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Law College Dreams: A Bright Future
The Bar Council of India (BCI), the statutory body that regulates legal education and practice, has recently imposed a three-year moratorium on the establishment of new law colleges and centres of legal education (CLEs).
India’s legal education has long resembled an overcrowded courtroom: Too many petitioners, too few advocates of substance, and an avalanche of paper that often hides the paucity of substance. At first glance, the decision may appear draconian in a country with soaring demand for legal education. But scratch beneath the surface, and the move reflects a deeper crisis in India’s legal training ecosystem—one that regulators are keen to fix before allowing further expansion.
The problem of quantity over quality
Estimates suggest that India today has over 1,700 law colleges, producing approximately 80,000–90,000 graduates each year. In theory, this should be a celebration of democracy, of access, of justice made tangible through a wider pool of practitioners. In practice, the majority of these institutions are barely more than signboards with classrooms. They offer skeletal libraries, non-existent moot courts, and faculty that too often treat teaching as a reluctant part-time job.
Multiple surveys by the BCI and independent commissions have revealed that a large share of law colleges operate more as “degree shops” than serious centres of learning. They lack full-time qualified faculty, libraries are skeletal, and clinical legal training is almost absent. The result: Graduates who hold a degree but are often ill-prepared for practice in courts, corporate firms, or public service.
Employment mismatch: The graduate glut
The crisis is not just academic but also economic. For every clutch of graduates from National Law Universities who step into gleaming corporate boardrooms, there are thousands more who wander from chambers to district courts, struggling to find cases, or worse, jobs that match neither their degree nor their debt.
The glut of unemployable law graduates has become the profession’s open secret.The BCI has been repeatedly criticised for allowing proliferation of sub-standard colleges, leading to an oversupply of graduates with limited practical skills. By announcing a freeze, the regulator is signalling that it wants to correct the imbalance between supply and demand.
Using the pause to raise standards
The moratorium is also about buying time to implement reforms. During this three-year window, the BCI aims to:
- Audit existing colleges to ensure compliance with infrastructure, faculty, and curriculum standards.
- Tighten recognition norms, making it harder for institutions to survive without meeting minimum requirements.
- Push for practical training, including moot courts, internships, and clinical legal education.
- Align curricula with contemporary needs—cyber law, arbitration, AI and law—so that graduates are better prepared for modern practice.
In short, the BCI wants to ensure that the next expansion of law colleges is accompanied by higher academic rigour and professional credibility, rather than unchecked growth.
A history of oversight failures
This is not the first time the legal education sector has been under the scanner. Back in the 1990s, the Yash Pal Committee and the National Knowledge Commission flagged concerns about the proliferation of substandard professional colleges—in law, engineering, and management alike. Despite multiple warnings, regulatory loopholes allowed a surge of law colleges in semi-urban and rural areas, many without the means to deliver quality education.The current moratorium is therefore an acknowledgement of past regulatory failures. It reflects the BCI’s recognition that before more licences are granted, existing institutions must be cleaned up and strengthened.The broader context: Lack of trust in the legal systemIndia’s judiciary is already battling a credibility crisis with innumerable pending cases, long delays, and concerns about access to justice.
In this context, poorly trained lawyers only worsen the problem. The moratorium thus serves a symbolic as well as practical purpose: Sending a message that legal education cannot be diluted without damaging the very justice system it feeds into.Interestingly, the BCI has kept the door slightly ajar. The Council has said that in backward or underserved regions, exceptions may be considered if there is a strong case for opening a new institution.
This indicates that the moratorium is not an absolute freeze, but a carefully calibrated pause.
Recent developments
While new colleges are blocked, existing institutions are seeing active regulatory engagement:
- CNLU’s 3-Year LLB Course: Chanakya National Law University (Patna) has been permitted to start a three-year LLB programme from 2025–26, making it the fourth NLU to do so. This suggests that the BCI is still encouraging programme diversification within reputed universities.
- Gujarat Colleges Back in Admissions: Fourteen grant-in-aid law colleges in Gujarat, previously excluded for non-compliance, have been reinstated into the admission process after the state government cleared dues and promised reforms. They must now strictly follow faculty and infrastructure norms.
The road ahead
The moratorium is not merely about stopping new colleges; it is about resetting the standards of legal education in India. If the BCI uses these three years to enforce accountability, upgrade curricula, and weed out non-performing institutions, the long-term benefits could be significant.However, if this pause ends without meaningful reform, it risks being yet another cosmetic measure—leaving students to bear the brunt of a system that churns out degrees without delivering real opportunity.