Private universities occupy a place in India today that veers between confusion and suspicion. The post-independence legacy has been one of Nehruvian socialism, through which many of us got excellent college education practically for free as the government picked up the tab. True, the inheritance has predominantly been of a university system set up by the British to produce an army of clerks to run the empire, an approach that remains fundamentally unchanged for most public universities across the nation. You’re just lucky (as I was) to land up in an elite college within the federal university systems, usually in the major metro cities. A few unique universities were formed in the 20th century, either driven by anticolonial movements (Jadavpur University, Calcutta), or particular social and disciplinary visions (Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, Hyderabad Central University, Hyderabad). All three universities—seats of excellence in a vast ocean of mediocre, bureaucratically minded, coloniallly inherited public higher education—have also been subjected to the worst violations of academic freedom in the current political regime, and that is no coincidence.