Try GOLD - Free
THE DOMICILE DEBATE
Careers 360
|February 2021
Over the past few years, most states have introduced domicile quotas of varying sizes in NLUs. Students, alumni and former administrators continue to oppose this policy.

The National Law University (NLU) Delhi last year implemented state domicile reservations after much pressure from the state government and resistance from students and alumni. The Karnataka government’s attempt to introduce a 25 percent quota for its residents at the National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bengaluru, is pending in the Supreme Court. Over the past few years, most National Law Universities (NLUs) – old and new – have freshly reserved seats for students from the states in which they are located, or taken steps to expand the quotas.
This hasn’t gone smoothly. Students, alumni, former vice-chancellors and some of the best-known figures in legal education have opposed this change arguing that large quotas based on domicile will diminish the NLUs’ “national character”. For several institutions, the attempts led to court cases.
In the case of National Law School of India University, Bengaluru, the Karnataka government plans 25 percent reservation while local lawyers demand 50 percent. NALSAR Hyderabad planned to offer 50 percent seats to locals, but at present around 20 percent seats are being offered. The West Bengal National Law University of Juridical Sciences (WBNUJS) reserved 30 of percent seats for the state last year, and National Law University Odisha, 25 percent. Newer NLUs such as Himachal Pradesh National Law University, Shimla, have had quotas for local students from the start. The 25 percent quota proposed for NLU Jodhpur is yet to be implemented.
State laws, national character
The fight over domicile quotas has its genesis in the way the NLUs came up.
This story is from the February 2021 edition of Careers 360.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Careers 360

Careers 360
Why all 4 pillars of education matter
Translation: A quarter of knowledge comes from the teacher, a quarter from one's own effort, a quarter from peers, and the final quarter through experience over time.
4 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
AI IN EDUCATION REVOLUTIONISING TOWARDS EDUCATION 4.0
AI has the power to transform the educational landscape of today, solving some of the biggest challenges of modern-day education. The transition from conventional teaching and learning methods to an AI-enabled or tech-enabled learning is observed in many domains of study, including secondary to senior secondary education as well as college education.
4 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
Introspection, contemplation as important as 'outwardfocused inquiry' in learning
NEP offers an opportunity for Indian educators to blend intuitive wisdom with modern teaching to transform classrooms into holistic learning spaces, write the CBSE secretary and a Delhi Government school leader
6 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
Promises vs Provision: Public funding in NEP 2020 framework
Five years after NEP's launch, India's education spending stagnant at 4.1% of GDP - far below the promised 6% - while declining scholarships, fund shift towards elite institutes, and rising student debt challenge the policy's vision of inclusive education
5 mins
August 2025
Careers 360
Education's Heroes
In India, education is shaped not only by policies and institutions but also by the people who refuse to accept inequality as the norm. They come from courtrooms, laboratories, medical colleges, village squares, and city streets, bound by a belief that learning must be a right for all, not a privilege for a few. Some take on entrenched systems through litigation and advocacy; others create small but lasting change through libraries, community classrooms, and grassroots campaigns.
13 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
Relevance of engineering in the age of AI
Which college? Which branch? These questions plague millions of students entering higher education every year.
3 mins
August 2025
Careers 360
NEP 2020 How Far Have We Come?
The business of policy-making for education is the business of nation building.
16 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
Learning beyond the classroom
In every age, engineering has been the engine of transformation.
3 mins
August 2025

Careers 360
'We operate on trust, but there are consequences for dishonesty'
Anil Sahasrabudhe, chairman of National Educational Technology Forum (NETF), the executive committee of National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), and National Board of Accreditation (NBA), speaks with Aeshwarya Tiwari about the reforms in accreditation bodies, global accreditation standards, NIRF rankings, 'One Nation One Data' initiative, and more. Edited excerpts below
12 mins
August 2025
Careers 360
India needs 10 times the number of audiologists it has
The Bachelor of Audiology and Speech Language Pathology degree can open many career avenues, its placement records are stellar and salaries, generous. It needs better promotion
5 mins
June 2025
Translate
Change font size