UGC NET Museology and Conservation Syllabus 2026 – Complete Guide, Unit-wise Topics, Exam Pattern
UGC NET Museology and Conservation is the specialised paper for candidates pursuing museum studies, heritage management, and cultural heritage conservation. As India's museum sector expands and global heritage discourse grows, qualified museologists and conservators are in increasing demand. This guide covers the full UGC NET Museology and Conservation syllabus 2026, exam pattern, unit-wise topics, essential references, and career prospects.
UGC NET Museology and Conservation Exam Pattern 2026
UGC NET Museology and Conservation Syllabus – Unit Wise
Unit 1 – Introduction to Museology
- Definition: Museum — ICOM (International Council of Museums) definition 2022: "A museum is a not-for-profit, permanent institution in the service of society that researches, collects, conserves, interprets and exhibits tangible and intangible heritage."
- History of museums: Mouseion of Alexandria (ancient world); early modern cabinets of curiosity (Wunderkammern); Ashmolean Museum Oxford (1683 — first public museum); British Museum (1753); Louvre (1793 — first public art museum); National Museum India (1949)
- Types of museums: General/encyclopaedic; Art museums; Natural history; Science and technology; Historical; Archaeological site museums; Ethnographic; Children's; Open-air (Skansen model); Eco-museums; Digital/virtual museums
- Museum functions: Collection; Documentation; Conservation; Research; Exhibition; Education; Outreach; Community engagement
- ICOM: Role; Code of Ethics; ICOM-CC (Conservation Committee); ICOM-CIDOC (Documentation)
Unit 2 – Museum Collections: Acquisition, Documentation and Registration
- Collection policy: Scope; ethics; due diligence; deaccessioning — when and how
- Acquisition methods: Purchase; gift/bequest; field collection; excavation finds; transfer from government; repatriation returns
- Documentation standards: Accession number; inventory; catalogue; object files; condition report
- Spectrum standard: UK-based museum documentation standard; primary and secondary information; SPECTRUM procedures
- Digital documentation: Collections Management Systems (CMS); database standards; Dublin Core; Lightweight Information Describing Objects (LIDO); 3D scanning; photogrammetry
- Repatriation and restitution: Elgin Marbles debate; Benin Bronzes; India's repatriation successes (Chola bronzes from USA, Nataraja from UK); UNESCO 1970 Convention on Illicit Trafficking
Unit 3 – Conservation Science: Principles and Practice
- Conservation philosophy: Preventive vs. remedial conservation; reversibility principle; minimum intervention; documentation before treatment
- Agents of deterioration: Physical (light — UV, visible, IR; temperature fluctuations; humidity); Chemical (pollution, oxidation, acids); Biological (insects, rodents, moulds, bacteria); Human (handling, theft, vandalism)
- Light and collections: Lux levels for different materials; UV filters; fibre optic lighting; LED advantages; ISO standards for museum lighting
- Climate control: Relative humidity (RH) standards for different materials (paper: 45–55%; metals: below 45%; organic: 45–60%); HVAC systems; microclimate solutions
- Pest management: Integrated Pest Management (IPM); identification; monitoring; treatment (freezing, heat treatment, nitrogen anoxia); quarantine
- Emergency preparedness: Disaster response planning; salvage priorities; fire suppression (Halon replacements — FM-200); water damage; flood-proofing; salvage triage
Unit 4 – Conservation of Specific Materials
- Paper and archives: Acid paper degradation; deacidification; paper repair; leaf casting; aqueous treatment; Bookkeeper spray; encapsulation; mass deacidification
- Photographs: Daguerreotype; calotype; albumen prints; gelatin silver; colour processes; digital preservation; FADGI guidelines
- Paintings: Canvas conservation; panel paintings (wood movement); varnish removal; inpainting (retouching) ethics; lining; consolidation
- Metals: Bronze disease (chloride attack — green powdery spot); iron corrosion; silver tarnish; cleaning methods; protective coatings; electrolytic reduction
- Organic materials: Wood (shrinkage, insects, rot); Textiles (silk degradation, wool moth damage); Ivory and bone (crack, splits); Basketry and natural fibres
- Stone and ceramics: Salt crystallisation; biological growth; consolidation with Primal/Paraloid B-72; ceramic restoration fills; injection grouting
Unit 5 – Exhibition Design and Interpretation
- Exhibition types: permanent; temporary; travelling; community; virtual; blockbuster
- Design process: brief; concept; spatial planning; traffic flow; interpretive text hierarchy; label writing
- Label writing: primary label; secondary label; group label; 50-word rule; reading age; multilingual labels
- Interactive and immersive experiences: touch tables; AR/VR; replica objects; sensory stations; audio guides
- Universal accessibility: wheelchair access; large print; Braille; audio description; tactile displays; deaf access; cognitive accessibility
- Lighting design in galleries: focal and ambient lighting; colour rendering index (CRI); track systems; climate effect of lighting
Unit 6 – Museum Education and Public Engagement
- Museum education theories: constructivism (Piaget, Vygotsky); contextual model of learning (Falk and Dierking); free-choice learning
- Educational programmes: school visits; object handling sessions; outreach boxes; family programmes; adult learning; citizen science
- Community museums: representation; co-curation; decolonising the museum; LGBTQ+ histories; postcolonial critique
- Digital engagement: social media (Instagram, YouTube); apps; online collections; virtual tours (Google Arts & Culture); NFTs in museums
- Volunteering and internships: role in museum operations; building museum workforce pipeline
Unit 7 – Heritage Management and Policy
- Heritage categories: tangible (movable, immovable); intangible (ICH — Intangible Cultural Heritage)
- UNESCO conventions: World Heritage Convention 1972; Convention for Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage 2003; UNESCO 1970 Illicit Traffic Convention
- World Heritage List: criteria (i–x); Outstanding Universal Value (OUV); India's 42 World Heritage Sites (as of 2024)
- Intangible Heritage in India: UNESCO ICH list — Yoga; Kumbh Mela; Garba; Durga Puja; Vedic chanting; Kutiyattam; Ramman; Chhau
- Indian legislation: Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act 1958 (AMASR); Antiquities and Art Treasures Act 1972; ASI (Archaeological Survey of India)
- Heritage tourism: carrying capacity; over-tourism (Venice, Machu Picchu, Hampi); heritage impact assessment