The Public Examination (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024, was enacted to curb widespread malpractices, paper leaks, and organised cheating in recruitment and entrance examinations conducted by central authorities.
Aims and Objectives of the Act
Provide clear legal framework to deal with issue of paper leaks
Defining Unfair Practices – Includes leakage of question papers, tampering of answer sheets, manipulation of computer systems, and collusion with officials or service providers.
Empowering Examination Authorities – Allows surprise checks, blacklisting of service providers, and enhanced oversight mechanisms.
Authorises the Centre to refer cases to Central Investigation Agencies for probing large-scale malpractices.
Enables setting up of special courts for time-bound adjudication of offences.
Stringent Punishments – Prescribes 3-5 years of imprisonment and fines up to , extendable for organised crimes, to restore public confidence.
Addressing Organised Examination Crimes – Provides for property attachment and prosecution of institutions involved in organised cheating networks.
Deterring Unfair Means – Prevents cheating, impersonation, and paper leaks, ensuring transparency, fairness, and credibility in examinations.
Significance
Ensuring Integrity of Public Examinations
Deterring Organised Malpractices
Protecting Merit and Equal Opportunity
Enhancing Accountability of Examination Authorities
Promoting Transparency and Trust
Strengthening Governance and Fair Recruitment
Coverage under the Act
The Act applies to âPublic Examinationsâ conducted by authorities listed in its Schedule or notified later by the Central Government.
The Schedule presently includes:
Union Public Service Commission (UPSC)
Staff Selection Commission (SSC)
Railway Recruitment Boards (RRBs)
Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS)
National Testing Agency (NTA) and other Central Government recruitment bodies.
University and State Education Board examinations are not automatically covered unless specifically notified by the Central Government under Section 2 of the Act.
Limitations of the Act
Limited Coverage – State Boards and Universities are not automatically covered.
No Dedicated Investigative Mechanism – Investigation left to DSP-level officers
Technology Gaps – Insufficient use of digital tracking, encryption, and data protection tools to prevent leaks.
Ambiguity in Defining âUnfair Meansâ – The broad wording may lead to subjective interpretation and misuse.
Heavy reliance on Central Government notification powers may limit federal flexibility.
Focuses mainly on punitive measures, not on systemic prevention and capacity-building.
Judicial Burden – Creation of special courts without adequate infrastructure may lead to delays in trial.
Training Deficit – Lack of awareness and training among invigilators and exam staff undermines effective implementation.
The Act represents a major reform to uphold the integrity, fairness, and accountability of Indiaâs examination system.