critiques of 'gross apathy' urge a national policy, but inertia persists beyond Odisha and Kerala.
Recommended Solutions for Meaningful Inclusion
To address the shortage, stakeholders must act decisively:
- Mandate Reservations: Enforce 1-2% horizontal quotas in faculty recruitments, with certificate verification reforms.
- Sensitization Training: Mandatory programs for hiring committees and staff on transgender rights.
- Scholarships and Fellowships: Expand schemes like UGC's transgender scholarships to PhD levels.
- Data Collection: Integrate robust transgender tracking in AISHE for evidence-based interventions.
- Infrastructure Upgrades: Gender-neutral facilities and anti-discrimination cells in all HEIs.
Institutions like UGC's annual reports can lead by publicizing success stories and best practices.
Outlook: Toward a More Inclusive Academia
While the numbers are dismal, recent appointments and judicial pushes offer optimism. With committed implementation, India's higher education can reflect its diverse populace, empowering transgender faculty to shape future generations. The path demands urgency—transforming policy into practice will not only fill vacancies but enrich the academic ecosystem profoundly.
Photo by Karollyne Videira Hubert on Unsplash
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