It has filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court and the matter is likely to come up for hearing tomorrow.
"At stake is the future of more than two lakh students. We will put a mechanism ensuring that their future is not affected if the Apex Court denotifies these institutes," a senior official in the ministry said.
Observing that the 44 deemed universities, classified as category C institutions, have no scope left for improvement in their functioning, the affidavit had said the "Supreme Court may be pleased to issue an appropriate order it deems fit to enable the government to denotify the 44 institutes".
It had examined the findings of a review committee headed by P N Tandon which had recommended blacklisting these 44 institutions as they had failed on several parameters.
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The nine parameters on which the 44 institutions were tested included conformity to UGC guidelines, aspects of governance, innovations in teaching, research output and impact, doctoral and research programmes, faculty resources, admission processes, award of degrees, among others.
The Tandon Committee had initially examined all 126 deemed universities in the country and classified them into three categories - A, B and C. While the 44 fell in category C, those in category A and B were allowed to continue.