Degrees and diplomas issued by diploma mills have been used to obtain employment, raises, or clients. Even if issuing or receiving a diploma mill qualification is legal, passing it off as an accredited one for personal gain is a
crime in many jurisdictions. In some cases the diploma mill may itself be guilty of an
offense, if it knew or ought to have known that the qualifications it issues are used for fraudulent purposes. Diploma mills could also be guilty of
fraud if they mislead customers into believing that the qualifications they issue are accredited or recognized, or make false claims that they will lead to career advancement, and accept money on the basis of these claims. Similar to
tax havens, diploma mills frequently employ
jurisdiction shopping, operating in another country or legal jurisdiction where running diploma mills is legal, standards are lax or prosecution is unlikely. Splitting the business across jurisdictions can be a way to avoid authorities. A school might operate in one jurisdiction but use a mailing address in a different jurisdiction, for example. Author
John Bear, a
distance learning and diploma mills expert, has written that fake degrees are risky for buyers and consumers:
Australia In
Australia, it is a criminal offence to call an institution a university, or issue university degrees, without authorisation through an act of federal or state parliaments. Under the
Higher Education Support Act 2003, corporations wishing to use the term "university" require approval from the relevant government minister, the
Minister for Education (). The corporate regulator
Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) places strict controls on corporations wishing to use the term "university" and if the applicant does not intend to provide education services the name must not imply a connection with an existing university. The Corporations Regulations 2001 lists the 39 academic organisations permitted to use the title "university". The use of higher education terms (such as "degree") is protected in state legislation, the e.g. Higher Education (Qld) Act 2003.
Brazil In Brazil, the terms "university," "university center," and "college" are regulated by the
Ministry of Education (MEC). For an undergraduate or postgraduate degree to be valid nationwide, both the educational institution and the specific course must be recognized by the MEC. Without recognition, the degree has no legal validity.
Bosnia and Herzegovina According to the laws on higher education in Bosnia and Herzegovina the terms "university", "faculty", "academy" and "university of applied sciences" can be used only by accredited educational institutions. Accreditation is independently assessed by the Agency for Development of Higher Education and Quality Assurance and formally conferred by the Ministry of Education and Science for each
canton,
entity or
district. Only these institutions are allowed to award academic degrees and diplomas. Illegal use of academic titles or academic degrees and "non-accredited diplomas" may lead to prosecution, conviction, fines or even imprisonment.
Canada In Canada education, including higher education, falls under the jurisdiction of provincial and territorial governments. Many of the public universities are established by provincial legislation which also confers degree granting authority upon the institution. However, private postsecondary institutions are also required to comply with applicable legislation in order to confer degrees and diplomas. Provincial or regional quality assurance bodies oversee education at a regional level, and there is no federal oversight. For example, in Ontario the
Post-secondary Education Choice and Excellence Act, 2000 regulates degree-granting authority. Any institution that wishes to offer a degree or use the term "university" must be authorized to do so under an Act of the Legislature or by the Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities. A list of recognized Canadian higher education institutions is available on the Canadian Information Centre for International Credentials website. The topic of diploma mills in Canada has been covered by the popular media since the 1970s, including in-depth investigations by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), news coverage by the Canadian Press and other mainstream media.
China Most, but not all, universities and colleges in the
People's Republic of China are public institutions. The Ministry of Education, which has legal authority to regulate college enrollment and degree awarding, publishes a yearly list of qualified higher-education institutions. Institutions not on the list cannot admit students or award degrees. Also, no institution may call itself a "university" or "college" without approval by a provincial-level education department. Any institution, public or private, which wishes to name itself after a geographic region larger than a province (e.g. "South China ... University") must go through the Ministry of Education. A new regulation forbids any new university or college from being named "national", "of China" or similar names. , China has 210 diploma mills.
Denmark Most universities and colleges are public institutions; universities are self-governing, but financed by the state. However, some schools, like
Det Nødvendige Seminarium in
Tvind provide a degree program that is accredited by the Ministry of Education in Mozambique and the
Southern African Development Community.
Finland All universities and colleges are public institutions; universities are public institutions or foundations, and vocational universities are municipal organs. There are no private higher educational institutions and no legal mechanism to found or accredit any. Universities are explicitly defined in the Universities Act. Other than universities proper,
technical universities (known in Finland as AMK,
ammattikorkeakoulu), officially called "Universities of Applied Sciences" in English, can be established with permission from the
cabinet. The degrees are protected by law. The list of AMKs can be viewed from the Ministry of Education website. For purposes of professional qualification, the use of foreign degree qualifications is regulated: if the name of a degree can be confused with a Finnish degree that requires more academic credit, the confusion must be eliminated. Several diploma mills have operated in Finland, and countermeasures in university admissions have become necessary. There are no laws against conferring unaccredited degrees or degrees accredited abroad, as long as a Finnish degree or equivalent is not claimed. Also, English terms like "Bachelor" or "Doctor" are not protected.
Germany In
Germany, it is a criminal offense to call an institution a
Universität (university) or
Fachhochschule, or to issue academic degrees, without authorization through an act of the respective
state's Ministry of Education. It is also a misdemeanor to falsely claim a degree in Germany if it is not accredited, see
:de:Missbrauch von Titeln, Berufsbezeichnungen und Abzeichen. Some corporate training programs in Germany use the English term "corporate university". Such use of the term is tolerated since it is widely understood that such programs are not actual universities. Similarly,
Fachhochschulen frequently use the English term "university of applied science". Neither are permitted to use the German word
Universität.
Greece Institutions of higher
Tertiary education Ανώτατα Εκπαιδευτικά Ιδρύματα (ΑΕΙ) (universities and technical universities) and
Ανώτατα Τεχνολογικά Εκπαιδευτικά Ιδρύματα (ΑΤΕΙ) (technological educational institutes / universities of applied sciences) in Greece are fully self-managed public entities and are the only institutions that can issue university diplomas. Diplomas issued by foreign educational institutions are validated and assessed by the Hellenic National Academic Recognition and Information Center (Hellenic NARIC).
Hong Kong It is illegal under Hong Kong laws chapter 320
Post Secondary Colleges Ordinance section 8 to call an organisation a "university" without approval from the Chief Executive in Council. Under Hong Kong laws chapter 200
Crimes Ordinance section 73, anyone who knowingly uses false documents with the intention of inducing somebody to accept them as genuine is liable to 14 years' imprisonment. Section 76 assigns the same penalty for anyone who makes or possesses machines that create such false documents.
India The
University Grants Commission (UGC) states, in section 22 of the University Grants Commission Act of 1956:
UGC has published a warning dated July 2012 against
Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM) about the unrecognized status of IIPM.
Ireland Legitimate higher education qualifications in
Ireland are placed on, or formally aligned, with the National Framework of Qualifications. This framework was established by the
National Qualifications Authority of Ireland in accordance with the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act (1999). It is illegal under the Universities Act (1997) for any body offering higher education services to use the term "university" without the permission of the Minister for Education and Science. It is likewise illegal under the Institutes of Technologies Acts (1992–2006) to use the term "institute of technology" or "regional technology college" without permission.
Italy All public and private universities and higher education institutions must be established, or specifically recognized, by
decree of the
Italian Minister of Education, University and Research; any other institution or organization is therefore not recognized and unaccredited.
Japan Under Article 135 of the School Education Act, all universities and
post-secondary education institutes in Japan require a government-issued licence from the
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). Operating such an institute without a licence from MEXT can result in a fine of ¥100,000 for each offence committed. In addition, the
National Institution for Academic Degrees and Quality Enhancement of Higher Education (NIAD-QE) has the sole authority to accredit all university and post-secondary qualifications in Japan, as per Article 104 of the School Education Act. The "
Patent University" (
ja:特許大学) was an example of a Japanese diploma mill which operated from 1964 until it was shut down in 1980, and which sold fraudulent doctorates for sums ranging between ¥300,000 and ¥5 million. In 2007, MEXT revealed that it had discovered 48 people with suspected falsified qualifications who were successfully hired to teach in 43 universities and post-secondary education institutes throughout Japan between 2004 and 2006.
Malaysia In
Malaysia, the Education Act 1996 protects the status of the terms "university", "university college" and "branch campus". Only institutions with this status may award academic degrees. The Private Higher Education Institutions act also places restrictions on the creation and operation of any private higher education institution that conducts any course of study or training programme for which a certificate, diploma or degree is awarded. Furthermore, all legitimate higher education qualifications are placed on or formally affiliated with the
Malaysian Qualifications Framework under the provisions of the Malaysian Qualifications Agency Act 2007. Limited exemptions are however granted to organizations and institutions "where the teaching is confined exclusively to the teaching of any religion" or "any place declared by the Minister by notification in the Gazette not to be an educational institution" under the Education Act 1996.
Mexico In Mexico, Under the Education Act the official recognition of studies (RVOE) educational programs offered by private institutions may be granted by the federal education authority, by state education authorities or by both. There are also public institutions of higher education, which are mandated to incorporate programs of these institutions according to its own rules. As of July 10, 2000, the Ministry applied for the granting of RVOE the guidelines established in the "Secretarial Agreement No. 279 establishing the processes and procedures related to the recognition of official validity of studies The
Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) lists several institutions that are unaccredited in Mexico. In August 2010, the
Secretariat said 22 federal health officials were arrested after their medical and psychology licenses turned out to be fakes from a diploma mill according to the newspaper
El Universal. They included the technical director of the National Center for Blood Transfusions and the chief medical officer of the National Commission for Medical Arbitration, which rules on cases of malpractice.
Netherlands In the Netherlands it is illegal for non-accredited, non-recognized institutes to bestow any legally protected academic title. The
Accreditation Organisation of the Netherlands and Flanders (NVAO) is the only agency allowed to accredit courses. Since the implementation of the
Bologna process, Dutch universities have started to bestow the English titles MSc and PhD instead of their Dutch equivalents. These English versions of the title are not protected under Dutch law. A diploma mill may thus bestow someone with a PhD title without violating Dutch law, but the recipient will not be allowed to use the protected titles "doctor" or "dr." Partnerships with foreign educational institutions are possible. This is called the "U-bocht (
U-turn) construction".
Nigeria The National University Commission (NUC) was formed in 1999 to clamp down on diploma mill activity in the country. A concentrated effort by the NUC has resulted in a significant drop in diploma mill activity in Nigeria. An International Higher Education article states, "Attainment of the Nigerian vision of being one of the top 20 economies by 2020 will be compromised by the injection of such poor-quality graduates into the economy. Herein lies the distaste for and the ''raison d'être'' for the government's clampdown on degree mills."
Norway Accreditation of universities and other institutions of higher education ("Universitet", "Høyskole(Høgskole)"), is governed by the state institution NOKUT, Norwegian Agency for Quality Assurance in Education. There have been cases where people submitting diplomas from a "Diploma Mill" to this agency for convalidation, have been prosecuted for fraud.
Pakistan The government-established Higher Education Commission (HEC) is responsible for all matters related to the accreditation of universities in Pakistan. All recognized universities in Pakistan are listed on the HEC website. However, the
Axact company, based in Karachi, was the subject of a 2015 investigation by the
New York Times, which found it was committing fraud in other countries, by granting fake degrees and diplomas.
Philippines Title IV (Crimes Against Public Interest), section V articles 174 and 175 of the
Revised Penal Code of the Philippines criminalize the falsification of medical certificates, certificates of merit or service and the like. Article 174 imposes a penalty on anyone who produces such certificates and article 175 on anyone who knowingly procures and uses such a certificate. Despite this, news and magazine articles appear from time to time reporting businesses operating along
Claro M. Recto Avenue in
Manila which offer fake documents for sale.
Portugal In Portugal according to Base Law of Educative System from 1973 Lei n.º 5/73 (
Lei de Bases do Sistema Educativo) the formal establishment of a diploma mill is impossible. To award higher studies degrees, all higher studies institutions require a governmental issued licence provided by the
Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education and published in the Government Journal (
Diário da República) and communicate to the High Studies General Board (Direção Geral do Ensino Superior - DGES) all record of grades and degree awarded by students. Acting otherwise is punishable by law. Previously to 2007, in the process of opening a new institution or new curriculum to be lectured, it was required to provide the degree content by science branch and the list of PhD, MSc and BSc professors that lecture that specific course, thus getting a licence without expiration date, mandatory professors or contents revision date. This created a series of controversial scandals and severe lack of educational quality and academic integrity in some private and public institutions as evidentiated by the 2007 state run inspection at the hands of
A3ES, resulting in their compulsory closure and transfer of students to other institutions. Created by governmental rule to ensure the quality in higher studies along the
Bologna Process implementation, this entity has a specific and rigorous agenda to control all public and private institutions of higher studies and its content. Its job is to perform inspections every 1, 2, 3 or 5 years about the
academic staff's scientific quality in every eligible educational institution, current and new curriculum in all degrees, assure that these are up to date, and control the BSc, MSc and PhD available degrees in Portugal, by closure or approval of new courses as the
Bologna Process demands.
Romania The Romanian newspaper
Gândul has reported that the
Dimitrie Cantemir Christian University from Bucharest started 34 Master's degree curricula which have no legal ground. According to the rector of the university,
Corina Dumitrescu, the law has a loophole, since it uses a continuous present for institutional evaluation, which is uncharacteristic of the Romanian language.
Russia Apart from the graduate level diploma mills, in Russia a significant number of leading institutions have "degree mills" within their departments (typically humanities and economics). According to the civic initiative
Dissernet such institutions are providing the Russian elite (heads of universities, members of parliament and government officials) with degrees based on plagiarised and falsified
Candidate of Sciences (
Ph.D) and
Doctor of Sciences (
habilitation) theses.
South Korea It is illegal to falsely claim a degree in
South Korea if it is not accredited. In March 2006 prosecutors in
Seoul were reported to have broken up a crime ring selling bogus music diplomas from Russia, which helped many land university jobs and seats in orchestras. People who falsely used these degrees were criminally charged. In early 2007,
Shin Jeong-ah (신정아) was criminally charged for forging and misusing a degree from
Yale University. The case had a far-reaching impact as she was a professor at
Dongguk University and also held a position at an art gallery known to have ties with economical and political figures.
Spain In Spain, universities and syllabi must be accredited by the
National Agency for Quality Assessment and Accreditation (ANECA). Furthermore, in order to apply for an
academic rank, a professor must have their curriculum accredited for said rank by this agency.
Sri Lanka Until 1999 only state universities could grant degrees, but amendments to the Universities Act now allow private institutions to be granted degree-awarding status by the
University Grants Commission. Universities can also be established by an
act of parliament.
Sweden In June 2007, the Swedish Minister for Employment,
Sven-Otto Littorin, was discovered to have an MBA degree from
Fairfax University. Though aware that claiming an MBA from this diploma mill would be illegal in many states in the US, Littorin tried to convince the Swedish media and people of the legitimacy of his qualification. He was eventually forced to remove the reference from his official
CV, but he remained in office.
Switzerland Qualifications, diplomas and titles earned from Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology (
ETH Zurich,
EPFL), from cantonal (state-run)
universities, from private universities recognized by state authorities, and from
Fachhochschule-institutions (Universities of Applied Sciences run or recognized by official authorities, federal and cantonal) are protected. Accreditation is conferred by the Conference of University Rectors of Switzerland (CRUS) and the Swiss Center of Accreditation and Quality Assurance in Higher Education (OAQ). Under Swiss law, it is a criminal offense, under
unfair competition legislation, to profit by any unfounded academic or occupational qualifications. The private use of such a title, however, is legal. Thus, one can call oneself an
LL.M., but one must not use the title when competing for clients.
United Kingdom In the
United Kingdom, degrees may only be awarded by institutions that have degree-awarding powers recognised by the UK authorities (the
UK parliament, the
Scottish parliament, the
National Assembly for Wales or the
Northern Ireland Assembly). Some institutions do not have degree-awarding powers but provide complete courses leading to recognised UK degrees that are validated by institutions which have degree-awarding powers. The UK authorities recognise those institutions which have been granted degree-awarding powers by either a
royal charter, an
Act of Parliament or the
Privy Council. These degree-awarding institutions are known as "recognised bodies." All UK universities and some higher education colleges are "recognised bodies." If an institution is not a "recognised body" or makes degree awards not validated by such a body, it is likely to be a degree mill. It is an offence against section 214 of the
Education Reform Act 1988 for any organisation to offer a degree qualification which could be taken to be that of a UK institution unless it is a "recognised body." The UK Border Agency maintains a list of institutions licensed to sponsor migrant students so that overseas students can check that they are attending an appropriate institution, and the
Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) maintain a directory of higher education providers regulated in England.
Higher Education Degree Datacheck (HEDD) is an initiative sponsored by HEFCE which aims to prevent higher education fraud in the UK by maintaining a list of UK degree-awarding bodies, including name changes, mergers and antecedents since 1990.
United States In the United States, diploma mills were very common before 1920s. The country does not have a federal law that would unambiguously prohibit diploma mills, and the term "university" is not legally protected on a national level. The
United States Department of Education lacks direct
plenary authority to regulate schools and, consequently, the quality of an institution's degree. However, the
Federal Trade Commission works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices including those in the field of education and alerts United States' consumers about diploma mills by delineating some tell-tale signs in its official web page. Under the terms of the
Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, the
U.S. Secretary of Education is required by law to publish a list of nationally recognized accrediting agencies that the Secretary determines to be reliable authorities on the quality of education or training provided by the institutions of higher education that they accredit. Some degree mills have taken advantage of the
Establishment Clause and
Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment by representing themselves as
seminaries, since in many jurisdictions religious institutions can legally offer degrees in religious subjects without government regulation. Medical diploma mills have operated and have been blacklisted in the United States. Although the
DipScam operation in the 1980s led to a decline in diploma mill activity across the United States, the lack of further action by law enforcement, uneven state laws, and the rise of the
Internet have combined to reverse many of the gains made in previous years. In 2005, the
US Department of Education launched its
Database of Accredited Postsecondary Institutions and Programs website to combat the spread of fraudulent degrees. A number of states have passed bills restricting the ability of organizations to award degrees without accreditation. Jurisdictions that have restricted or made illegal the use of credentials from unaccredited schools include
Oregon,
Maine,
North Dakota,
Nevada,
Illinois, Many other states are also considering restrictions on the use of degrees from unaccredited institutions. == Research on diploma mills ==