Thought Leadership

By Abhishek Jain, Head, Public Policy at Mantra4Change.

Introduction: Law and Policy as Tools for Social Change

Societies have relied on law and policy not only to regulate behavior but have also served as levers of transformation shaping progress, creating opportunities, correcting imbalances, and steering collective action.

Nathan Roscoe Pound3 conceptualised law as social engineering. He argued that lawmakers function like engineers: using law as a tool to reconcile, problem solve and balance three competing sets of interests: individual, public, and social.4

In the contemporary context, law and policy can serve (among others) the dual functionality of enabling and directing. Serve as ‘enablers’ opening pathways and creating opportunities, and ‘drivers’ imposing obligations, nudging behavior, and directing collective effort.

For system‑level reform, particularly in education, these roles must be anchored in four foundational pillars/forces:

Pillar Role in system level reform (in education)
Samaaj (society) Civic participation and social demand for change, ensuring reforms reflect community needs and aspirations
Sarkaar (government) Authority drafting and building laws and policies that govern us, providing the institutional backbone for reform.
Bazaar (market) Economic forces and innovations that sustain reform, creating resources and scalable solutions for education delivery.
Sanchaar (media) Communication channels that shape narratives and mobilize opinion, driving awareness and accountability around education policy.

This blog explores some examples of how some central laws and policies act as enablers and drivers across these four pillars, and how this can enable and drive us to build a more robust education system and policy.

Role of Law and Policy as a Driver in the Education System

Role of Law and Policy as an Enabler in the Education System

Conclusion

It is pertinent to understand that the legal and policy framework are instrumental in the future of India’s education system. They enable and drive each pillar in different yet interconnected ways, not only ensuring that each of their roles and functions reinforces the others but also helping drive meaningful and impactful systemic change, collectively laying the foundation for an education system that is accessible, equitable, and future‑ready. 

This vision resonates with the work of organisations like Shikshagraha, which seek to reimagine public education by restoring agency to schools and communities, proving that systemic reform is not only about laws and policies but also about people leading change on the ground.

Moving forward, the focus must be on strengthening laws and policies as both enablers and drivers of education reform, while ensuring that every stakeholder actively plays their role in shaping a system that truly delivers.

* By Abhishek Jain, Head, Public Policy at Mantra4Change.

* AI Use Declaration: Assistance of AI tools was taken for analysis and copy-editing of this blog.

1 The National Education Policy 2020 (‘NEP) was approved on July 29, 2020 and is accessible here.

2 Page 6 of the NEP.

3 Legal Scholar and Educator, who also served as the Dean of Harvard Law School from 1916–1936.

4 Pound, Roscoe, “The lawyer as a social engineer”, J. Pub. L. 3 (1954): 292.

5 You can read more about the mandates flowing from the law and policy framework, here- https://www.mantra4change.org/indias-education-policy-landscape/ and https://www.mantra4change.org/decoding-the-fundamental-right-to-education-in-india/

6 Article 246 and List III – Concurrent List of Schedule VII of the CoI; you can read more about the government’s power to prescribe law and policy here – https://www.mantra4change.org/indias-education-policy-landscape/

7 Article 51A(k) of the CoI.

8 Rule 3(1) of the Companies (Corporate Social Responsibility Policy) Rules, 2014.

9 Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013.

10 Paragraph (ii) of the Schedule VIII of the Act.

11 Article 19(1)(a) of the CoI.

12 DO Letter, DO 11(35)/20-13-L.I, issued by the Legislative Department, Ministry of Law and Justice, dated February 5, 2014 (“Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy”).

13 Paragraph 2, Appendix, Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy.