Attempt the question first, then check it against the bulleted skeleton: green = how to open / context, blue = body points (facts, dimensions, arguments), violet = conclusion / way forward, rose = scholars, sources, data, places, dynasties & examples to cite. Use the filter to revise one area at a time.
GS-1 · 2025
Art & Culture
1[10m] Discuss the salient features of the Harappan architecture.
- Intro: Harappan (Indus Valley) architecture, dating to c. 2600-1900 BCE, reflects remarkable town planning, civic sense and uniformity.
- town planning: a grid layout (streets at right angles), the citadel (raised, to the west) + lower town (east) division
- the Great Bath (Mohenjo-daro) — ritual bathing, watertight brickwork
- drainage: a sophisticated covered underground system with soak pits — the world's first urban sanitation
- standardised baked/burnt bricks (ratio 4:2:1), granaries (Harappa/Mohenjo-daro), the dockyard (Lothal)
- utilitarian, not monumental/religious (no temples/palaces) — an egalitarian civic focus
- wells, public buildings, uniformity across sites.
- Concl: Harappan architecture is distinguished by planned cities, advanced drainage, standardised brick and a utilitarian, civic-minded ethos — among the earliest and most sophisticated urban planning in the ancient world.
- Add: Indus Valley (c. 2600-1900 BCE); grid planning/citadel-lower town; Great Bath (Mohenjo-daro); drainage system; Lothal dockyard; standardised bricks (4:2:1).
2[10m] The sculptors filled the Chandella artform with resilient vigor and breadth of life. Elucidate.
- Intro: The Chandella dynasty (9th-13th century), patrons of the Khajuraho temples, infused their sculptural art with vitality, sensuousness and a celebration of life.
- Khajuraho temples (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) — the Nagara style, built on high platforms, in sandstone
- sculptural richness: dynamic, lifelike figures — surasundaris (celestial maidens), mithunas (couples), deities, dance, daily life
- "resilient vigor": fluid, energetic, naturalistic bodies, movement, emotion
- "breadth of life": every aspect of life depicted (sacred + secular + sensual) — a holistic worldview
- examples: the Kandariya Mahadeva, Lakshmana and Vishvanatha temples
- exquisite craftsmanship
- a celebration of the human form.
- Concl: Chandella art at Khajuraho captures life in its fullness — vigorous, sensuous and naturalistic sculptures depicting the sacred and secular alike — a masterful celebration of human vitality in stone.
- Add: Chandellas (9th-13th c.); Khajuraho (UNESCO/Nagara style); surasundaris/mithunas; Kandariya Mahadeva temple; sandstone; celebration of life.
3[10m] Examine the main aspects of Akbar's religious syncretism.
- Intro: Akbar's reign (1556-1605) was marked by a remarkable religious syncretism, blending faiths in pursuit of tolerance and an integrated polity.
- sulh-i-kul ("peace with all"/universal tolerance) — the cornerstone
- Din-i-Ilahi (1582): a syncretic ethical order drawing from Islam, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Christianity and Jainism (few followers)
- the Ibadat Khana (House of Worship, Fatehpur Sikri): inter-faith debates
- abolition of jizya and the pilgrim tax; Rajput alliances/marriages
- translation of Hindu texts (the Mahabharata as the Razmnama), patronage of diverse scholars
- the Mahzar (1579)
- pragmatic + spiritual motives (legitimacy, integration)
- a composite culture.
- Concl: Akbar's syncretism — sulh-i-kul, the Din-i-Ilahi, the Ibadat Khana and the abolition of jizya — sought to transcend sectarian divides and forge an inclusive, tolerant empire, foundational to India's composite culture.
- Add: Akbar (1556-1605); sulh-i-kul; Din-i-Ilahi (1582); Ibadat Khana (Fatehpur Sikri); abolition of jizya; Razmnama (Mahabharata translation).
Modern History
4[15m] Mahatma Jotirao Phule's writings and efforts of social reforms touched issues of almost all subaltern classes. Discuss.
- Intro: Mahatma Jotirao Phule (1827-1890) was a pioneering social reformer whose writings and activism championed virtually all subaltern groups — lower castes, women and peasants.
- anti-caste crusade: attacked Brahminical orthodoxy and caste oppression; founded the Satyashodhak Samaj (1873) for the oppressed/Shudras
- writings: Gulamgiri ("Slavery", 1873 — dedicated to American abolitionists), Shetkaryacha Asud ("The Cultivator's Whipcord" — peasant exploitation)
- women's emancipation: opened the first girls' school (1848, with Savitribai), widow remarriage, against child marriage, a home for widows
- peasants/labourers: against agrarian exploitation and moneylenders
- rationalism, education as liberation
- popularised "Dalit"; inspired Ambedkar.
- Concl: Phule's writings and reforms embraced all subaltern classes — Dalits, women, peasants — through education, anti-caste struggle and rationalism, making him a foundational figure of India's social-justice and anti-caste movements.
- Add: Jotirao Phule (1827-90); Satyashodhak Samaj (1873); Gulamgiri/Shetkaryacha Asud; first girls' school (1848, Savitribai); "Dalit"; inspired Ambedkar.
World History
5[15m] The French Revolution has enduring relevance to the contemporary world. Explain.
- Intro: The French Revolution (1789) remains enduringly relevant, having bequeathed to the modern world its foundational political ideals and templates of change.
- ideals: "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" — the bedrock of modern democracy/republics
- the Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789) → human rights, constitutionalism
- popular sovereignty, citizenship, secularism, the end of feudal/divine-right monarchy
- nationalism, the modern nation-state
- inspired later revolutions, anti-colonial movements, the Indian Constitution (fraternity, rights)
- ideologies: liberalism, socialism, the left-right spectrum
- cautionary: the Reign of Terror (revolution's dark side)
- a global, continuing legacy.
- Concl: The French Revolution's ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity, human rights and popular sovereignty continue to shape democracies, constitutions and movements worldwide — including India's — making it perennially relevant, even as its excesses warn of revolution's perils.
- Add: French Revolution (1789); "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"; Declaration of the Rights of Man; popular sovereignty/nationalism; Reign of Terror; influence on the Indian Constitution.
Post-Independence History
6[15m] Trace India's consolidation process during the early phase of independence in terms of polity, economy, education and international relations.
- Intro: In the early post-independence years, India undertook a multi-pronged consolidation — political, economic, educational and diplomatic — to forge a unified, modern nation.
- polity: integration of 560+ princely states (Sardar Patel/V.P. Menon), the Constitution (1950), linguistic reorganisation of states (1956), democracy/universal suffrage
- economy: planned development (the Planning Commission 1950, the Five-Year Plans), the mixed economy, PSUs/heavy industry (Nehru-Mahalanobis), land reforms
- education: the IITs, the UGC, scientific temper, institution-building
- international relations: Non-Alignment (NAM), Panchsheel, an independent foreign policy, decolonisation solidarity
- nation-building amid Partition's trauma
- unity in diversity.
- Concl: India's early consolidation — integrating princely states, building democratic and planned-economic institutions, expanding education, and charting a non-aligned foreign policy — laid the durable foundations of a unified, modern and democratic nation.
- Add: integration of princely states (Patel/Menon); States Reorganisation (1956); Planning Commission/Five-Year Plans; IITs/scientific temper; Non-Alignment/Panchsheel.
Indian Society
7[15m] Does tribal development in India centre around two axes, those of displacement and of rehabilitation? Give your opinion.
- Intro: Tribal development in India has too often revolved around the twin axes of displacement (by "development" projects) and rehabilitation — a paradigm that has marginalised rather than empowered.
- displacement: dams, mines, industry and forest/wildlife projects have displaced tribals disproportionately (tribals ~8% of the population but ~40% of the displaced) — "development-induced displacement"
- loss of land, forest, livelihood, culture, identity
- rehabilitation: often inadequate, delayed, poorly implemented (cash over land, no community restoration)
- beyond the two axes: rights-based development — PESA (1996), the Forest Rights Act (2006), self-governance, the 5th Schedule, ownership
- examples: Narmada, mining in central India
- from victims to stakeholders.
- Concl: Tribal development has indeed centred on displacement and flawed rehabilitation, treating tribals as obstacles rather than agents; genuine development requires a rights-based, participatory approach (PESA, FRA) securing land, livelihood and self-governance.
- Add: development-induced displacement (~40% tribal); PESA (1996); Forest Rights Act (2006); 5th Schedule; Narmada; rights-based development.
8[15m] Achieving sustainable growth with emphasis on environmental protection could come into conflict with poor people's needs in a country like India. Comment.
- Intro: In a country like India, the pursuit of environmentally focused sustainable growth can come into tension with the immediate survival needs of the poor — a real but reconcilable conflict.
- the conflict: environmental protection (forest/mining curbs, emission norms, conservation) can restrict the poor's access to land, fuel, forests, livelihoods and cheap energy; "green" costs may burden the poor (fuel prices)
- examples: forest-dwellers vs conservation, coal phase-out vs jobs, farmers vs pollution norms
- the deeper view: the poor are the worst hit by environmental degradation (climate, pollution) → sustainability serves them long-term
- reconciliation: "sustainable development" (Brundtland), a just transition, inclusive green growth, livelihoods + ecology
- equity-centred sustainability.
- Concl: Environmental protection and the poor's needs can conflict in the short run, but since the poor suffer most from degradation, the answer is inclusive, equity-centred sustainable development — a "just transition" that protects both livelihoods and ecology.
- Add: sustainable development (Brundtland); just transition; development vs environment; the poor & climate vulnerability; inclusive green growth; Environmental Kuznets Curve.
9[15m] How do you account for the growing fast food industries given that there are increased health concerns in modern society? Illustrate your answer with the Indian experience.
- Intro: The paradoxical growth of fast-food industries amid rising health awareness reflects deeper social, economic and cultural transformations — vividly seen in India.
- drivers despite health concerns: urbanisation, busy/dual-income lifestyles, convenience, affordability, aggressive marketing/branding, youth aspiration, taste, the global culture
- the Indian experience: global chains + "Indianised" fast food, street food, food delivery (Zomato/Swiggy), changing diets
- consequences: a "nutrition transition" — obesity, diabetes, lifestyle diseases (NCDs rising) alongside undernutrition (the "double burden")
- cultural change: eroding traditional diets and eating habits
- responses: FSSAI labelling, "Eat Right India", awareness
- convenience over health.
- Concl: Fast food thrives despite health concerns because urban lifestyles, affordability, marketing and aspiration outweigh awareness — driving India's "nutrition transition" and a double burden of malnutrition, which demands stronger regulation, labelling and food literacy.
- Add: nutrition transition/double burden; urbanisation/dual-income lifestyles; food delivery (Zomato/Swiggy); NCDs (obesity/diabetes); FSSAI/"Eat Right India".
10[10m] Do you think that globalization results in only an aggressive consumer culture? Justify your answer.
- Intro: While globalisation has fostered an aggressive consumer culture, reducing it to only that overlooks its broader, multidimensional impacts.
- the consumerist effect: global brands, advertising, materialism, homogenised tastes ("McDonaldisation"), status consumption, the erosion of frugality
- but not only: globalisation also brings economic growth/jobs, technology/knowledge transfer, cultural exchange/hybridity, the spread of ideas (democracy, rights, feminism), global connectivity, the diaspora
- India: the IT/services boom, the middle class, but also inequality and cultural anxieties
- a double-edged, plural phenomenon
- "glocalisation" (the local adapting the global)
- more than consumerism.
- Concl: Globalisation does drive a powerful consumer culture, but it is far more — bringing economic opportunity, technological and cultural exchange, and the global flow of ideas; its impact is plural and "glocal," not merely consumerist.
- Add: globalisation/"McDonaldisation"; consumerism vs cultural exchange; "glocalisation"; IT/services boom; homogenisation vs hybridity; double-edged.
11[10m] The ethos of civil service in India stands for the combination of professionalism with nationalistic consciousness. Elucidate.
- Intro: The ethos of India's civil service embodies a distinctive blend of professional competence and nationalistic, public-service consciousness inherited from the freedom struggle and nation-building.
- professionalism: merit, expertise, neutrality, the rule of law, efficiency, integrity (the Weberian "steel frame")
- nationalistic consciousness: commitment to nation-building, public welfare, constitutional values, the spirit of service (Sardar Patel's "steel frame of India")
- the blend: technical competence directed by a higher purpose — serving the nation/people, not just administering
- examples: civil servants in development, disaster, integration
- challenges: politicisation, an eroding ethos
- reviving: ethics, capacity (Mission Karmayogi), the values of integrity + patriotism
- "lokseva" (public service).
- Concl: The civil service's ethos fuses professionalism (merit, neutrality, competence) with nationalistic consciousness (service to nation and people) — a synthesis, rooted in Patel's vision, that must be revived against politicisation to sustain effective, value-driven governance.
- Add: civil service ethos; "steel frame" (Patel); professionalism + neutrality; nation-building/public service; Mission Karmayogi; integrity/lokseva.
12[10m] How does the smart city in India address the issues of urban poverty and distributive justice?
- Intro: India's Smart Cities Mission promises technologically enabled urban development, but its capacity to address urban poverty and distributive justice is contested.
- the Smart Cities Mission (2015): tech-enabled infrastructure, e-governance, area-based development (retrofitting, redevelopment, greenfield), pan-city solutions
- how it can help the poor: better services (water, sanitation, transport, housing), e-governance access, jobs, affordable housing (PMAY)
- concerns/distributive justice: an area-based "enclave" focus (a few zones, not the whole city), an elite/tech bias, possible exclusion of slums/the informal sector, displacement, the digital divide, gentrification
- "smart for whom?"
- inclusive urbanism needed: slum upgrading, informal-sector inclusion, participatory planning
- equity over technology.
- Concl: Smart cities can improve urban services and opportunities, but their area-based, technology-centric model risks excluding the poor and deepening spatial inequity; genuinely addressing urban poverty needs inclusive, participatory and slum-focused planning — smart and just.
- Add: Smart Cities Mission (2015); area-based development; PMAY (housing); digital divide/gentrification; inclusive urbanism; distributive justice ("smart for whom?").
Geography
13[15m] Discuss the distribution and density of population in the Ganga River Basin with special reference to land, soil and water resources.
- Intro: The Ganga River Basin, India's most densely populated region, owes its high population concentration to favourable land, soil and water resources.
- distribution/density: among the world's most densely populated basins (the Indo-Gangetic plain — UP, Bihar, West Bengal — 600-1000+ per sq km)
- land: vast, flat, fertile alluvial plains — easy agriculture, settlement, transport
- soil: rich alluvial soil (renewed by floods), highly fertile, supporting intensive agriculture (wheat, rice, sugarcane)
- water: perennial Himalayan-fed rivers, abundant for irrigation, drinking, navigation; a high water table
- a cradle of civilisation and urbanisation (Delhi, Kanpur, Patna, Kolkata)
- also a monsoon climate and historical/cultural pull
- but floods, overpopulation pressure, pollution.
- Concl: The Ganga Basin's flat fertile alluvial land, rich soil and perennial water have made it India's demographic heartland — sustaining dense agrarian and urban populations, though now strained by overpopulation, floods and pollution.
- Add: Indo-Gangetic plain (600-1000+/sq km); alluvial soil/fertility; Himalayan perennial rivers; intensive agriculture; urbanisation; flood/pollution pressure.
14[15m] Discuss how the changes in shape and sizes of continents and ocean basins take place due to tectonic movements of the crustal masses.
- Intro: The shapes and sizes of continents and ocean basins are continually reshaped by the tectonic movements of the Earth's crustal (lithospheric) plates.
- plate tectonics: the lithosphere is divided into plates moving over the asthenosphere (driven by mantle convection, ridge push, slab pull)
- divergent boundaries: plates move apart → new ocean crust (mid-ocean ridges, sea-floor spreading — the Atlantic widening), continents rift (the East African Rift)
- convergent boundaries: plates collide → subduction (ocean basins shrink — the Pacific), mountain-building (the Himalayas — India-Eurasia), continents merge
- transform boundaries: plates slide (the San Andreas)
- Wegener's continental drift → Pangaea breaking up → the present continents
- the Wilson Cycle (ocean basins open and close)
- a dynamic Earth.
- Concl: Through divergence (sea-floor spreading, rifting), convergence (subduction, collision) and transform motion of lithospheric plates, continents and ocean basins are perpetually reshaped — from the widening Atlantic to the rising Himalayas, per the Wilson Cycle.
- Add: plate tectonics/lithospheric plates; sea-floor spreading (mid-ocean ridges); subduction/collision (Himalayas); continental drift (Wegener/Pangaea); Wilson Cycle; mantle convection.
15[15m] How can Artificial Intelligence (AI) and drones be effectively used along with GIS and RS techniques in locational and areal planning?
- Intro: Artificial Intelligence and drones, integrated with GIS and Remote Sensing, can transform locational and areal (regional) planning with precision and real-time intelligence.
- GIS + RS: spatial data, mapping, layering, analysis
- drones (UAVs): high-resolution, real-time, low-cost aerial data — surveys, mapping, monitoring (crops, disasters, land records — SVAMITVA)
- AI/ML: pattern recognition, predictive analytics, classification (land use, change detection), automation, decision support
- applications in planning: urban/regional planning, land-use, infrastructure siting, disaster management, precision agriculture, forest/water monitoring, smart cities
- examples: SVAMITVA (drone village mapping), crop estimation, flood mapping
- precise, fast, evidence-based planning
- challenges: data, privacy, capacity.
- Concl: AI and drones, fused with GIS and RS, enable precise, real-time, predictive spatial planning — from village land mapping (SVAMITVA) to disaster and urban management — making locational and areal planning faster, evidence-based and efficient.
- Add: GIS/Remote Sensing; drones/UAVs (SVAMITVA); AI/ML (predictive analytics/change detection); precision farming; disaster/urban planning; geospatial governance.
16[15m] Give a geographical explanation of the distribution of off-shore oil reserves of the world. How are they different from the on-shore occurrences of oil reserves?
- Intro: The world's offshore oil reserves, found beneath continental shelves, have a distinct geographical distribution and differ markedly from onshore occurrences.
- distribution: continental shelves and margins — the Persian Gulf, the North Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, the Niger Delta, Brazil (pre-salt), the Caspian, Mumbai High (India), the South China Sea
- geological basis: sedimentary basins on shelves where marine organic matter accumulated, was buried, and formed hydrocarbons (source + reservoir + cap rock + trap)
- differences from onshore: deeper/harder to access, higher extraction cost/technology (rigs, platforms), greater environmental/spill risk, marine logistics, often larger newer reserves; onshore is cheaper, easier, with older fields
- EEZ/maritime-boundary disputes
- offshore = the future frontier.
- Concl: Offshore oil concentrates on the continental shelves of sedimentary basins (the Gulf, North Sea, Mumbai High) and differs from onshore in its greater depth, cost, technology and environmental risk — an increasingly vital but challenging frontier of energy supply.
- Add: continental shelves (Persian Gulf/North Sea/Gulf of Mexico/Mumbai High); sedimentary basins/hydrocarbon traps; offshore rigs/cost; spill risk; EEZ disputes.
17[10m] What are Tsunamis? How and where are they formed? What are their consequences? Explain with examples.
- Intro: Tsunamis are series of powerful ocean waves generated by the sudden displacement of large volumes of water, with devastating coastal consequences.
- what: long-wavelength, high-energy sea waves (not tidal)
- how formed: sudden vertical displacement of the sea floor/water — chiefly undersea earthquakes (subduction zones), also submarine landslides, volcanic eruptions, rarely meteor impacts
- where: along plate boundaries/subduction zones — the "Pacific Ring of Fire" (most common), the Indian Ocean
- behaviour: small in the deep ocean, growing huge near shore (shoaling), the drawback then surge
- consequences: coastal devastation, loss of life, damaged infrastructure, salinisation, displacement
- examples: the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami (the Sumatra quake — ~230,000 deaths), the 2011 Japan/Tohoku tsunami (Fukushima)
- early-warning systems (INCOIS).
- Concl: Tsunamis, triggered mainly by undersea earthquakes at subduction zones (the Ring of Fire), unleash catastrophic coastal destruction — as in 2004 and 2011 — underscoring the need for early-warning systems and coastal preparedness.
- Add: tsunami (seismic sea waves); subduction zones/Ring of Fire; 2004 Indian Ocean (~230,000 deaths); 2011 Tohoku/Fukushima; shoaling; INCOIS early warning.
18[10m] Explain briefly the ecological and economic benefits of solar energy generation in India with suitable examples.
- Intro: Solar energy generation offers India significant ecological and economic benefits, central to its clean-energy transition and climate commitments.
- ecological benefits: clean/renewable, low carbon emissions (climate mitigation), reduced air pollution, not fuel/water-intensive (vs thermal), energy from an abundant resource (~300 sunny days)
- economic benefits: energy security (reduced oil/coal imports), falling costs (the cheapest power now), jobs, rural electrification, a reduced import bill, the solar industry/manufacturing (PLI)
- examples: the Bhadla Solar Park (Rajasthan), the International Solar Alliance (India-led), rooftop solar, PM-KUSUM (solar pumps for farmers), the 500 GW renewable target
- challenges: land, storage, intermittency, manufacturing imports
- a win-win for ecology and economy.
- Concl: Solar energy delivers India ecological gains (clean, low-carbon, less pollution) and economic ones (energy security, cheap power, jobs) — anchored by projects like Bhadla and the ISA — making it pivotal to a sustainable, self-reliant energy future.
- Add: solar energy (~300 sunny days); climate mitigation/clean energy; Bhadla Solar Park; International Solar Alliance (ISA); PM-KUSUM; 500 GW target.
19[10m] What are non-farm primary activities? How are these activities related to physiographic features in India? Discuss with suitable examples.
- Intro: Non-farm primary activities — those that extract or harvest natural resources without cultivation — are closely shaped by India's diverse physiographic features.
- non-farm primary activities: fishing, forestry, mining, animal husbandry, gathering, quarrying (primary = resource extraction, but non-agricultural)
- link to physiography: fishing — coasts (Kerala, the long coastline), rivers, the continental shelf
- mining — mineral-rich plateaus/shields (the Chota Nagpur plateau — coal/iron, the Deccan)
- forestry — the Himalayas, the Western Ghats, the Northeast (forest cover)
- animal husbandry — semi-arid/grassland regions (Rajasthan, the plateaus)
- each tied to terrain, geology, climate
- examples: Chota Nagpur (mining), the coasts (fishing)
- resources determined by physical geography.
- Concl: Non-farm primary activities — fishing, mining, forestry, animal husbandry — are dictated by physiography: coasts enable fishing, mineral-rich plateaus (Chota Nagpur) mining, mountains and forests forestry, and drylands pastoralism — illustrating geography's hold on the resource economy.
- Add: non-farm primary activities (fishing/mining/forestry); Chota Nagpur plateau (coal/iron); coastline (fishing); Himalayas/Western Ghats (forestry); physiography-resource link.
20[10m] How are climate change and the sea level rise affecting the very existence of many island nations? Discuss with examples.
- Intro: Climate change-driven sea-level rise poses an existential threat to many low-lying island nations, endangering their very survival.
- the threat: thermal expansion + melting ice (Greenland/Antarctica) raising sea levels
- low-lying nations at risk: the Maldives (avg ~1.5 m elevation), Tuvalu, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands — small island developing states (SIDS)
- consequences: inundation/land loss, coastal erosion, saltwater intrusion (freshwater/agriculture), more intense storms/surges, displacement ("climate refugees"), loss of territory/sovereignty/EEZ, coral/ecosystem loss
- examples: Tuvalu (digital nationhood/relocation), the Maldives (artificial islands, relocation plans)
- responses: adaptation, AOSIS advocacy, the loss-and-damage fund (COP27), emission cuts
- a climate-justice issue.
- Concl: Sea-level rise threatens the very existence of low-lying island nations like the Maldives and Tuvalu — through inundation, saltwater intrusion and displacement — making their plight a stark case for global climate action, adaptation and justice (loss and damage).
- Add: sea-level rise (thermal expansion/ice melt); Maldives/Tuvalu/Kiribati (SIDS); saltwater intrusion/climate refugees; AOSIS; loss-and-damage fund (COP27); climate justice.
GS-1 · 2024
Art & Culture
1[15m] Though the great Cholas are no more, their name is still remembered with great pride because of their highest achievements in the domain of art and architecture. Comment.
- Intro: The Chola dynasty (9th-13th century), though long gone, is remembered with pride for its extraordinary achievements in art, architecture and bronze sculpture.
- temple architecture: the apogee of the Dravidian style — towering vimanas, the Brihadeeswara (Big) Temple, Thanjavur (a UNESCO site, Rajaraja I), Gangaikonda Cholapuram, Airavatesvara (the "Great Living Chola Temples")
- bronze sculpture: the lost-wax (cire perdue) method — the iconic Nataraja (Shiva as cosmic dancer), exquisite icons
- mural painting (Brihadeeswara frescoes), patronage of literature (Tamil/Sanskrit), Kamban's Ramavataram
- town planning, irrigation, local self-government (the Uttiramerur inscriptions)
- a golden age of South Indian culture.
- Concl: The Cholas' towering Dravidian temples (Brihadeeswara), masterly Nataraja bronzes and rich literary patronage made theirs a golden age of Indian art and architecture — an enduring legacy that keeps their name alive.
- Add: Cholas (9th-13th c.); Brihadeeswara Temple/Thanjavur (UNESCO, Rajaraja I); Dravidian vimana; Nataraja bronze (lost-wax); Uttiramerur (local self-government); Kamban.
2[10m] Estimate the contribution of the Pallavas of Kanchi for the development of art and literature of South India.
- Intro: The Pallavas of Kanchi (3rd-9th century) were pioneering patrons whose contributions laid the foundations of South Indian temple art, architecture and literature.
- architecture: pioneers of Dravidian temple architecture — rock-cut and structural
- the Mahabalipuram (Mamallapuram) monuments (a UNESCO site) — the rathas (monolithic temples), cave temples, the Shore Temple, the Descent of the Ganga (Arjuna's Penance) relief
- the Kailasanatha and Vaikunta Perumal temples (Kanchipuram) — structural
- patronage of literature: Sanskrit (Bharavi, Dandin), Tamil (the Bhakti movement — Alvars/Nayanars), education (Kanchi a learning centre/Ghatika)
- Mahendravarman I (a versatile patron)
- a bridge to the Cholas.
- Concl: The Pallavas pioneered Dravidian temple architecture (Mahabalipuram, Kanchipuram) and nurtured Sanskrit and Tamil literature and the Bhakti movement — laying the cultural foundations later South Indian dynasties built upon.
- Add: Pallavas of Kanchi (3rd-9th c.); Mahabalipuram (UNESCO — rathas/Shore Temple/Descent of the Ganga); Kailasanatha temple; Mahendravarman I; Alvars/Nayanars; Dravidian architecture.
3[10m] Underline the changes in the field of society and economy from the Rig Vedic to the later Vedic period.
- Intro: The transition from the Rig Vedic (c. 1500-1000 BCE) to the later Vedic period (c. 1000-600 BCE) saw a shift from pastoral tribal life to a settled agrarian, stratified order.
- society: Rig Vedic — tribal (jana), relatively egalitarian, the varna system fluid/occupational, women better placed (sabha/vidatha)
- later Vedic — a rigid varna/caste hierarchy (the four varnas fixed, Brahmin/Kshatriya dominance), the ashrama system, declining women's status, larger kingdoms (janapadas)
- economy: Rig Vedic — pastoral (cattle wealth — gau), limited agriculture, barter
- later Vedic — settled agriculture (iron — krishna ayas, the plough), surplus, crafts, trade, the beginnings of a money economy, land's importance
- from tribe to territory/state
- rising ritualism (the Brahmanas).
- Concl: From the Rig Vedic to the later Vedic age, society grew more stratified (a rigid varna order, declining women's status) and the economy shifted from cattle-based pastoralism to settled iron-using agriculture — marking the move from tribal life toward state and class society.
- Add: Rig Vedic (c. 1500-1000 BCE) vs later Vedic (c. 1000-600 BCE); jana → janapada; varna rigidification; pastoral (gau) → agriculture (iron/krishna ayas); ashrama system.
World History
4[15m] How far was the Industrial Revolution in England responsible for the decline of handicrafts and cottage industries in India?
- Intro: The Industrial Revolution in England was substantially responsible for the decline ("deindustrialisation") of India's handicrafts and cottage industries, though colonial policy compounded it.
- how the Industrial Revolution caused decline: cheap, machine-made British textiles flooded India (factory mass production undercut handlooms)
- colonial policy: one-way free trade, heavy duties on Indian goods in Britain + free entry of British goods, India as a raw-material supplier + market ("drain of wealth")
- the ruin of weavers (Dhaka muslin), artisans, the decline of towns
- loss of court patronage (after the princely states' decline)
- railways aiding penetration
- "deindustrialisation" (R.C. Dutt, Dadabhai Naoroji)
- from the world's workshop to an agrarian colony
- both technology + policy.
- Concl: The Industrial Revolution's cheap machine goods, backed by discriminatory colonial trade policy, devastated India's handicrafts and cottage industries — a deindustrialisation that turned a manufacturing exporter into a raw-material-supplying colony.
- Add: Industrial Revolution/machine textiles; deindustrialisation (R.C. Dutt/Naoroji); Dhaka muslin (ruin of weavers); one-way free trade; drain of wealth; loss of patronage.
5[15m] How far is it correct to say that the First World War was fought essentially for the balance of power?
- Intro: While the First World War (1914-18) was significantly shaped by the European balance-of-power system, attributing it solely to that oversimplifies its multiple causes.
- balance of power: the alliance system (the Triple Alliance vs the Triple Entente), an armed-camps Europe, the arms race, mutual deterrence turning into mutual destruction
- but other causes: aggressive nationalism, imperialism/colonial rivalry, militarism, the Balkan tinderbox (the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand — the trigger), economic competition (Anglo-German), secret diplomacy
- the alliance system turned a local crisis into a world war
- "balance of power" was both a cause (rivalry) and a failed mechanism
- a multi-causal war.
- Concl: The balance-of-power and alliance system was central to the First World War's outbreak and escalation, but nationalism, imperialism, militarism and the Balkan trigger were equally vital — making it a multi-causal conflict, not solely a balance-of-power war.
- Add: balance of power/alliance system (Triple Alliance vs Entente); militarism/arms race; imperialism/nationalism; Balkan crisis (Franz Ferdinand assassination); secret diplomacy.
Modern History
6[10m] What were the events that led to the Quit India Movement? Point out its results.
- Intro: The Quit India Movement (1942), the final mass upsurge of the freedom struggle, was precipitated by wartime grievances and the failure of negotiations, demanding an immediate British exit.
- events leading to it: WWII (India dragged in without consent), the failure of the Cripps Mission (1942), wartime hardships (inflation, shortages), the fall of Southeast Asia (fear of Japanese invasion), rising nationalist impatience
- the Bombay session (8 Aug 1942) — Gandhi's "Do or Die" call, the "Quit India" resolution
- results: mass arrests of leaders, a leaderless but widespread spontaneous uprising (strikes, sabotage, parallel governments — Satara, Tamluk, Ballia), brutal repression
- outcome: suppressed, but it showed the depth of nationalist feeling, made British withdrawal inevitable, the last great mass movement
- "the beginning of the end" of the Raj.
- Concl: Triggered by the Cripps failure and wartime distress, the Quit India Movement of 1942 — "Do or Die" — was a spontaneous mass revolt that, though suppressed, demonstrated the irreversibility of the demand for independence and hastened the end of British rule.
- Add: Quit India (Aug 1942)/"Do or Die"; Cripps Mission failure; Bombay AICC session; parallel governments (Satara/Tamluk/Ballia); mass repression; "beginning of the end".
Indian Society
7[15m] Critically analyze the proposition that there is a high correlation between India's cultural diversities and socio-economic marginalities.
- Intro: The proposition that India's cultural diversities correlate highly with socio-economic marginalities holds significant truth, though the relationship is complex and not deterministic.
- the correlation: certain cultural/identity groups (tribals/Adivasis, Dalits, some religious minorities, denotified tribes) are disproportionately poor, excluded and marginalised
- evidence: tribal/Dalit poverty, a lower HDI, the geography of backwardness (the Northeast, the central tribal belt)
- causes: historical exclusion, caste, colonial disruption, displacement, discrimination, a lack of access (education, land, capital)
- but: diversity ≠ marginality always — many groups thrive; marginality is structural, not cultural per se
- caution against essentialising
- measures: affirmative action, inclusion, the 5th/6th Schedules
- correlation, not causation.
- Concl: There is a real correlation between cultural-identity groups and socio-economic marginality in India — rooted in historical exclusion and discrimination — but it is structural rather than cultural, demanding inclusive, affirmative policies rather than essentialising diversity itself.
- Add: tribals/Dalits/minorities (marginality); HDI/poverty data; historical exclusion/caste; affirmative action; 5th/6th Schedules; correlation vs causation.
8[15m] Globalization has increased the urban migration by skilled, young, unmarried women from various classes. How has this trend impacted upon their personal freedom and relationship with family?
- Intro: Globalisation-driven urban migration of skilled, young, unmarried women has expanded their personal freedom while reconfiguring — and sometimes straining — their relationship with family.
- the trend: globalisation/IT-services creating jobs → educated young women migrating to cities (independent work, hostels/PGs)
- impact on freedom: economic independence, autonomy, decision-making, lifestyle choices, exposure, delayed marriage, empowerment, breaking patriarchal confines
- impact on family relations: physical distance, changed/negotiated roles, tension between tradition and autonomy, parental anxiety, weakened daily ties but continued (digital) bonds, remittances/support, a new "individualised" identity
- challenges: safety, the dual burden, social judgement, isolation
- a transformation of gender roles
- negotiated modernity.
- Concl: Globalisation has given skilled young women new economic independence and personal freedom through urban migration, even as it renegotiates family ties — balancing autonomy with belonging in a "negotiated modernity" that is reshaping gender roles in India.
- Add: globalisation/IT-services jobs; women's migration/autonomy; economic independence; delayed marriage; patriarchy/family negotiation; "negotiated modernity".
9[15m] Despite comprehensive policies for equity and social justice, underprivileged sections are not yet getting the full benefits of the affirmative actions envisaged by the Constitution. Comment.
- Intro: Despite comprehensive constitutional and policy provisions for equity and social justice, India's underprivileged sections still do not fully reap the benefits of affirmative action — owing to implementation and structural gaps.
- the framework: reservations (Art 15(4), 16(4)), scholarships, the SCSP/TSP, anti-discrimination laws, welfare schemes
- why benefits don't fully reach: poor implementation, awareness/access gaps, elite capture (the "creamy layer"), the unfilled backlog of posts, quality (education) deficits, intra-group inequality, the private-sector gap, persisting social discrimination, tokenism
- data: continued SC/ST/OBC under-representation in higher posts, an outcome gap
- measures: better targeting, quality education, monitoring, complementary capability-building, addressing discrimination
- from formal provision to substantive realisation.
- Concl: Affirmative action has advanced inclusion but its full benefits elude the underprivileged due to weak implementation, elite capture and capability gaps; realising substantive social justice needs better targeting, quality support and tackling persistent discrimination, not just legal provision.
- Add: reservations (Art 15(4)/16(4)); creamy layer/elite capture; SCSP/TSP; implementation gaps; under-representation data; substantive vs formal equality.
10[15m] What is regional disparity? How does it differ from diversity? How serious is the issue of regional disparity in India?
- Intro: Regional disparity — unequal development across regions — differs fundamentally from diversity and remains a serious challenge to India's balanced growth and unity.
- regional disparity: inequality in income, infrastructure, HDI and opportunity across regions/states
- vs diversity: diversity (cultural/linguistic/geographic variety) is a positive plurality; disparity is a negative inequality in development outcomes
- seriousness in India: the rich West/South vs the poorer East/Central (BIMARU), urban-rural, the Northeast, intra-state gaps
- causes: historical, geography/resources, colonial, investment patterns, governance
- consequences: migration, unrest, separatism, federal tensions, "sons of the soil"
- measures: balanced regional planning, special-category support, the Aspirational Districts, devolution, the Finance Commission
- equity for unity.
- Concl: Regional disparity, unlike enriching diversity, is a harmful inequality in development that remains serious in India (the East-West, BIMARU divides) — fuelling migration and tension; balanced regional development and targeted support are essential for equitable, cohesive growth.
- Add: regional disparity vs diversity; BIMARU/East-West divide; HDI/per-capita gaps; Aspirational Districts Programme; balanced regional planning; "sons of the soil".
11[10m] In dealing with socio-economic issues of development, what kind of collaboration between government, NGOs and private sector would be most productive?
- Intro: Tackling India's socio-economic development challenges is best served by a synergistic collaboration among government, NGOs and the private sector, each contributing distinct strengths.
- government: policy, funding, scale, legitimacy, regulation, public goods
- NGOs/civil society: grassroots reach, local knowledge, trust, innovation, last-mile delivery, advocacy, flexibility
- private sector: efficiency, capital, technology, management, jobs, CSR
- the most productive model: PPPs + multi-stakeholder partnerships — government sets vision/funds, the private sector brings efficiency/tech, NGOs ensure community reach/accountability
- examples: CSR-NGO projects, the Aspirational Districts (convergence), skill development, health/education partnerships
- complementary roles, shared accountability
- "collaborative governance".
- Concl: The most productive approach to socio-economic development is a complementary partnership — government providing scale and policy, the private sector efficiency and capital, and NGOs grassroots reach and accountability — synergised through PPPs and convergence (as in the Aspirational Districts).
- Add: government-NGO-private partnership; PPP/CSR; last-mile delivery (NGOs); Aspirational Districts (convergence); collaborative governance; complementary strengths.
12[10m] Intercaste marriages between castes which have socio-economic parity have increased, to some extent, but this is less true of interreligious marriages. Discuss.
- Intro: While intercaste marriages between socio-economically comparable castes have risen modestly, interreligious marriages remain far rarer — reflecting the deeper resilience of religious over caste boundaries.
- the trend: intercaste marriages increasing somewhat — especially among castes of similar socio-economic status (urbanisation, education, mobility, love marriages), but still low overall
- interreligious marriages much rarer: religion a stronger identity/boundary, family/community resistance, conversion issues, "honour", legal hurdles (the Special Marriage Act, "love jihad" narratives)
- why the difference: religion tied to a deeper identity/endogamy; caste somewhat eroding within religions
- data: NFHS/studies show low inter-marriage rates
- uneven social change
- persistence of endogamy
- a secularism/social-integration challenge.
- Concl: Intercaste marriages among status-parity groups have grown modestly with urbanisation and education, but interreligious marriages stay rare — showing that religious endogamy is more resilient than caste, and that social integration in India remains a work in progress.
- Add: intercaste vs interreligious marriage; endogamy/homogamy; Special Marriage Act; "honour"/community resistance; NFHS data; urbanisation/love marriage.
13[10m] Distinguish between gender equality, gender equity and women's empowerment. Why is it important to take gender concerns into account in programme design and implementation?
- Intro: Gender equality, gender equity and women's empowerment are distinct but interlinked concepts, all essential to integrate into programme design for effective development.
- gender equality: equal rights, opportunities and treatment for all genders (sameness — the goal/outcome)
- gender equity: fairness — accounting for different needs/disadvantages, providing differential support to level the field (the means; e.g., maternity benefits, reservations)
- women's empowerment: enhancing women's agency, capabilities, power and decision-making (the process)
- why integrate into programmes (gender mainstreaming): women have different needs; ignoring them perpetuates inequality; gender-responsive design → better targeting, outcomes, equity (gender budgeting)
- examples: gender budgeting, Beti Bachao, SHGs
- from welfare to agency.
- Concl: Gender equality (equal outcomes), equity (fair, need-based treatment) and empowerment (agency) are complementary; integrating gender concerns through mainstreaming and gender budgeting ensures programmes reach women effectively and advance substantive justice, not just formal equality.
- Add: gender equality vs equity vs empowerment; gender mainstreaming/budgeting; Beti Bachao Beti Padhao; SHGs/agency; substantive equality; Amartya Sen (agency).
14[10m] What is the concept of 'demographic winter'? Is the world moving towards such a situation? Elaborate.
- Intro: "Demographic winter" refers to a sustained decline in fertility below replacement level, leading to ageing and shrinking populations — a situation parts of the world are approaching, though not uniformly.
- concept: fertility falling below the replacement rate (~2.1) → population ageing, then shrinking, fewer working-age people, a higher dependency ratio
- is the world moving toward it? — partly: many developed/East Asian countries (Japan, South Korea — the world's lowest TFR, Italy, China now) face it; global TFR is falling
- but: Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia still have high fertility → the world isn't uniformly there yet
- India: TFR now ~2.0 (below replacement), ageing ahead but a young population now
- consequences: labour shortage, pension/healthcare burden, economic slowdown
- responses: pro-natal policies, immigration, productivity
- a late stage of the demographic transition.
- Concl: "Demographic winter" — sub-replacement fertility causing ageing and population decline — is a reality for much of the developed and East Asian world and looms for others (including a transitioning India), though high-fertility regions mean the world is not uniformly there; it demands proactive policy on ageing and labour.
- Add: demographic winter (sub-replacement fertility, TFR<2.1); Japan/South Korea/China (low TFR); ageing/dependency ratio; India TFR ~2.0; pro-natal policy; demographic transition.
15[10m] Why do large cities tend to attract more migrants than smaller towns? Discuss in the light of conditions in developing countries.
- Intro: Large cities attract more migrants than smaller towns because they offer greater economic opportunity and amenities — a pattern especially pronounced in developing countries.
- pull factors of big cities: more/diverse jobs (formal + informal), higher wages, agglomeration economies, services (health, education), anonymity, social networks (chain migration), aspiration/"bright lights"
- developing-country conditions: rural distress (push — agrarian crisis, landlessness, poverty), few opportunities in small towns, the primacy of metros (over-concentration), the informal sector absorbing labour
- result: over-urbanisation, mega-city growth (Mumbai, Delhi), slums, strained infrastructure
- small towns lag (fewer jobs/services)
- measures: balanced urbanisation, developing small/medium towns, rural livelihoods (the rurban mission)
- uneven urban growth.
- Concl: Large cities draw migrants through superior jobs, wages, services and networks, amplified in developing countries by rural distress and metro primacy — driving over-urbanisation and slums; balanced development of small towns and rural livelihoods is needed to ease the pressure.
- Add: push-pull migration; agglomeration economies/big-city jobs; rural distress (push); over-urbanisation/metro primacy; slums; balanced urbanisation/rurban.
Geography
16[15m] What is a twister? Why are the majority of twisters observed in areas around the Gulf of Mexico?
- Intro: A "twister" (tornado) is a violently rotating column of air; the United States, especially around the Gulf of Mexico ("Tornado Alley"), records most of the world's tornadoes due to a unique convergence of conditions.
- twister/tornado: a rapidly rotating funnel of air extending from a thunderstorm (supercell) to the ground, extremely destructive (very high wind speeds)
- why concentrated around the Gulf/US: the collision of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico with cold, dry air from Canada/the Rockies + dry air from the west → strong instability
- the flat Great Plains terrain, the jet stream, wind shear (changing wind with height) → supercells → tornadoes
- "Tornado Alley" (spring/summer)
- the mesocyclone
- a perfect-storm geography.
- Concl: Tornadoes are violent rotating air columns; the Gulf of Mexico region (Tornado Alley) sees the most because warm moist Gulf air clashing with cold dry continental air over flat plains, with strong wind shear, creates ideal supercell conditions.
- Add: tornado/twister (supercell); Gulf of Mexico/"Tornado Alley"; warm-moist vs cold-dry air clash; wind shear/instability; Great Plains; mesocyclone.
17[15m] What are aurora australis and aurora borealis? How are these triggered?
- Intro: The aurora borealis (northern lights) and aurora australis (southern lights) are luminous atmospheric displays near the poles, triggered by the interaction of solar particles with the Earth's magnetic field and atmosphere.
- what: glowing, colourful lights in the high-latitude night sky — borealis (Arctic/north), australis (Antarctic/south)
- how triggered: the solar wind/solar flares/CMEs eject charged particles → carried to the Earth → guided by the magnetic field toward the poles (the magnetosphere funnels them) → they collide with atmospheric gases (oxygen, nitrogen) in the ionosphere → excite them → emit light (green/red — oxygen; blue/purple — nitrogen)
- strongest near the magnetic poles (the auroral oval)
- enhanced during solar maxima/geomagnetic storms
- a solar-terrestrial phenomenon.
- Concl: Auroras — borealis in the north, australis in the south — occur when charged solar-wind particles, funnelled by Earth's magnetic field to the poles, collide with and excite atmospheric gases, emitting light; they intensify during solar storms.
- Add: aurora borealis/australis; solar wind/CMEs (charged particles); magnetosphere/magnetic poles; ionosphere (oxygen-green, nitrogen-blue); auroral oval; solar maxima.
18[15m] The groundwater potential of the Gangetic valley is on a serious decline. How may it affect the food security of India?
- Intro: The serious decline of groundwater in the Gangetic valley — India's foodbowl — poses a grave threat to national food security.
- the decline: over-extraction (tube wells), the Green Revolution's water-intensive cropping (paddy-wheat), free/subsidised power, falling water tables (Punjab, Haryana, western UP — "dark zones")
- the Gangetic valley = the granary (wheat, rice — the bulk of buffer/PDS stocks)
- impact on food security: reduced irrigation → lower yields, higher costs (deeper pumping), well failures, crop shifts, salinisation/contamination (arsenic), farmer distress
- a threat to the PDS/buffer stocks, prices, the rural economy
- measures: micro-irrigation (drip/sprinkler), crop diversification (away from paddy), "per drop more crop", recharge, regulation, the Atal Bhujal Yojana, MSP reform
- a sustainable water-food nexus.
- Concl: The Gangetic valley's groundwater depletion endangers India's food security by undermining its grain bowl; safeguarding it needs efficient irrigation (micro-irrigation), crop diversification, recharge and water governance (Atal Bhujal Yojana) to sustain the water-food nexus.
- Add: groundwater depletion (Punjab/Haryana/UP "dark zones"); Green Revolution (paddy-wheat); food security/PDS; micro-irrigation ("per drop more crop"); Atal Bhujal Yojana; crop diversification.
19[10m] What is the phenomenon of cloudbursts? Explain.
- Intro: A cloudburst is a sudden, intense, localised downpour — typically over mountainous terrain — that can trigger flash floods and landslides.
- definition: very heavy rainfall (>100 mm/hour) over a small area in a short time
- how it forms: rapid uplift of warm, moisture-laden air (orographic lifting over mountains), towering cumulonimbus clouds, raindrops held aloft by strong updrafts then suddenly released
- where: the Himalayas (Uttarakhand, Himachal, J&K), the monsoon season
- consequences: flash floods, landslides, debris flows, loss of life/property (e.g., Kedarnath 2013, Leh 2010, Amarnath)
- aggravated by terrain, deforestation, unplanned construction, climate change
- hard to predict (very localised)
- measures: early warning, Doppler radar, regulated development.
- Concl: A cloudburst is a sudden, extreme, localised downpour — common in the Himalayas during the monsoon due to orographic uplift — causing devastating flash floods and landslides (Kedarnath 2013); better forecasting and regulated mountain development are crucial.
- Add: cloudburst (>100 mm/hr, localised); orographic uplift/cumulonimbus; Himalayas (monsoon); Kedarnath 2013/Leh 2010; flash floods/landslides; Doppler radar warning.
20[10m] What is sea surface temperature rise? How does it affect the formation of tropical cyclones?
- Intro: Sea surface temperature (SST) rise — the warming of the upper ocean — directly intensifies the formation and strength of tropical cyclones.
- SST rise: the increase in ocean-surface temperature, driven by global warming (oceans absorb most excess heat)
- how it affects cyclones: tropical cyclones need warm water (≥26.5°C, ~50 m deep) as their energy source — warm water → more evaporation → latent-heat release → stronger convection/low pressure
- higher SST → more energy → more frequent intense cyclones, rapid intensification, higher rainfall, a longer season, poleward expansion
- examples: intensifying Arabian Sea/Bay of Bengal cyclones (Amphan, Tauktae, Biparjoy)
- plus sea-level rise → worse storm surges
- a climate-change amplifier
- a threat to coasts.
- Concl: Rising sea surface temperatures supercharge tropical cyclones — providing more energy for stronger, wetter and rapidly intensifying storms (as seen in recent Arabian Sea/Bay of Bengal cyclones) — making warming oceans a key driver of escalating coastal disaster risk.
- Add: sea surface temperature (≥26.5°C threshold); ocean warming/latent heat; rapid intensification; Amphan/Tauktae/Biparjoy; storm surge; climate change.
GS-1 · 2023
Art & Culture
1[15m] What were the major technological changes introduced during the Sultanate period? How did those technological changes influence Indian society?
- Intro: The Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526) introduced major technological innovations — from Persian/Central Asian sources — that significantly transformed Indian society and economy.
- technologies introduced: the Persian wheel (saqiya/araghatta) for irrigation, the spinning wheel (charkha) — revolutionising textiles, the true (pointed) arch and dome (lime mortar) in architecture, paper-making, advanced metallurgy, gunpowder/firearms, new crafts
- impact on society/economy: higher agricultural productivity (irrigation), a textile boom (charkha → cheaper cloth, more weavers), urbanisation/trade, Indo-Islamic architecture (Qutb Minar, arches/domes), new occupational groups, the spread of paper → records/literature
- a synthesis of cultures
- economic growth.
- Concl: The Sultanate's technologies — the Persian wheel, spinning wheel, arch-and-dome and paper — transformed agriculture, textiles, architecture and learning, boosting productivity and urbanisation and forging a lasting Indo-Islamic material culture.
- Add: Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526); Persian wheel (irrigation); spinning wheel/charkha (textiles); true arch & dome; paper-making; gunpowder; Indo-Islamic architecture.
2[10m] Explain the role of geographical factors towards the development of Ancient India.
- Intro: Geographical factors — rivers, mountains, monsoons, coasts and resources — profoundly shaped the development of ancient Indian civilisation.
- rivers: the Indus and Ganga fostered fertile plains → agriculture, settlement, civilisations (Harappan, Vedic, Magadha)
- the Himalayas: a natural barrier (protection), source of rivers, passes for trade/invasion (the Khyber)
- the monsoon: agriculture, the rhythm of life, trade winds (maritime trade)
- coasts/seas: maritime trade (Rome, Southeast Asia), ports (Lothal, Arikamedu)
- resources: iron (Magadha's rise), minerals, fertile soil
- isolation + connectivity shaping culture
- the Deccan plateau, forests
- geography as the stage of history.
- Concl: Ancient India's development was moulded by its geography — fertile river plains nurturing civilisations, the Himalayas offering protection and passes, monsoons and coasts enabling agriculture and trade, and resources like iron powering states such as Magadha.
- Add: Indus/Ganga river plains (Harappan/Vedic); Himalayas (barrier/Khyber Pass); monsoon/maritime trade; ports (Lothal/Arikamedu); iron (Magadha); geography & history.
Modern History
3[15m] How did colonial rule affect the tribals in India and what was the tribal response to the colonial oppression?
- Intro: Colonial rule deeply disrupted India's tribal communities — their land, forests and autonomy — provoking a series of fierce tribal revolts against this oppression.
- how colonialism affected tribals: intrusion into forests (the Forest Acts — restricting access), land alienation (to outsiders — moneylenders, zamindars, "dikus"), revenue/taxation, exploitation by traders/moneylenders, loss of shifting cultivation, missionary activity, erosion of autonomy/customary rights
- tribal response — revolts: the Santhal rebellion (1855-56, Sidhu-Kanhu), the Munda rebellion (Birsa Munda, Ulgulan 1899-1900), the Kol, Bhil, Khond and Rampa rebellions
- nature: against dikus and the British, for land/forest/autonomy, often messianic/millenarian
- largely suppressed but forced some protective laws
- resistance for identity and rights.
- Concl: Colonial rule dispossessed tribals of land, forests and autonomy through exploitative laws and outsiders, provoking determined revolts (Santhal, Munda/Birsa) that, though crushed, asserted tribal rights and identity and compelled some protective legislation.
- Add: Forest Acts/land alienation ("dikus"); Santhal rebellion (1855, Sidhu-Kanhu); Birsa Munda/Ulgulan (1899-1900); Kol/Bhil/Rampa revolts; loss of shifting cultivation; messianic resistance.
4[10m] What was the difference between Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore in their approach towards education and nationalism?
- Intro: Though both were towering nationalists, Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore differed notably in their philosophies of education and nationalism.
- on nationalism: Gandhi — a mass-based, anti-colonial nationalism rooted in swaraj, non-violence and Indian tradition; Tagore — wary of aggressive/narrow nationalism (critiqued it in "Nationalism"), favoured universalism/humanism and internationalism
- on education: Gandhi — "Nai Talim"/basic education — self-reliance, craft/manual work, the vernacular, character, the rural
- Tagore — holistic, creative, nature-based, liberal-arts learning (Visva-Bharati/Santiniketan), freedom, the arts, the universal
- both anti-colonial, valuing Indian roots, but differing on means/vision
- a creative dialogue (the "Poet and the Mahatma").
- Concl: Gandhi championed a mass, tradition-rooted nationalism and craft-centred basic education (Nai Talim), while Tagore favoured a universal humanism wary of narrow nationalism and a creative, liberal education (Santiniketan) — complementary visions in a celebrated dialogue.
- Add: Gandhi (Nai Talim/basic education; swaraj/non-violence) vs Tagore ("Nationalism" critique; Visva-Bharati/Santiniketan; universalism); the "Poet and the Mahatma".
World History
5[10m] Bring out the socio-economic effects of the introduction of railways in different countries of the world.
- Intro: The introduction of railways across the world had profound and double-edged socio-economic effects — integrating economies and societies while also serving imperial and commercial domination.
- economic effects: integrated national markets, boosted trade/industry/agriculture (commercialisation), mobility of goods/labour, urbanisation, but in colonies — facilitated resource extraction and the drain (raw materials out, manufactures in)
- social effects: mobility, the breaking of isolation, the spread of ideas/nationalism, mixing of people (eroding some barriers), pilgrimage/travel
- in India: linked to British commercial/military control yet also unified the country and aided the freedom movement
- globally: in the US/Europe — industrialisation, westward expansion; in colonies — exploitation
- a tool of both progress and domination.
- Concl: Railways worldwide accelerated economic integration, trade and urbanisation and broke social isolation, spreading ideas and mobility — but in colonies like India they doubled as instruments of extraction and control, making their impact both transformative and exploitative.
- Add: railways (market integration/commercialisation); colonial drain (raw materials); urbanisation/labour mobility; spread of ideas/nationalism; US westward expansion; double-edged.
Indian Society
6[15m] Discuss the impact of post-liberal economy on ethnic identity and communalism.
- Intro: The post-liberalisation (post-1991) economy has reshaped ethnic identity and communalism in India in complex, often contradictory ways.
- impact: market integration, mobility and competition can both dilute and sharpen identities
- heightening identity/communalism: economic insecurity/inequality, competition for jobs/resources → scapegoating, "sons of the soil", communal/ethnic mobilisation, identity politics, relative deprivation
- media/globalisation amplifying identities
- but also: consumer/aspirational culture, mobility, urban cosmopolitanism can blur some boundaries
- politicisation of identity for electoral ends
- examples: regional/ethnic assertions, communal polarisation amid economic change
- the political economy of identity
- uneven development feeding grievance.
- Concl: The post-liberal economy has had a double impact — its inequalities, insecurities and competition often sharpening ethnic and communal identities and politics, even as mobility and cosmopolitanism blur some boundaries — making identity increasingly entangled with economic grievance.
- Add: post-1991 liberalisation; economic insecurity/inequality → identity politics; "sons of the soil"; relative deprivation; communal mobilisation; political economy of identity.
7[15m] Why is caste identity in India both fluid and static?
- Intro: Caste identity in India is paradoxically both fluid and static — changing in form and function yet persisting as a structuring reality.
- static aspects: endogamy, hereditary status, caste-based discrimination/hierarchy, ritual notions, caste in marriage/politics, the persistence of untouchability/atrocities
- fluid aspects: Sanskritisation (mobility — M.N. Srinivas), the changing role (caste associations, caste in politics/reservation as a resource), urbanisation/occupation delinking, "substantialisation" (Dumont), new assertions/Dalit identity, modern caste (vote banks)
- caste adapts rather than disappears — "caste in a new form"
- both continuity and change
- the modernity-tradition interplay.
- Concl: Caste is static in its endogamy, hierarchy and discrimination yet fluid in its mobility (Sanskritisation), political and economic reinvention, and new assertions — adapting to modernity rather than disappearing, persisting in changed forms.
- Add: caste (endogamy/hierarchy — static); Sanskritisation (M.N. Srinivas — mobility); caste in politics/reservation; "substantialisation" (Dumont); Dalit assertion; continuity & change.
8[15m] Does urbanization lead to more segregation and/or marginalization of the poor in Indian metropolises?
- Intro: Urbanisation in Indian metropolises has, in many ways, intensified the segregation and marginalisation of the poor rather than integrating them.
- segregation: spatial divides — gated communities/enclaves vs slums, the "splintering" city, ghettoisation (class, caste, religion — e.g., Muslim ghettos), peripheralisation of the poor
- marginalisation: slum demolitions, displacement, denial of services/tenure, informal-sector precarity, exclusion from "world-class city" plans, gentrification
- exclusionary urbanism
- but also: cities offer mobility, anonymity, opportunity, some mixing
- examples: Mumbai (Dharavi), Delhi
- measures: inclusive cities, slum upgrading, the right to the city, affordable housing
- unequal urban space.
- Concl: Indian metropolitan urbanisation has often deepened the poor's segregation (slums vs enclaves) and marginalisation (displacement, service denial, exclusion) — though cities also offer opportunity; inclusive, right-to-the-city planning is needed to counter exclusionary urbanism.
- Add: urban segregation (gated enclaves vs slums/ghettos); marginalisation/displacement; Dharavi (Mumbai); gentrification; "right to the city"; inclusive urbanism.
9[15m] What are the main features of Vedic society and religion? Do you think some of the features are still prevailing in Indian society?
- Intro: Vedic society and religion laid enduring foundations, some features of which still persist in modern Indian society.
- features of Vedic society: the varna system (later rigid), patriarchy, the family/gotra, the ashrama scheme, a cattle-based then agrarian economy
- Vedic religion: nature worship (Indra, Agni, Varuna), yajnas/sacrifices, the Vedas, ritualism, later philosophical (the Upanishads — atman/brahman, karma)
- still prevailing: the caste/varna legacy, Sanskrit/Vedic rituals (marriage, samskaras), worship of deities, yoga, festivals, the karma/dharma concepts, gotra in marriage, reverence for the Vedas
- but much has also changed (reform, modernity)
- living continuity + transformation.
- Concl: Vedic society and religion — the varna order, ritual sacrifices, deity worship and philosophical ideas of karma and dharma — left a deep imprint, many features of which (caste, samskaras, festivals, gotra, Vedic rituals) still endure in modern Indian society, alongside much change.
- Add: Vedic society (varna/ashrama/patriarchy); Vedic religion (Indra/Agni, yajnas, the Vedas); Upanishads (atman/brahman/karma); samskaras/gotra; living continuity.
10[15m] Why did human development fail to keep pace with economic development in India?
- Intro: Despite robust economic growth, India's human development has lagged — reflecting a failure to translate growth into well-being.
- the gap: high GDP growth but a low HDI rank, persistent malnutrition, low health/education indicators, inequality
- reasons: low public spending on health (~2%) and education (below 6% of GDP), jobless/inequitable growth (not "trickling down"), poor delivery/governance, gender gaps (low female LFPR), regional/social disparities, neglect of the social sectors, the informal economy
- growth-mediated vs support-led (Sen/Dreze)
- Kerala vs high-growth low-HDI states
- measures: invest in human capital, reduce inequality, employment, social protection
- growth as a means, not an end.
- Concl: India's human development lagged its economic growth because of inadequate social-sector investment, jobless and unequal growth, and weak delivery — making development inclusive requires prioritising health, education and equity, treating growth as a means to human well-being, not an end.
- Add: HDI vs GDP gap; social spending (health ~2%, education <6%); jobless/unequal growth; Sen & Dreze (support-led development); Kerala model; human capital.
11[10m] Child cuddling is now being replaced by mobile phones. Discuss its impact on the socialization of children.
- Intro: The replacement of human nurturing ("child cuddling") with mobile phones is reshaping — and in many ways impoverishing — the socialisation of children.
- socialisation: the process of learning norms, emotions, language and values through interaction (the family the primary agent)
- negative impacts of phone-substitution: reduced emotional bonding/attachment, weaker empathy/social skills, screen addiction, delayed language/cognitive development, less physical play, isolation, exposure to inappropriate content, attention issues, a "digital pacifier"
- shift of the primary agent from family to media/screens
- some positives: access to learning, connectivity (if guided)
- examples: rising screen time among children
- measures: parental engagement, screen-time limits, quality interaction
- technology displacing human bonds.
- Concl: Substituting mobile phones for nurturing weakens children's emotional bonding, empathy, language and social skills — shifting socialisation from family to screens; healthy development needs human interaction and mindful, limited technology use.
- Add: socialisation (family as primary agent); attachment/emotional bonding; screen addiction; language/cognitive delay; "digital pacifier"; parental mediation.
12[10m] Explain why suicide among young women is increasing in Indian society.
- Intro: Rising suicide among young women in India reflects a confluence of social, economic and psychological pressures rooted in gender inequality.
- the trend: India has high female suicide rates (especially young/married women — NCRB data)
- causes: patriarchal pressures, early/forced marriage, dowry, domestic violence, marital discord, restricted autonomy, the burden of expectations, mental-health stigma, economic dependence, harassment, academic/career stress, social media
- the "double bind" (rising aspirations vs persisting constraints)
- rural distress, agrarian households
- mental-health neglect
- measures: women's empowerment, mental-health support, ending violence/dowry, helplines, awareness, the Mental Healthcare Act
- a gendered public-health crisis.
- Concl: Young women's rising suicides stem from patriarchal pressures, violence, restricted autonomy and mental-health neglect amid rising aspirations — a gendered crisis demanding women's empowerment, mental-health support and the dismantling of dowry and domestic violence.
- Add: female suicide (NCRB data); patriarchy/dowry/domestic violence; restricted autonomy; mental-health stigma; "double bind" (aspiration vs constraint); Mental Healthcare Act.
13[10m] Do you think marriage as a sacrament is losing its value in modern India?
- Intro: Marriage as a sacrament — a sacred, indissoluble, lifelong bond — is gradually losing some of its traditional value in modern India, even as the institution endures.
- the sacramental view (Hindu): marriage as a religious samskara, sacred and permanent
- signs of change: rising divorce/separation, the contractual/companionate view (love marriage, the Special Marriage Act, registration), individualism, women's autonomy/education/work, live-in relationships, delayed marriage, urbanisation, legal reforms (divorce, maintenance)
- but: marriage remains near-universal/valued (arranged marriages persist, family/social pressure, low divorce rates overall)
- from sacrament to companionship/contract
- continuity + transformation
- a changing but resilient institution.
- Concl: Marriage in India is partly shifting from a sacred, indissoluble sacrament toward a companionate, contractual bond — with rising divorce, individualism and women's autonomy — yet it remains a deeply valued, near-universal institution, reflecting both change and continuity.
- Add: marriage as sacrament (samskara) vs contract; rising divorce/individualism; Special Marriage Act; companionate marriage; women's autonomy; near-universality.
Geography
14[15m] Comment on the resource potentials of the long coastline of India and highlight the status of natural hazard preparedness in these areas.
- Intro: India's ~7,500 km coastline holds vast resource potential but is also exposed to natural hazards, demanding robust preparedness.
- resource potential: fisheries/the blue economy, ports/trade, minerals (placer — monazite; oil/gas — Mumbai High), tourism, mangroves, renewables (offshore wind/tidal), the EEZ (~2 million sq km), salt
- hazards: cyclones (the east coast especially), tsunamis (2004), storm surges, coastal erosion, sea-level rise, saltwater intrusion
- preparedness status: early-warning systems (IMD/INCOIS), cyclone shelters, the NDMA/coastal-zone management (CRZ), mangrove restoration, the National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project — improved (lower cyclone deaths) but gaps remain
- a balance of exploitation and protection
- integrated coastal management.
- Concl: India's long coastline offers rich resources (fisheries, ports, minerals, the blue economy) but faces cyclones, tsunamis and erosion; preparedness has improved (early warning, shelters, CRZ) yet needs strengthening through integrated coastal-zone management.
- Add: 7,500 km coastline/EEZ (~2 mn sq km); blue economy (fisheries/ports/Mumbai High); cyclones/tsunami (2004); INCOIS/IMD early warning; CRZ/mangroves; National Cyclone Risk Mitigation.
15[15m] From being a net food importer in the 1960s, India has emerged as a net food exporter to the world. Provide reasons.
- Intro: India's transformation from a food-deficit importer in the 1960s to a net food exporter today reflects a remarkable agricultural turnaround.
- reasons: the Green Revolution (HYV seeds, fertilisers, irrigation, mechanisation — Borlaug/M.S. Swaminathan), expansion of irrigation, institutional support (MSP, procurement, the FCI, credit, cooperatives)
- later revolutions: the White (milk — Operation Flood), Blue (fish), Yellow (oilseeds), the horticulture/Golden Revolution
- technology, research (ICAR), high production (record grains)
- self-sufficiency → surplus → exports (rice, wheat, sugar, marine, spices)
- policy/markets
- but: regional/crop skew, sustainability concerns
- from "ship-to-mouth" to a food exporter.
- Concl: India became a net food exporter through the Green Revolution and successive farm revolutions (milk, fish, horticulture), backed by irrigation, MSP, research and institutions — turning 1960s food dependence into surplus and exports, though sustainability now poses new challenges.
- Add: Green Revolution (HYV/M.S. Swaminathan); irrigation/MSP/FCI; Operation Flood (milk)/Blue/Yellow revolutions; ICAR; food self-sufficiency; "ship-to-mouth" to exporter.
16[15m] Identify and discuss the factors responsible for diversity of natural vegetation in India. Assess the significance of wildlife sanctuaries in rain forest regions of India.
- Intro: India's natural vegetation is remarkably diverse, shaped by varied geographical factors; its rainforest wildlife sanctuaries are vital biodiversity reservoirs.
- factors for vegetation diversity: climate (temperature, rainfall — the monsoon gradient), relief/altitude (the Himalayas — alpine to tropical), soil, latitude, drainage
- resulting types: tropical evergreen (the Western Ghats, Northeast), deciduous (monsoon), thorn/desert, mangroves (Sundarbans), montane, alpine
- rainforest sanctuaries' significance: biodiversity hotspots (the Western Ghats, the Northeast — endemic species), watershed/climate regulation, carbon sinks, tribal livelihoods, eco-tourism, gene pools
- examples: Silent Valley, the Western Ghats sanctuaries, Namdapha
- conservation (biosphere reserves, hotspots)
- ecological wealth.
- Concl: India's vegetation diversity flows from its varied climate, relief and soils; its rainforest sanctuaries (the Western Ghats, Northeast) are crucial biodiversity hotspots — conserving endemic species, watersheds and carbon — making their protection ecologically indispensable.
- Add: vegetation factors (climate/relief/soil); tropical evergreen (Western Ghats/Northeast); biodiversity hotspots; Silent Valley/Namdapha; mangroves (Sundarbans); biosphere reserves.
17[10m] Why is the South-West monsoon called 'Purvaiya' (easterly) in the Bhojpur Region? How has this directional seasonal wind system influenced the cultural ethos of the region?
- Intro: In the Bhojpur region, the south-west monsoon is locally called 'Purvaiya' (easterly) because of its locally reversed, easterly approach — a wind that has shaped the region's cultural ethos.
- why "easterly"/Purvaiya: the Bay of Bengal branch of the SW monsoon, deflected by the Himalayas, moves up the Ganga plain from the east/southeast — so locally it arrives as an easterly wind
- it brings the life-giving monsoon rains
- cultural influence: the Purvaiya is celebrated in folk songs (the Bhojpuri folk tradition — birha, kajri, barahmasa), poetry, festivals, agricultural rhythms, romance/longing (the awaited rains/returning beloved), prosperity symbolism
- it shapes the agrarian calendar, sowing, festivals (Teej)
- a wind woven into folklore and identity
- geography in culture.
- Concl: The Purvaiya — the easterly-arriving Bay of Bengal monsoon deflected up the Ganga plain — brings vital rains to Bhojpur and is deeply woven into its folk songs (kajri, birha), agriculture and emotional life, illustrating how a wind shapes regional culture.
- Add: SW monsoon (Bay of Bengal branch, Himalaya-deflected); "Purvaiya" (easterly); Bhojpuri folk (kajri/birha/barahmasa); agrarian calendar; geography & culture.
18[10m] How are the fjords formed? Why do they constitute some of the most picturesque areas of the world?
- Intro: Fjords are deep, narrow, steep-sided coastal inlets formed by glacial erosion and subsequent submergence, renowned for their dramatic beauty.
- formation: glaciers carve deep U-shaped valleys (glacial erosion) reaching below sea level → after the ice melts (deglaciation/post-glacial sea-level rise), the sea floods the valley → a fjord (a drowned glacial valley)
- features: steep walls, great depth, a shallow "threshold"/sill at the mouth
- where: high-latitude glaciated coasts — Norway (the classic), Chile, New Zealand, Alaska, Greenland, Canada
- why picturesque: towering cliffs, deep blue water, waterfalls, hanging valleys, a serene grandeur → tourism (the Norwegian fjords — UNESCO)
- glacial geomorphology
- scenic and ecological value.
- Concl: Fjords are drowned U-shaped glacial valleys — deep, steep and narrow — formed by glacial erosion and post-glacial submergence; their towering cliffs, deep waters and waterfalls (as in Norway and New Zealand) make them among the world's most picturesque landscapes.
- Add: fjord (drowned U-shaped glacial valley); glacial erosion + post-glacial submergence; sill/threshold; Norway/Chile/New Zealand; hanging valleys/waterfalls; UNESCO fjords.
19[10m] Why is the world today confronted with a crisis of availability of and access to freshwater resources?
- Intro: The world faces a deepening crisis in the availability of and access to freshwater, driven by rising demand, depletion and inequity.
- scarcity of availability: freshwater is <3% of all water (most frozen/inaccessible); growing demand (population, agriculture ~70%, industry, urbanisation), over-extraction/depleting aquifers, pollution, climate change (erratic rainfall, glacier melt, droughts)
- access crisis: unequal distribution, poverty, lack of infrastructure, governance failures, transboundary disputes, the urban-rural/rich-poor divide
- consequences: water stress (India, the Middle East, Africa), conflict, health, food insecurity
- "Day Zero" cities (Cape Town)
- measures: efficiency, recycling, rainwater harvesting, equitable governance, SDG-6
- a looming global challenge.
- Concl: The freshwater crisis stems from finite supply meeting soaring demand, depletion, pollution and climate change, compounded by unequal access — straining regions worldwide; averting it needs efficiency, conservation, equitable governance and the realisation of SDG-6.
- Add: freshwater (<3% of water); demand (agriculture ~70%)/over-extraction; pollution/climate change; "Day Zero" (Cape Town); transboundary disputes; SDG-6.
20[10m] Discuss the consequences of climate change on the food security in tropical countries.
- Intro: Climate change poses severe threats to food security in tropical countries, which are especially vulnerable due to their geography and dependence on agriculture.
- consequences: rising temperatures/heat stress reducing crop yields (wheat, rice, maize), erratic monsoons/rainfall, droughts and floods, water stress, pests/diseases shifting, declining soil fertility, loss of arable land (sea-level rise, salinity)
- tropical vulnerability: already-hot climates near crop thermal limits, rain-fed agriculture, smallholders, poverty, weak adaptive capacity
- impact: lower production, price spikes, malnutrition, rural distress, the poor worst hit
- examples: Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia
- measures: climate-resilient/smart agriculture, drought-resistant crops, irrigation, adaptation, loss-and-damage support
- a climate-justice and food-security crisis.
- Concl: Climate change threatens tropical food security through heat stress, erratic rainfall, droughts, floods and pests — hitting rain-fed smallholders hardest; safeguarding it needs climate-resilient agriculture, resilient crops, adaptation and global support, as a matter of food security and climate justice.
- Add: climate change/heat stress (crop yields); erratic monsoon/droughts-floods; tropical/rain-fed vulnerability; climate-smart agriculture; loss & damage; food security/climate justice.
GS-1 · 2022
Art & Culture
1[15m] Discuss the significance of the lion and bull figures in Indian mythology, art and architecture.
- Intro: The lion and bull are recurrent, symbolically rich figures in Indian mythology, art and architecture, embodying power, sacredness and cosmic ideas.
- lion: a symbol of power, royalty, courage and protection — Vishnu's Narasimha avatar, Durga's mount (Simha), the Ashokan Lion Capital (Sarnath — the national emblem), guardian figures (yali/dvarapalas), Buddhist symbolism (the Buddha as "Shakyasimha")
- bull: Nandi (Shiva's mount/vahana, fertility, dharma), the Harappan seals (the humped bull), the Pashupati seal, Nandi sculptures at temples, agricultural/fertility symbolism
- in architecture: temple guardians, capitals, friezes, mythological narratives
- continuity from the Indus to classical to medieval
- symbols of strength + sacredness.
- Concl: The lion (power, royalty, protection — the Ashokan capital) and the bull (Nandi, fertility, dharma — from the Harappan seals) are enduring motifs woven through Indian mythology, sculpture and architecture, symbolising strength and the sacred across millennia.
- Add: lion (Ashokan Lion Capital/Sarnath — national emblem; Narasimha; Durga's mount); bull (Nandi/Shiva; Harappan humped bull/Pashupati seal); yali/guardian figures; continuity.
2[15m] Discuss the main contributions of the Gupta period and the Chola period to Indian heritage and culture.
- Intro: The Gupta period (4th-6th century) and the Chola period (9th-13th century) are landmark eras whose contributions enriched India's heritage and culture in distinct ways.
- Gupta ("the Golden Age"): classical Sanskrit literature (Kalidasa), science/mathematics (Aryabhata — zero/decimal, Varahamihira), art (the Ajanta paintings, the Sarnath Buddha, Nalanda university), the Nagara temple style (Dashavatara, Deogarh), metallurgy (the Iron Pillar), a Hindu revival
- Chola: the apogee of Dravidian temple architecture (Brihadeeswara — UNESCO), bronze sculpture (Nataraja), Tamil literature, naval power/maritime trade, local self-government (Uttiramerur), murals
- Gupta = the North/classical synthesis; Chola = the South/Dravidian zenith
- enduring cultural legacies.
- Concl: The Guptas gave India a "Golden Age" of Sanskrit literature, science and temple art, while the Cholas perfected Dravidian architecture, bronze sculpture and maritime culture — together representing the classical zeniths of North and South Indian heritage.
- Add: Gupta (Kalidasa; Aryabhata/zero; Ajanta; Iron Pillar; Nagara style); Chola (Brihadeeswara/UNESCO; Nataraja bronze; Uttiramerur; maritime power).
3[10m] How will you explain that medieval Indian temple sculptures represent the social life of those days?
- Intro: Medieval Indian temple sculptures are not merely religious art but vivid records of the social life of their times, depicting people, customs and daily activities.
- how they reflect social life: scenes of daily life (markets, dance, music, hunting, war, agriculture), social hierarchy, costumes/ornaments/hairstyles, occupations, royal courts/processions, women's life, sports/games, erotica (Khajuraho, Konark)
- examples: Khajuraho (Chandella — life in all aspects), Konark (the Sun Temple — daily life, dance, animals), the Hoysala temples (Belur/Halebidu — intricate friezes), South Indian gopurams
- religion + secular life intertwined
- a "frozen society in stone"
- a visual social history
- patronage and worldview.
- Concl: Medieval temple sculptures — at Khajuraho, Konark and the Hoysala temples — depict not only deities but the full sweep of social life (dress, occupations, dance, customs, even erotica), serving as an invaluable visual record and social history of their age.
- Add: Khajuraho (Chandella)/Konark (Sun Temple)/Hoysala (Belur-Halebidu); daily life/costumes/occupations; erotica; secular + sacred; "social history in stone".
Modern History
4[15m] The political and administrative reorganisation of states and territories has been a continuous ongoing process since the mid-nineteenth century. Discuss with examples.
- Intro: The political and administrative reorganisation of India's states and territories has been a continuous process since the mid-19th century, evolving through colonial and post-independence phases.
- colonial phase: provinces reorganised for administrative convenience (the partition of Bengal 1905, the creation of provinces), arbitrary boundaries
- post-independence: integration of princely states (Patel), the demand for linguistic states → the States Reorganisation Commission (Fazl Ali, 1955) → the States Reorganisation Act (1956 — states on a linguistic basis)
- later: bifurcations/new states (Bombay → Maharashtra/Gujarat 1960, Punjab/Haryana 1966, the Northeast states, Chhattisgarh/Jharkhand/Uttarakhand 2000, Telangana 2014), UT reorganisation (J&K 2019, Ladakh)
- ongoing — identity, administration and development drivers
- a dynamic federal map.
- Concl: From colonial administrative carving to linguistic reorganisation (the 1956 Act) and the continued creation of new states (Telangana, the J&K UTs), India's territorial reorganisation has been a continuous, ongoing process driven by identity, administration and development.
- Add: Bengal Partition (1905); States Reorganisation Commission (Fazl Ali, 1955)/Act 1956 (linguistic); new states (2000 — Jharkhand/Chhattisgarh/Uttarakhand; Telangana 2014); J&K reorganisation (2019).
5[10m] Why was there a sudden spurt in famines in colonial India since the mid-eighteenth century? Give reasons.
- Intro: Colonial India witnessed a sharp spurt in famines from the mid-18th century, largely a product of British policies rather than mere natural causes.
- the spurt: recurrent, devastating famines (the Bengal famine 1770, the Great Famine 1876-78, the Bengal famine 1943 — millions dead)
- reasons: colonial exploitation — high land revenue (the Permanent Settlement), the commercialisation of agriculture (cash crops over food), the drain of wealth, the export of grain even during famines, the disruption of traditional relief, laissez-faire policy (non-intervention), the destruction of village economies
- vs natural (drought) — the colonial economy turned scarcity into catastrophe (Amartya Sen's entitlement failure)
- man-made famines.
- Concl: The spurt in colonial-era famines stemmed mainly from British policies — extractive revenue, the commercialisation of agriculture, grain exports and laissez-faire neglect — that turned droughts into man-made catastrophes (as Sen's entitlement analysis shows), not from nature alone.
- Add: colonial famines (Bengal 1770; Great Famine 1876-78; Bengal 1943); high land revenue/Permanent Settlement; commercialisation/grain export; laissez-faire; Amartya Sen (entitlement failure).
6[10m] Why did the armies of the British East India Company — mostly comprising Indian soldiers — win consistently against the more numerous and better-equipped armies of the then Indian rulers? Give reasons.
- Intro: The British East India Company's armies, largely composed of Indian sepoys, consistently defeated larger, better-equipped Indian armies due to superior organisation, discipline and resources.
- reasons: superior military organisation/discipline/training (a professional standing army, drill), modern tactics (infantry firepower, coordinated artillery), better logistics/supply, regular pay (loyalty, morale), a unified command vs the Indian rulers' divided/feudal levies
- Indian weaknesses: disunity/mutual rivalry (no national unity), outdated tactics (cavalry-heavy), treachery/betrayal (e.g., Plassey — Mir Jafar), weak logistics, financial/diplomatic manoeuvring (the subsidiary alliance)
- technology + finance (control of resources)
- "divide and rule"
- organisation over numbers.
- Concl: The Company's victories owed less to numbers and more to disciplined, well-trained and well-paid professional armies with superior tactics, logistics and unified command — exploiting Indian disunity, betrayal and outdated warfare, backed by financial and diplomatic guile.
- Add: EIC sepoy army (discipline/training/pay); modern tactics (infantry firepower/artillery); Indian disunity/feudal levies; Plassey (Mir Jafar's betrayal); subsidiary alliance; organisation over numbers.
Indian Society
7[15m] Elucidate the relationship between globalisation and new technology in a world of scarce resources, with special reference to India.
- Intro: In a world of finite resources, globalisation and new technology are deeply interlinked — together offering both solutions and challenges, as India's experience shows.
- the relationship: globalisation spreads technology (transfer, FDI, knowledge); technology enables globalisation (ICT, transport, the internet)
- in a resource-scarce world: technology can ease scarcity (efficiency, renewables, precision agriculture, the circular economy) but globalisation also intensifies resource demand/competition/extraction (consumption, e-waste)
- India: the IT/digital revolution (a leader in services), leapfrogging (mobile/UPI/digital public infrastructure), green tech (solar/ISA), but also resource stress, the digital divide, import dependence
- tech as a double-edged tool
- sustainable, inclusive use needed.
- Concl: Globalisation and new technology reinforce each other and can help manage scarce resources through efficiency and innovation — as India's digital and green-tech leaps show — but they also intensify resource demand and inequality, demanding sustainable and inclusive deployment.
- Add: globalisation-technology nexus; technology transfer/FDI; India's IT/digital public infrastructure (UPI); green tech (solar/ISA); resource stress/e-waste; sustainability.
8[15m] Are tolerance, assimilation and pluralism the key elements in the making of an Indian form of secularism? Justify your answer.
- Intro: Indian secularism is distinctively shaped by tolerance, assimilation and pluralism — making it a positive, accommodative model rather than a strict separation.
- tolerance: the historic ethos of accepting/respecting all faiths (sarva dharma sambhava) — Ashoka, Akbar, the Bhakti-Sufi traditions
- assimilation: a "composite culture" absorbing and synthesising diverse traditions (syncretism, Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb)
- pluralism: celebrating diversity (many religions/languages/cultures coexisting), constitutional protection (Art 25-28, minority rights Art 29-30)
- Indian secularism = "principled distance"/positive (the State engages all faiths equally), not the Western "wall of separation"
- challenges: communalism, polarisation
- a civilisational secularism.
- Concl: Tolerance, assimilation and pluralism are indeed the cornerstones of India's distinctive secularism — a positive, accommodative "principled distance" rooted in its composite culture and constitutional guarantees, distinguishing it from the Western separationist model, though communal challenges persist.
- Add: Indian secularism ("principled distance"/positive); sarva dharma sambhava; composite culture/Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb; Art 25-30; Ashoka/Akbar; vs Western "wall of separation".
9[15m] Analyse the salience of 'sect' in Indian society vis-a-vis caste, region and religion.
- Intro: 'Sect' (sampradaya/panth) is a significant axis of identity in Indian society, interacting with — and at times cutting across — caste, region and religion.
- what is a sect: a subgroup within a religion with distinct beliefs/practices/founder (e.g., the Lingayats, Kabirpanthis, Radhasoamis, the Arya Samaj, various Bhakti/Sufi orders)
- salience vis-a-vis caste: sects can transcend caste (anti-caste reform — Lingayats, Bhakti) or align with it
- region: sects often regionally rooted (the Warkari in Maharashtra)
- religion: sects within/across religions, sometimes becoming distinct religions
- role: identity, community, reform, social mobilisation, politics (sect-based vote banks)
- both integrative (transcending caste) and divisive
- a fluid, layered identity.
- Concl: Sect is a salient, layered identity in Indian society — sometimes transcending caste and region (as reformist Bhakti sects did), sometimes reinforcing them — interacting dynamically with religion to shape community, reform and politics.
- Add: sect/sampradaya (Lingayats/Kabirpanthis/Arya Samaj); Bhakti-Sufi reform (transcending caste); Warkari (regional); sect vs caste/region/religion; identity & mobilisation.
10[10m] Given the diversities among the tribal communities in India, in which specific contexts should they be considered as a single category?
- Intro: Despite vast diversity among India's tribal communities, certain specific contexts justify treating them as a single category for analytical and policy purposes.
- the diversity: ~700 Scheduled Tribes, varied languages, religions, livelihoods, regions (Northeast vs central vs island), levels of development (PVTGs to advanced)
- contexts for a single category: constitutional/administrative (the 5th/6th Schedules, ST status, reservations), shared marginalisation/displacement/exploitation, a distinct relationship with forests/land, customary self-governance (PESA), cultural distinctiveness from the "mainstream", protective discrimination
- but caution: homogenising risks ignoring internal diversity
- "tribe" a colonial-cum-administrative construct
- a category of convenience for justice.
- Concl: Though tribal communities are highly diverse, they can be treated as a single category in specific contexts — constitutional protection, shared marginalisation, forest-land relationships and customary governance — for purposes of justice and policy, while remaining alert to their internal diversity.
- Add: Scheduled Tribes (~700, PVTGs); 5th/6th Schedules/PESA; shared marginalisation/displacement; forest-land relationship; "tribe" as construct; protective discrimination.
11[10m] How is the growth of Tier 2 cities related to the rise of a new middle class with an emphasis on the culture of consumption?
- Intro: The growth of Tier-2 cities is closely linked to the rise of a new, aspirational middle class defined by a culture of consumption.
- the link: economic growth, IT/services, manufacturing and real estate spreading beyond metros → Tier-2 cities (Indore, Coimbatore, Kochi, Jaipur) booming
- the new middle class: rising incomes, education, employment (services/IT), aspiration, exposure (media/internet)
- consumption culture: malls, brands, cars, housing, e-commerce, lifestyle, leisure — "consumerism" as identity/status
- drivers: smaller-city affordability, the work-from-anywhere trend, infrastructure
- consequences: economic dynamism but also inequality, debt, environmental costs
- a "new India" of aspirational urbanism
- consumption and class intertwined.
- Concl: Tier-2 cities are rising on the back of a new, aspirational middle class whose growing incomes and consumption-driven lifestyle (malls, brands, e-commerce) fuel urban economic dynamism — reflecting a consumerist "new India," even as it raises concerns of inequality and sustainability.
- Add: Tier-2 cities (Indore/Coimbatore/Kochi); new middle class (IT/services); consumption culture/consumerism; aspirational urbanism; e-commerce/malls; inequality.
12[10m] Explore and evaluate the impact of 'Work From Home' on family relationships.
- Intro: 'Work From Home' (WFH), accelerated by the pandemic, has had a mixed impact on family relationships — strengthening some bonds while straining others.
- positive impacts: more time with family, flexibility, shared domestic responsibilities, presence for children/elders, reduced commute stress, work-life integration
- negative impacts: blurred work-home boundaries (overwork, "always on"), space/privacy conflicts, role overload (especially women — the double burden), digital distraction, isolation, financial/relationship stress, the erosion of personal time
- gendered effects (women's burden), generational dynamics
- a renegotiation of family roles and space
- depends on housing, gender norms, work culture
- a double-edged transformation.
- Concl: WFH has reshaped family life — affording more presence and shared responsibilities yet blurring work-home boundaries, intensifying women's double burden and creating space conflicts; its impact on family relationships is double-edged, hinging on gender norms, housing and work culture.
- Add: Work From Home (pandemic-accelerated); work-life integration vs blurred boundaries; women's double burden; space/privacy conflict; renegotiated family roles; gendered impact.
Geography
13[15m] Mention the significance of straits and isthmus in international trade.
- Intro: Straits and isthmuses are strategically vital geographical features that shape and facilitate international maritime trade and connectivity.
- strait: a narrow water passage connecting two larger water bodies — chokepoints of global trade (the Strait of Hormuz — oil, Malacca — Asia trade, Bab-el-Mandeb, Gibraltar, the Bosphorus)
- significance: shortest sea routes, energy/goods transit, strategic/military control, vulnerability (blockades, piracy)
- isthmus: a narrow land strip connecting two larger landmasses — sites for canals (the Suez — Isthmus of Suez, the Panama — Isthmus of Panama)
- significance: canals cut through isthmuses → drastically shorten routes (Suez: Europe-Asia; Panama: Atlantic-Pacific), boosting trade
- chokepoints = strategic and economic leverage
- the geopolitics of trade routes.
- Concl: Straits (Hormuz, Malacca) and isthmus-canals (Suez, Panama) are critical chokepoints that shorten maritime routes and carry the bulk of world trade and energy — making them strategically and economically pivotal, and vulnerable points in global commerce.
- Add: straits (Hormuz/Malacca/Bab-el-Mandeb — chokepoints); isthmus canals (Suez/Panama); shortened sea routes; energy/trade transit; strategic vulnerability; geopolitics.
14[15m] Troposphere is a very significant atmospheric layer that determines weather processes. How?
- Intro: The troposphere, the lowest atmospheric layer, is the seat of virtually all weather phenomena, making it the most significant layer for weather processes.
- the troposphere: extends ~8-18 km (higher at the equator, lower at the poles), contains ~75% of atmospheric mass and almost all water vapour/aerosols
- why it determines weather: temperature decreases with height (the normal lapse rate ~6.5°C/km) → instability/convection
- all weather (clouds, rain, storms, winds) occurs here
- water vapour → clouds/precipitation
- convection currents, the jet streams (at the top), pressure systems
- the tropopause caps it
- vertical mixing/turbulence
- the layer of life and weather
- contrast with the stable stratosphere.
- Concl: The troposphere determines weather because it holds most of the atmosphere's mass, water vapour and aerosols, and its decreasing temperature with height drives the convection, cloud formation and pressure systems that produce all weather phenomena.
- Add: troposphere (~8-18 km; ~75% mass); lapse rate (~6.5°C/km); water vapour/convection; clouds/precipitation/storms; tropopause; jet streams.
15[15m] Describing the distribution of rubber producing countries, indicate the major environmental issues faced by them.
- Intro: Natural rubber production is concentrated in the equatorial tropics, where producing countries face significant environmental challenges.
- distribution: needs a hot, humid equatorial climate (high rainfall, ~25-35°C) → Southeast Asia dominates (Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia — ~70-80% of world output), also India (Kerala), Africa (Nigeria, Ivory Coast), Brazil (the native Amazon)
- environmental issues: deforestation (rainforest cleared for plantations — biodiversity loss), monoculture (soil degradation, pest vulnerability), loss of habitat, water use, agrochemicals, displacement of natural forests, carbon emissions, the threat to the Amazon/Southeast Asian rainforests
- climate-change vulnerability
- a tension: economy vs ecology
- sustainable rubber needed.
- Concl: Natural rubber is concentrated in the equatorial tropics (Southeast Asia leading), where its cultivation drives serious environmental issues — deforestation, biodiversity loss, monoculture and soil degradation — highlighting the need for sustainable plantation practices.
- Add: natural rubber (equatorial/hot-humid); Southeast Asia (Thailand/Indonesia — ~70%); India (Kerala); deforestation/biodiversity loss; monoculture; sustainable rubber.
16[15m] What are the forces that influence ocean currents? Describe their role in the fishing industry of the world.
- Intro: Ocean currents, driven by several forces, profoundly influence the world's fishing industry by determining the distribution of marine life.
- forces influencing currents: prevailing winds (the main driver), the Coriolis force (deflection), temperature/salinity differences (density — thermohaline circulation), the Earth's rotation, gravity, the configuration of coastlines
- role in fishing: the meeting of warm and cold currents (e.g., the Grand Banks — Labrador + Gulf Stream; the North Sea; off Japan — Kuroshio + Oyashio) creates rich fishing grounds
- why: mixing brings up nutrients (upwelling — the Peru/Humboldt, Benguela), plankton blooms → fish
- cold currents = nutrient-rich; upwelling zones = the world's great fisheries
- El Niño disrupting (Peru)
- currents as the basis of fisheries.
- Concl: Ocean currents, driven by winds, the Coriolis force and density differences, create the world's richest fishing grounds where warm and cold currents meet and where upwelling brings nutrients (Peru, Grand Banks) — making them foundational to the global fishing industry.
- Add: currents (winds/Coriolis/thermohaline); warm-cold confluence (Grand Banks — Gulf Stream+Labrador); upwelling (Peru/Humboldt, Benguela); plankton/nutrients; Kuroshio-Oyashio; El Niño.
17[10m] Examine the potential of wind energy in India and explain the reasons for their limited spatial spread.
- Intro: India has substantial wind-energy potential, but its exploitation remains spatially concentrated due to geographical and infrastructural constraints.
- potential: a long coastline and windy regions → high potential (~300+ GW estimated); India a top wind-power producer
- concentration: mainly in a few states — Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh (the windy southern/western belts — the Western Ghats gaps, coastal/desert)
- reasons for limited spatial spread: wind depends on specific geography (high, consistent wind speeds only in certain zones — the monsoon/topography), the eastern/northern regions have low wind speeds, grid/transmission limits, land, intermittency, the cost
- measures: offshore wind, repowering, better mapping, hybrid (solar-wind)
- a geography-bound resource.
- Concl: India's wind energy is significant but spatially concentrated in a few windy southern, western and coastal states because viable wind speeds occur only in specific geographies; expanding it needs offshore wind, repowering, grid strengthening and solar-wind hybrids.
- Add: wind potential (~300+ GW); concentration (Tamil Nadu/Gujarat/Maharashtra/Rajasthan); geography-bound wind speeds; offshore wind; intermittency/grid; solar-wind hybrid.
18[10m] Discuss the natural resource potentials of the 'Deccan trap'.
- Intro: The Deccan Traps, vast volcanic basalt formations of peninsular India, hold significant natural-resource potential.
- what: extensive basaltic lava flows (formed ~66 million years ago, end-Cretaceous volcanism), covering much of Maharashtra/the Deccan
- resource potentials: fertile black (regur) soil — ideal for cotton (the "black cotton soil") and other crops
- building stone (basalt — construction)
- minerals — some metallic ores, zeolites, semi-precious stones (agate)
- groundwater (in weathered/fractured zones, though limited storage)
- trap topography (terraced)
- scenic/tourism (waterfalls, hill stations)
- but: hard rock limits groundwater, mineral-poor compared to shields
- agriculture the prime asset.
- Concl: The Deccan Traps' chief resource is their fertile black cotton (regur) soil supporting cotton and other crops, alongside basalt building stone, zeolites/agate and limited groundwater — making them agriculturally valuable though mineral-poor relative to India's shield regions.
- Add: Deccan Traps (basalt, ~66 mya volcanism); black cotton/regur soil (cotton); basalt building stone; zeolites/agate; limited groundwater (hard rock); Maharashtra.
19[10m] Discuss the meaning of colour-coded weather warnings for cyclone-prone areas given by the India Meteorological Department.
- Intro: The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issues colour-coded weather warnings to communicate the severity of cyclonic and extreme-weather threats and guide preparedness.
- the four colour codes: Green — no warning (all clear, no action)
- Yellow — "be aware/watch" (warning of bad weather, stay updated)
- Orange — "be prepared" (alert for very bad weather, be ready to act, disruption likely)
- Red — "take action" (warning of extremely severe weather, take immediate action, danger)
- based on rainfall/wind intensity, escalating with severity
- purpose: early warning, disaster preparedness, evacuation, saving lives (linked to the NDMA/state response)
- used for cyclones, heatwaves, rainfall
- part of India's improved disaster-warning system (lower cyclone deaths).
- Concl: The IMD's colour codes — Green (no warning), Yellow (be aware), Orange (be prepared) and Red (take action) — escalate with weather severity to drive timely preparedness and evacuation, a key part of India's life-saving cyclone early-warning system.
- Add: IMD colour codes (Green/Yellow/Orange/Red); "be aware/prepared/take action"; rainfall-wind severity; early warning/NDMA; cyclone preparedness; reduced mortality.
20[10m] Describe the characteristics and types of primary rocks.
- Intro: Primary rocks — igneous rocks — are the original rocks formed from the solidification of molten material, the parent of all other rock types.
- what: "primary"/igneous rocks form from the cooling and solidification of magma (intrusive) or lava (extrusive)
- characteristics: crystalline, hard, non-porous, no fossils, no strata/layering, made of interlocking minerals
- types: intrusive/plutonic (slow cooling underground → large crystals — granite) vs extrusive/volcanic (fast cooling on the surface → fine crystals — basalt)
- also by silica: acidic (granite — silica-rich, lighter) vs basic (basalt — silica-poor, darker)
- examples: granite, basalt (the Deccan Traps), gabbro, dolerite
- the source of sedimentary/metamorphic rocks
- the foundation of the crust.
- Concl: Primary (igneous) rocks, formed by the solidification of magma or lava, are crystalline, hard and fossil-free — classed as intrusive (granite) or extrusive (basalt), and acidic or basic; they are the original crustal rocks from which sedimentary and metamorphic rocks derive.
- Add: primary/igneous rocks (solidified magma/lava); crystalline/no fossils; intrusive (granite) vs extrusive (basalt); acidic vs basic; Deccan basalt; parent rock.
GS-1 · 2021
Art & Culture
1[10m] Evaluate the nature of Bhakti Literature and its contribution to Indian culture.
- Intro: Bhakti literature, the devotional outpouring of the Bhakti movement (c. 7th-17th century), is a rich, transformative body of writing that profoundly shaped Indian culture.
- nature: devotional, personal, emotional surrender to a personal God; in the vernacular/regional languages (not Sanskrit) — accessible to all; saguna (with form — Tulsidas, Surdas) and nirguna (formless — Kabir, Nanak)
- egalitarian, anti-caste, anti-ritual, mystical, lyrical (songs/poems — dohas, padas, abhangas)
- saint-poets: Kabir, Mirabai, Tulsidas (Ramcharitmanas), Surdas, Tukaram, Namdev, Chaitanya, the Alvars/Nayanars, Guru Nanak
- contribution: enriched regional languages/literature, social reform (challenging caste/orthodoxy), Hindu-Muslim synthesis (Sufi-Bhakti), music/arts, a composite culture, devotional traditions
- a literature of the people.
- Concl: Bhakti literature — devotional, vernacular and egalitarian — democratised spirituality and challenged caste and orthodoxy, enriching India's regional languages, music and social reform; its saint-poets (Kabir, Tulsidas, Mirabai) left an enduring imprint on India's composite culture.
- Add: Bhakti literature (saguna/nirguna); vernacular/regional languages; Kabir/Tulsidas (Ramcharitmanas)/Mirabai/Surdas; anti-caste/anti-ritual; Sufi-Bhakti synthesis; composite culture.
Modern History
2[15m] Bring out the constructive programmes of Mahatma Gandhi during the Non-Cooperation Movement and Civil Disobedience Movement.
- Intro: Alongside mass agitation, Mahatma Gandhi pursued "constructive programmes" during the Non-Cooperation (1920-22) and Civil Disobedience (1930-34) movements to build self-reliance and social reform.
- during Non-Cooperation: khadi/charkha (spinning, swadeshi), national schools/colleges (boycott of government education), panchayats (alternative courts), Hindu-Muslim unity, removal of untouchability, temperance (anti-liquor)
- during Civil Disobedience: salt (Dandi — defying the salt law), more khadi, village industries, the upliftment of Harijans (anti-untouchability), women's participation, prohibition
- the rationale: constructive work builds self-reliance, unity, discipline and mass base, fills the "gaps" between agitations, nation-building from below
- "constructive programme" as the positive side of satyagraha
- swaraj from the grassroots.
- Concl: Gandhi's constructive programmes — khadi/swadeshi, national education, Hindu-Muslim unity, anti-untouchability and village self-reliance — complemented mass agitation by building the social foundations of swaraj from below, embodying the positive, nation-building dimension of satyagraha.
- Add: constructive programme (khadi/charkha/swadeshi); national schools/panchayats; Hindu-Muslim unity; anti-untouchability (Harijan); Dandi salt; self-reliance/nation-building.
3[15m] To what extent did the role of the moderates prepare a base for the wider freedom movement? Comment.
- Intro: The Moderates (1885-1905), the early Congress leaders, laid an indispensable foundation for the later, wider freedom movement despite their limited methods.
- who: Dadabhai Naoroji, G.K. Gokhale, S.N. Banerjee, Pherozeshah Mehta
- methods: "the 3 Ps" — petitions, prayers, protests; constitutional agitation, faith in British justice
- contributions/base they prepared: the economic critique of colonialism (the "drain of wealth" — Naoroji), political education/awakening, building a national platform (the Congress), demands (representation, reforms — the 1892 Act), exposing colonial exploitation, training leaders, creating national consciousness
- limitations: elitist, narrow base, slow methods (criticised by the Extremists)
- but they laid the intellectual/organisational groundwork
- the first phase of nationalism.
- Concl: Though limited to constitutional methods, the Moderates built the essential foundation of the freedom movement — an economic critique of colonialism, a national organisation and political consciousness — that the later mass phase of nationalism built upon.
- Add: Moderates (Naoroji/Gokhale/S.N. Banerjee); "drain of wealth" (Naoroji); petitions-prayers-protests; Congress (1885); political awakening; foundation of nationalism.
4[10m] Trace the rise and growth of socio-religious reform movements with special reference to Young Bengal and Brahmo Samaj.
- Intro: The 19th-century socio-religious reform movements, exemplified by the Brahmo Samaj and Young Bengal, sought to modernise and reform Indian society and religion under colonial impact.
- Brahmo Samaj (Raja Ram Mohan Roy, 1828): monotheism, rejection of idolatry/superstition/caste, the abolition of sati (1829), widow remarriage, women's rights, a rational/reformed Hinduism, Western education
- Young Bengal (Henry Vivian Derozio, the 1820s-30s): radical, rationalist, free-thinking students of Hindu College — questioned orthodoxy, tradition, superstition; championed rationalism, liberty, women's rights, free thought
- context: the colonial encounter, Western ideas, the Bengal Renaissance
- contributions: social reform, rationalism, women's upliftment, a modern outlook
- limitations: urban/elite, the Young Bengal too radical/limited
- seeds of modern India.
- Concl: The Brahmo Samaj (Ram Mohan Roy) and Young Bengal (Derozio) spearheaded 19th-century reform — combating idolatry, caste, sati and superstition while championing rationalism, women's rights and modern education — sowing the seeds of social reform and the modern Indian outlook.
- Add: Brahmo Samaj (Ram Mohan Roy, 1828; abolition of sati 1829); Young Bengal (Derozio, Hindu College); rationalism/anti-idolatry; women's rights; Bengal Renaissance; socio-religious reform.
World History
5[15m] "There arose a serious challenge to the Democratic State System between the two World Wars." Evaluate the statement.
- Intro: The interwar period (1919-39) saw a serious challenge to the democratic state system, as economic crisis and instability gave rise to totalitarian and authoritarian regimes.
- the challenge: the rise of fascism (Italy — Mussolini), Nazism (Germany — Hitler), militarism (Japan), authoritarianism — rejecting liberal democracy
- causes: the Great Depression (1929 — mass unemployment, despair), the failure of the Versailles settlement/the weak Weimar/League of Nations, fear of communism, nationalism/revanchism, the appeal of strong leaders/order
- democracies seemed weak/ineffective (economic failure, instability)
- totalitarianism offered order, jobs, national pride
- the spread: across Europe (Spain, etc.)
- culminating in WWII
- a crisis of liberal democracy
- lessons for democratic resilience.
- Concl: Between the wars, liberal democracy faced a grave challenge as the Great Depression and post-war instability fuelled the rise of fascism, Nazism and militarism — totalitarian alternatives that exploited democratic weakness and nationalism, ultimately plunging the world into the Second World War.
- Add: interwar (1919-39); fascism (Mussolini)/Nazism (Hitler)/Japanese militarism; Great Depression (1929); Versailles/weak Weimar; totalitarianism vs liberal democracy; WWII.
Post-Independence History
6[10m] Assess the main administrative issues and socio-cultural problems in the integration process of Indian Princely States.
- Intro: The integration of over 560 princely states into the Indian Union after 1947 was a monumental task, fraught with administrative and socio-cultural challenges, accomplished largely under Sardar Patel.
- the task: ~565 states (varied size/development) given the choice (the Indian Independence Act) → integration (Patel/V.P. Menon, the Instrument of Accession, the States Department)
- administrative issues: diverse legal/administrative systems, merging into provinces/unions, the privy purses, integrating bureaucracies/armies/finances, drawing boundaries
- socio-cultural problems: feudal/autocratic legacies, varied development, popular movements (against rulers), distinct identities, language, the holdouts (Junagadh, Hyderabad — police action; Kashmir — accession/war)
- democratisation of feudal states
- a unified, federal India
- "the Iron Man's" achievement.
- Concl: Integrating ~565 princely states posed huge administrative challenges (merging diverse systems, privy purses, holdouts like Hyderabad and Kashmir) and socio-cultural ones (feudal legacies, distinct identities) — overcome largely through Patel and Menon's statecraft, forging a unified India.
- Add: princely states (~565); Sardar Patel/V.P. Menon; Instrument of Accession; privy purses; Junagadh/Hyderabad (police action)/Kashmir; democratisation/integration.
Indian Society
7[15m] How does Indian society maintain continuity in traditional social values? Enumerate the changes taking place in it.
- Intro: Indian society is marked by a remarkable balance of continuity — preserving traditional social values — and change, as it adapts to modernity.
- continuity (how maintained): the family/joint family, religion/rituals/festivals, caste (in marriage/identity), language, customs, the guru-shishya/oral traditions, socialisation, samskaras, reverence for tradition, dharma/karma values
- changes taking place: nuclearisation of families, urbanisation, education, women's empowerment, declining caste rigidity (in cities), Sanskritisation/Westernisation, technology/globalisation, individualism, intercaste marriage, secular values, consumerism
- the interplay: "tradition + modernity" coexisting (Yogendra Singh — the modernisation of Indian tradition)
- selective adaptation
- a living, evolving society.
- Concl: Indian society sustains continuity through family, religion, caste and ritual values while simultaneously changing via urbanisation, education, women's empowerment and globalisation — an evolving synthesis of tradition and modernity, adapting selectively rather than abandoning its roots.
- Add: continuity (family/religion/caste/samskaras); change (nuclearisation/urbanisation/Westernisation); Sanskritisation/modernisation (Yogendra Singh); tradition + modernity; selective adaptation.
8[15m] What is Cryptocurrency? How does it affect global society? Has it been affecting Indian society also?
- Intro: Cryptocurrency, a decentralised digital currency based on blockchain, is reshaping economies and societies globally — including India — with both opportunities and risks.
- what: a digital/virtual currency secured by cryptography, decentralised (no central bank), on a blockchain/distributed ledger (Bitcoin, Ethereum)
- effect on global society: financial inclusion/innovation, borderless transactions, speculation/wealth (and loss), anonymity (misuse — money laundering, crime, terror financing), volatility, a challenge to state monetary control, energy use (mining), Web3/fintech
- on Indian society: rising adoption (young investors), speculation, regulatory uncertainty (taxed 30%, the RBI's caution, a proposed CBDC — the e-rupee), scams, fintech growth
- disruption + risk
- needs regulation, financial literacy
- a transformative but double-edged technology.
- Concl: Cryptocurrency, a blockchain-based decentralised currency, is transforming global and Indian society — enabling financial innovation and inclusion but also speculation, volatility, misuse and regulatory challenges; harnessing it responsibly needs regulation, literacy and alternatives like the RBI's digital rupee.
- Add: cryptocurrency/blockchain (Bitcoin/Ethereum); decentralised/borderless; volatility/money laundering; India (30% tax, RBI caution); CBDC/e-rupee; regulation needed.
9[15m] Discuss the main objectives of Population Education and point out the measures to achieve them in India in detail.
- Intro: Population Education aims to create awareness of population dynamics and their relationship with quality of life, equipping people to make responsible decisions.
- objectives: awareness of population issues (growth, resources, environment, family size), understanding the consequences of population growth, promoting a small-family norm/responsible parenthood, reproductive/sexual health awareness, gender equality, delaying marriage, improving quality of life
- measures in India: integration into school/college curricula, the National Population Policy (2000), awareness campaigns (media), family-planning/welfare programmes, women's education/empowerment, ASHA/health workers, incentives, adolescent education (the AEP)
- linking population with development/sustainability
- from population control to reproductive choice/empowerment
- informed, responsible citizens.
- Concl: Population Education seeks to build awareness of population dynamics and quality of life, promoting responsible parenthood and reproductive health; India pursues it through curricula, the National Population Policy, women's education and awareness — shifting from control to informed, empowered choice.
- Add: Population Education (awareness/small-family norm); reproductive health/responsible parenthood; National Population Policy (2000); women's education/empowerment; Adolescence Education Programme; quality of life.
10[15m] What are the main socio-economic implications arising out of the development of IT industries in major cities of India?
- Intro: The growth of IT industries in India's major cities has had far-reaching socio-economic implications, transforming economies, urban life and society.
- economic implications: job creation (direct/indirect), high incomes, a services-led economy, exports/forex, the new middle class, ancillary growth (real estate, retail), city economies (Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune)
- social implications: urbanisation/migration, a changed lifestyle/consumption, women's workforce participation, nuclear families, work culture (long hours, stress), the digital culture
- negative: urban stress (infrastructure, traffic, housing, cost of living), inequality (IT haves vs have-nots), regional skew, the rural-urban divide, cultural change
- "IT cities" reshaping society
- uneven, transformative growth.
- Concl: IT industries have powered India's cities economically (jobs, incomes, a services economy, a new middle class) and socially (urbanisation, women's employment, changed lifestyles) — but also strained infrastructure and widened inequality, making their impact transformative yet uneven.
- Add: IT industry (Bengaluru/Hyderabad/Pune); jobs/services economy/exports; new middle class; urbanisation/women's workforce; infrastructure stress/inequality; digital culture.
11[10m] Examine the role of 'Gig Economy' in the process of empowerment of women in India.
- Intro: The gig economy — flexible, platform-based, on-demand work — offers significant potential for the empowerment of women in India, alongside real limitations.
- how it empowers women: flexibility (work-life balance, home-based), low entry barriers, income/financial independence, diverse opportunities (delivery, freelancing, e-commerce, tutoring, beauty services — Urban Company), entrepreneurship, bypassing some workplace barriers, reaching homemakers
- examples: women in online selling, ride-hailing, content, micro-tasks
- but limitations: precarity (no job security/benefits/social security), low/uncertain pay, algorithmic control, safety concerns, the digital divide, the double burden, informal-sector vulnerabilities
- measures: social security (the Code on Social Security 2020), skilling, safety, fair platforms
- flexible opportunity vs precarity.
- Concl: The gig economy can empower Indian women through flexible, accessible, income-generating work — aiding financial independence and entrepreneurship — but its precarity, lack of social security and safety concerns mean realising this potential needs protection, skilling and fair platform practices.
- Add: gig economy (platform/on-demand); flexibility/financial independence (Urban Company/delivery); precarity/no social security; algorithmic control; Code on Social Security 2020; digital divide.
12[10m] Examine the uniqueness of tribal knowledge systems when compared with mainstream knowledge and cultural systems.
- Intro: Tribal knowledge systems are unique, holistic and ecologically rooted bodies of wisdom that differ markedly from mainstream knowledge and cultural systems.
- uniqueness: ecological/nature-centric (intimate knowledge of forests, biodiversity, medicinal plants — ethnobotany), holistic/community-based (vs individualistic), oral transmission (vs written), sustainable living (in harmony with nature), traditional medicine/healing, agriculture (shifting cultivation, seed diversity), art/crafts, customary law/self-governance, a distinct worldview/cosmology
- vs mainstream: experiential/practical vs theoretical/formal, collective vs individual, sustainable vs extractive
- value: biodiversity conservation, climate wisdom, medicine, cultural diversity
- threats: erosion, biopiracy, displacement
- protection: documentation, IPR (the TKDL), the Forest Rights Act, recognition
- invaluable indigenous wisdom.
- Concl: Tribal knowledge systems are unique in their ecological, holistic, community-based and orally transmitted character — embodying sustainable living, traditional medicine and biodiversity wisdom; preserving and respecting them (through documentation, IPR and rights) is vital against their erosion and for sustainability.
- Add: tribal/indigenous knowledge (ethnobotany/traditional medicine); holistic/oral/community-based; sustainable living; biopiracy/erosion; TKDL/IPR; Forest Rights Act.
Geography
13[15m] Discuss the multi-dimensional implications of uneven distribution of mineral oil in the world.
- Intro: The highly uneven global distribution of mineral oil (petroleum) has profound multi-dimensional implications — economic, political, strategic and environmental.
- uneven distribution: concentrated in a few regions — the Middle East (Gulf — ~half of reserves), Russia, the US, Venezuela, Africa; many consumers (Asia, Europe) import
- economic implications: oil wealth/rentier economies (OPEC), price volatility, trade balances, import dependence (India ~85%)
- political/strategic: geopolitics, conflicts/wars (the Gulf), OPEC's power, energy security, alliances, chokepoints (Hormuz), the "resource curse"
- environmental: pollution, climate change, spills, the push for renewables
- social: development funded by oil, or distorted
- a driver of global power and conflict
- the energy-transition imperative.
- Concl: Oil's uneven distribution shapes the global order — concentrating wealth and power (the Gulf, OPEC), driving geopolitics, conflict and import dependence (as for India), and carrying heavy environmental costs — making energy security and the renewable transition strategic imperatives.
- Add: oil distribution (Middle East/Gulf ~half; OPEC); price volatility/import dependence (India ~85%); geopolitics/conflicts (Hormuz); resource curse; climate/spills; energy transition.
14[15m] How do the melting of the Arctic ice and the glaciers of the Antarctic differently affect the weather patterns and human activities on the earth?
- Intro: The melting of Arctic sea ice and Antarctic glaciers, though both products of global warming, affect weather patterns and human activities differently due to their distinct geographies.
- Arctic: mostly sea ice over ocean (surrounded by land/people) → melting raises little sea level directly (already floating) but: albedo loss/amplified warming, an altered jet stream/polar vortex → extreme mid-latitude weather (cold snaps, heatwaves), opening shipping routes (the Northern Sea Route), resource access, threats to indigenous peoples/wildlife (polar bears)
- Antarctic: land-based ice sheets/glaciers → melting raises global sea levels significantly (coastal flooding, island nations), cold-water input altering ocean currents (the thermohaline circulation), less direct human habitation but a global impact
- both: feedback loops, climate disruption
- differential effects.
- Concl: Arctic (sea-ice) melting chiefly disrupts weather (the jet stream, extreme events), opens shipping and threatens indigenous life with little direct sea-level effect, whereas Antarctic (land-ice) melting drives major global sea-level rise and ocean-current changes — distinct impacts of a shared warming crisis.
- Add: Arctic sea ice (albedo/jet stream/Northern Sea Route) vs Antarctic land ice (sea-level rise); polar vortex/extreme weather; thermohaline circulation; island-nation flooding; climate feedback.
15[15m] Briefly mention the alignment of major mountain ranges of the world and explain their impact on local weather conditions, with examples.
- Intro: The alignment (orientation) of major mountain ranges critically influences local and regional weather by modifying winds, rainfall and temperature.
- major ranges & alignment: the Himalayas (east-west — block cold Central Asian winds, trap the monsoon → heavy rain on the south, the rain shadow/Tibet desert beyond), the Rockies/Andes (north-south — block westerlies → rain shadow, the Andes and the Atacama), the Alps (east-west)
- impact on weather: orographic rainfall (windward wet — Cherrapunji, the Western Ghats), rain shadow (leeward dry — the Deccan, Patagonia), barriers to winds/air masses, temperature inversion, local winds (Chinook/Foehn)
- alignment relative to prevailing winds is key (perpendicular = maximum effect)
- examples: the Himalayas shaping the monsoon
- mountains as climate-makers.
- Concl: The alignment of mountain ranges relative to prevailing winds shapes weather — the east-west Himalayas trapping the monsoon and blocking cold winds (heavy rain plus the Tibetan rain shadow), and the north-south Andes/Rockies creating windward rain and leeward deserts — making ranges decisive in regional climate.
- Add: Himalayas (E-W — monsoon barrier/Tibet rain shadow); orographic rain (Cherrapunji/Western Ghats); rain shadow (Deccan/Atacama); Andes/Rockies (N-S); Foehn/Chinook winds; alignment vs winds.
16[10m] Why is India considered as a subcontinent? Elaborate your answer.
- Intro: India is termed a "subcontinent" because of its vast size, distinct geographical identity and physical separation from the rest of Asia.
- reasons: a large, distinct landmass (the Indian Plate — separated from Asia by the Himalayas)
- physical boundaries: the Himalayas (north), the seas (the Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal) — a clearly demarcated unit
- geological distinctiveness (the Indian Plate, once part of Gondwana, collided with Eurasia)
- diversity: varied physiography (mountains, plains, plateaus, deserts, coasts), climate, vegetation — a "mini-continent"
- cultural/demographic distinctiveness, a huge population
- comprising India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka
- a self-contained geographical realm.
- Concl: India is a subcontinent because of its vast size, the Indian Plate's distinct geology, and clear natural boundaries (the Himalayas and surrounding seas) that set it apart as a self-contained, diverse "mini-continent" within Asia.
- Add: subcontinent (Indian Plate/Gondwana); Himalayas + seas (natural boundaries); India-Eurasia collision; diverse physiography/climate; "mini-continent"; South Asia.
17[10m] Mention the global occurrence of volcanic eruptions in 2021 and their impact on the regional environment.
- Intro: The year 2021 witnessed several notable volcanic eruptions worldwide, with significant regional environmental impacts.
- major 2021 eruptions: La Palma (Cumbre Vieja, Canary Islands — lava destroying homes/farmland), Mount Nyiragongo (DR Congo — lava near Goma, displacement), Mount Etna (Italy — repeated), Fagradalsfjall (Iceland), Mount Semeru (Indonesia, Dec), Taal (Philippines)
- environmental impacts: lava flows (destroying land/property), ashfall (air quality, aviation, agriculture), volcanic gases (SO2 — acid rain, respiratory), evacuation/displacement, soil fertility (long-term), local cooling (aerosols), lahars
- regional: livelihoods, ecosystems, health
- along plate boundaries/the Ring of Fire
- both destructive and (long-term) soil-enriching
- disaster preparedness.
- Concl: 2021's eruptions — La Palma, Nyiragongo, Semeru and others — caused regional environmental damage through lava, ashfall, toxic gases and displacement, while enriching soils over time; concentrated along plate boundaries, they underscore the need for monitoring and preparedness.
- Add: 2021 eruptions (La Palma/Cumbre Vieja; Nyiragongo-Goma; Semeru; Etna); lava/ashfall/SO2; displacement/air quality; Ring of Fire; soil fertility; preparedness.
18[10m] What are the environmental implications of the reclamation of water bodies into urban land use? Explain with examples.
- Intro: The reclamation of water bodies (lakes, wetlands, floodplains) for urban land use carries serious environmental implications, undermining ecological and hydrological balance.
- the practice: filling/encroaching on lakes, wetlands, ponds and rivers for construction/real estate (urban expansion)
- environmental implications: loss of natural drainage → urban flooding (Chennai 2015, Mumbai, Bengaluru), groundwater depletion (lost recharge), loss of biodiversity/habitat, the heat-island effect, water scarcity, pollution, disrupted ecosystem services (the wetland's filtering)
- examples: Bengaluru's vanishing/frothing lakes (Bellandur), Chennai's marshlands, the East Kolkata Wetlands
- social: livelihoods (fishers), water security
- a short-term gain, long-term loss
- measures: protection (wetland rules), restoration, eco-sensitive planning
- the ecological cost of urbanisation.
- Concl: Reclaiming water bodies for urban use destroys natural drainage and recharge — causing urban flooding (Chennai, Bengaluru), groundwater loss, biodiversity decline and heat islands; protecting and restoring wetlands and lakes is essential for sustainable, water-secure cities.
- Add: water-body reclamation/encroachment; urban flooding (Chennai 2015/Bengaluru); groundwater/recharge loss; Bellandur lake/East Kolkata Wetlands; wetland rules; ecosystem services.
19[10m] Despite India being one of the countries of Gondwanaland, its mining industry contributes much less to its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in percentage. Discuss.
- Intro: Despite being a Gondwanaland fragment rich in minerals, India's mining industry contributes a relatively small share to its GDP — a paradox of potential versus performance.
- Gondwana endowment: India's ancient shield/plateau (the Peninsular block — part of Gondwana) holds rich mineral deposits (coal — the Gondwana coalfields, iron, manganese, bauxite, mica)
- yet a low GDP share (~2-3%): reasons — under-exploration (much area unexplored), regulatory/policy hurdles (clearances, the earlier captive-allocation issues), land/environmental/forest conflicts (tribal areas), technology/investment gaps, illegal mining, the dominance of services in GDP, value addition done abroad, infrastructure
- a services-led economy
- potential under-realised
- reforms (the MMDR amendments, auctions, exploration)
- untapped mineral wealth.
- Concl: India's Gondwana geology endows it with rich minerals (coal, iron, bauxite), yet mining contributes only ~2-3% of GDP due to under-exploration, regulatory and environmental hurdles, technology gaps and a services-dominated economy — a potential that reforms aim to unlock.
- Add: Gondwana shield (Peninsular block); minerals (Gondwana coal/iron/bauxite); low GDP share (~2-3%); under-exploration/clearances; forest-tribal conflict; MMDR reforms/auctions.
20[10m] Differentiate the causes of landslides in the Himalayan region and the Western Ghats.
- Intro: Landslides afflict both the Himalayas and the Western Ghats, but their causes differ owing to the contrasting geology, tectonics and climate of the two regions.
- Himalayan landslides: young, fragile, tectonically active (rising) mountains, steep slopes, weak/fractured rock, frequent earthquakes (a seismic zone), heavy monsoon/cloudbursts, glacial activity, snowmelt, plus human triggers (roads, dams, deforestation, construction)
- Western Ghats landslides: older, stable mountains but steep, very heavy orographic rainfall (the prime trigger), deep weathering/lateritic soils, deforestation, quarrying, construction, plantation/land-use change (Kerala/Wayanad, Kodagu)
- key difference: the Himalayas — tectonics + seismicity + relief; the Western Ghats — extreme rainfall + weathering + anthropogenic
- common: monsoon + human activity
- region-specific mitigation.
- Concl: Himalayan landslides stem chiefly from young, seismically active, fragile geology and steep relief plus heavy rain, whereas Western Ghats landslides arise mainly from intense orographic rainfall, deep weathering and human activity — distinct causes (tectonics vs rainfall) needing region-specific mitigation.
- Add: Himalaya (young/fragile/seismic + cloudbursts) vs Western Ghats (orographic rain + lateritic weathering); deforestation/construction; Wayanad/Kodagu; monsoon trigger; region-specific mitigation.
GS-1 · 2020
Art & Culture
1[15m] Persian literary sources of medieval India reflect the spirit of the age. Comment.
- Intro: Persian literary sources of medieval India — chronicles, court histories, biographies and poetry — vividly reflect the spirit, politics and culture of their age.
- types: court chronicles/histories (Minhaj's Tabaqat-i-Nasiri, Barani's Tarikh-i-Firuz Shahi, Abul Fazl's Akbarnama/Ain-i-Akbari), memoirs (Babur's Baburnama, Jahangir's Tuzuk), poetry (Amir Khusrau), travelogues, malfuzat (Sufi discourses)
- how they reflect the age: political events, administration, court life, the rulers' ideology (legitimacy, kingship), religion (Islam, Sufism, syncretism), society/economy, the composite Indo-Persian culture
- but: court-centric/patronised (bias toward rulers), elite, sometimes flattering
- a window into the Sultanate/Mughal worldview
- Indo-Persian synthesis
- invaluable yet partial sources.
- Concl: Persian literary sources — from Barani and Abul Fazl to the Baburnama — richly mirror medieval India's politics, court culture, religion and Indo-Persian synthesis, capturing the spirit of the age, even if their court-centric, patronised nature demands critical use.
- Add: Persian sources (Barani's Tarikh-i-Firuz Shahi; Abul Fazl's Akbarnama/Ain-i-Akbari; Baburnama; Amir Khusrau); court chronicles/memoirs; Indo-Persian culture; court bias.
2[15m] Indian Philosophy and tradition played a significant role in conceiving and shaping the monuments and their art in India. Discuss.
- Intro: Indian philosophy and tradition — religious, cosmological and symbolic — profoundly shaped the conception, design and art of India's monuments.
- how philosophy shaped monuments: temple architecture embodies cosmology (the temple as the cosmos/Mount Meru, the garbhagriha as the womb-sacred centre, the Vastu Shastra/Shilpa Shastra)
- symbolism: the mandala plan, iconography (deities, mudras, symbols), the stupa (Buddhist — the cosmos/Buddha's presence), the chaitya/vihara
- religious traditions: Hindu (Nagara/Dravida/Vesara styles), Buddhist (stupas, Ajanta), Jain (Dilwara), Islamic (the mosque/tomb — paradise symbolism)
- philosophy of harmony, proportion, sacred geometry, the union of art and spirituality
- examples: Khajuraho, Konark (the chariot of the Sun), the stupas
- art as spiritual expression.
- Concl: Indian monuments are physical embodiments of philosophy and tradition — temples as cosmic diagrams (Mount Meru, the mandala) governed by the Shilpa/Vastu Shastra, and stupas symbolising the Buddhist cosmos — making their art and architecture a profound expression of India's spiritual worldview.
- Add: Vastu/Shilpa Shastra; temple as cosmos/Mount Meru; garbhagriha/mandala plan; stupa (Buddhist cosmology); Nagara/Dravida styles; Konark (Sun chariot); sacred geometry.
3[10m] Pala period is the most significant phase in the history of Buddhism in India. Enumerate.
- Intro: The Pala period (8th-12th century) in eastern India was the most significant later phase of Buddhism in India, a final flourishing before its decline.
- the Palas as patrons: ardent Buddhist rulers (Gopala, Dharmapala, Devapala) — the last great royal patrons of Buddhism
- contributions: the great monastic universities — Nalanda (revived), Vikramashila (founded by Dharmapala), Odantapuri, Somapura (Paharpur — UNESCO)
- centres of learning attracting scholars (from Tibet, China, Southeast Asia)
- the flourishing of Mahayana and Vajrayana (Tantric) Buddhism
- Pala art (the Pala school of bronze/stone sculpture, Buddhist iconography, palm-leaf manuscripts)
- the spread of Buddhism to Tibet (Atisha Dipankara), Southeast Asia
- after the Palas, Buddhism declined in India (the Turkish invasions destroyed Nalanda/Vikramashila)
- a last golden age.
- Concl: The Pala period was Buddhism's last great phase in India — its rulers patronising the famed universities of Nalanda, Vikramashila and Somapura, nurturing Vajrayana Buddhism and Pala art, and spreading the faith to Tibet — before its decline after the Turkish invasions.
- Add: Palas (8th-12th c.; Dharmapala/Devapala); Nalanda/Vikramashila/Somapura (Paharpur — UNESCO); Vajrayana/Tantric Buddhism; Pala bronze art; Atisha (to Tibet); decline post-invasions.
4[10m] The rock-cut architecture represents one of the most important sources of our knowledge of early Indian art and history. Discuss.
- Intro: Rock-cut architecture — structures hewn from living rock — is among the most important sources for understanding early Indian art, religion and history.
- what: caves/temples carved into rock (not built) — for Buddhist, Hindu and Jain worship
- evolution: the Barabar caves (Mauryan, Ashoka — the earliest), Buddhist chaityas/viharas (Ajanta, Karle, Bhaja, Ellora), Hindu (Ellora — the Kailasa temple monolith, Elephanta), Jain (Ellora, Udayagiri)
- why a key source: well-preserved (durable rock), the Ajanta paintings/sculptures (a record of art, daily life, Jataka tales, dress, society), inscriptions (donors, dynasties — history), religious evolution
- examples: Ajanta (paintings), Ellora (multi-religious), Mahabalipuram
- patronage (royal, guilds, merchants)
- a "frozen" record of early India
- art, faith and history in stone.
- Concl: Rock-cut architecture — from the Barabar caves to Ajanta and Ellora — preserves, in durable stone, the paintings, sculpture, inscriptions and religious life of early India, making it an invaluable source of its art, history and the evolution of Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism.
- Add: rock-cut architecture (Barabar/Ajanta/Ellora/Karle); chaitya-vihara; Kailasa temple (Ellora monolith); Ajanta paintings (Jatakas/daily life); inscriptions; multi-religious patronage.
Modern History
5[15m] Since the decade of the 1920s, the national movement acquired various ideological strands and thereby expanded its social base. Discuss.
- Intro: From the 1920s, the Indian national movement broadened ideologically and socially, drawing in new groups and ideas that transformed it into a truly mass movement.
- the broadening: Gandhi's mass mobilisation (Non-Cooperation 1920, Civil Disobedience 1930) — bringing in peasants, workers, women, the middle class
- ideological strands: Gandhian (non-violence, swaraj), the Left/socialist (the rise of socialism — Nehru, Bose; the Congress Socialist Party 1934), communist (workers/peasants — the CPI, the Kisan Sabha), revolutionary (Bhagat Singh, the HSRA), the communal/separate streams, the Dalit movement (Ambedkar), the labour/trade-union movement
- expanded social base: peasants (the Kisan Sabhas), workers (AITUC), women, students, the depressed classes
- from elite to mass
- a many-stranded, broad-based movement.
- Concl: From the 1920s, the national movement acquired diverse ideological strands — Gandhian, socialist, communist, revolutionary and the assertion of peasants, workers, women and Dalits — vastly expanding its social base from an elite affair into a broad-based mass struggle.
- Add: Non-Cooperation (1920)/Civil Disobedience (1930); Gandhian/socialist (Nehru/Bose)/communist (CPI)/revolutionary (Bhagat Singh); Kisan Sabhas/AITUC; Ambedkar (Dalit); mass base.
6[10m] Evaluate the policies of Lord Curzon and their long-term implications on the national movements.
- Intro: Lord Curzon's policies (Viceroy 1899-1905), though aimed at efficient administration, had far-reaching long-term implications that fuelled the national movement.
- his policies: administrative efficiency/reforms, the Calcutta Corporation Act, the Universities Act (1904 — control of education), the Official Secrets Act, archaeology/the ASI (preservation), the famine commission, the partition of Bengal (1905 — the most consequential)
- long-term implications: the Partition of Bengal (on communal/divide-and-rule lines) → the Swadeshi/Boycott movement (1905), mass agitation, militant nationalism (the Extremists), Hindu-Muslim divide (seeds of separatism), boosting national consciousness
- his arrogance/anti-Indian measures alienating the educated → galvanising nationalism
- "curbing" backfiring
- a catalyst for the freedom struggle.
- Concl: Curzon's policies — above all the 1905 Partition of Bengal — though framed as administrative, were seen as repressive and divisive, igniting the Swadeshi movement, militant nationalism and communal cleavages; ironically, his measures galvanised rather than curbed the national movement.
- Add: Lord Curzon (1899-1905); Partition of Bengal (1905); Universities Act (1904)/Official Secrets Act; Swadeshi/Boycott movement; militant nationalism (Extremists); divide-and-rule.
Indian Society
7[15m] How have digital initiatives in India contributed to the functioning of the education system in the country? Elaborate your answer.
- Intro: Digital initiatives have significantly transformed the functioning of India's education system, enhancing access, delivery and quality, especially post-pandemic.
- key initiatives: DIKSHA (digital content), SWAYAM/SWAYAM Prabha (online courses/MOOCs), the National Digital Library, PM eVIDYA, virtual labs, the NEP 2020's digital push, the NDEAR
- contributions: expanded access (remote/rural learning), continuity (during COVID lockdowns — online classes), self-paced/blended learning, teacher training, quality content, inclusivity (regional languages), reduced costs, skill development
- but limitations: the digital divide (connectivity, devices — exclusion of the poor/rural/girls), screen fatigue, the loss of interaction, quality/teacher capacity
- a tool to democratise education if the divide is bridged
- EdTech growth.
- Concl: Digital initiatives (DIKSHA, SWAYAM, PM eVIDYA) have expanded access, ensured continuity and enriched India's education — especially during the pandemic — but realising their full promise requires bridging the digital divide so that technology democratises rather than deepens educational inequality.
- Add: DIKSHA/SWAYAM/PM eVIDYA; NEP 2020 (digital); online learning (COVID continuity); digital divide (connectivity/devices); regional-language content; EdTech.
8[15m] Customs and traditions suppress reason leading to obscurantism. Do you agree?
- Intro: While customs and traditions can suppress reason and breed obscurantism, this is not universally true — many traditions also embody wisdom and adapt to reason.
- where they suppress reason (obscurantism): blind/dogmatic adherence, superstitions (witch-hunting, sati historically), caste/untouchability, gender discrimination (purdah, female foeticide), rituals over rationality, resistance to science/reform, "because it has always been done"
- but: not all traditions are irrational — many carry accumulated wisdom (ecological practices, social cohesion, ethics, festivals), and traditions evolve/reform (the reform movements, science within tradition)
- the issue is uncritical/rigid adherence, not tradition per se
- reason + tradition can coexist (a "critical traditionalism")
- reform vs blind faith
- rationalism (the reformers — Roy, Phule, Ambedkar).
- Concl: Customs and traditions can foster obscurantism when followed blindly and dogmatically (superstition, caste, gender bias), but tradition is not inherently anti-reason — much of it embodies wisdom and can be reformed; the remedy is critical, rational engagement, not wholesale rejection.
- Add: obscurantism (superstition/caste/gender bias); blind vs critical adherence; reform movements (Roy/Phule/Ambedkar); tradition as wisdom; rationalism; "critical traditionalism".
9[15m] Is diversity and pluralism in India under threat due to globalisation? Justify your answer.
- Intro: Globalisation poses real challenges to India's diversity and pluralism, but it also offers avenues to celebrate and sustain them — making the threat partial, not absolute.
- threats: cultural homogenisation ("McDonaldisation"/Westernisation), erosion of local languages/crafts/cuisines, dominance of global/consumer culture, weakening of traditional identities, commodification of culture
- but also: globalisation can revive/promote diversity (global platforms for local art — yoga, Bollywood, cuisine; tourism; the diaspora; digital preservation), "glocalisation" (local adapting global), cultural exchange
- reactive identity assertion (sometimes sharpening, sometimes defensive)
- India's resilience (a deep-rooted plural civilisation)
- selective adaptation
- both homogenising and pluralising forces
- a managed coexistence.
- Concl: Globalisation does threaten India's diversity through homogenisation and the erosion of local cultures, yet it also provides platforms to project and renew them ("glocalisation"); India's deep-rooted pluralism is resilient, so the threat is real but not fatal, demanding conscious cultural preservation.
- Add: globalisation/homogenisation ("McDonaldisation"); erosion of languages/crafts; "glocalisation"; diaspora/global platforms (yoga/Bollywood); cultural commodification; pluralism's resilience.
10[15m] Account for the huge flooding of million cities in India including the smart ones like Hyderabad and Pune. Suggest lasting remedial measures.
- Intro: Recurrent severe flooding of India's million-plus cities — including "smart" ones like Hyderabad and Pune — reflects systemic urban-planning and governance failures, demanding lasting remedies.
- causes: unplanned/rapid urbanisation, encroachment on lakes/wetlands/floodplains/drains (loss of natural drainage), concretisation (reduced infiltration), inadequate/clogged stormwater drains, poor solid-waste management, the heat-island/climate change (extreme rainfall/cloudbursts), violation of building norms, weak early warning
- examples: Hyderabad (2020), Chennai (2015), Mumbai, Bengaluru, Pune
- remedial measures: restore water bodies/drainage (the "sponge city" concept), permeable surfaces, rainwater harvesting, enforce land-use/zoning, desilt drains, urban wetlands, early warning, climate-resilient planning, the AMRUT/Smart Cities focus on drainage
- ecology-sensitive urbanism.
- Concl: Million-city floods stem from unplanned urbanisation that destroys natural drainage and encroaches on water bodies, compounded by climate change; lasting remedies require restoring drainage and wetlands ("sponge cities"), enforcing zoning, and climate-resilient, ecology-sensitive urban planning.
- Add: urban flooding (Hyderabad 2020/Chennai 2015); encroached drains/wetlands; concretisation/lost infiltration; "sponge city"; stormwater/desilting; climate-resilient planning/AMRUT.
11[10m] Do you agree that regionalism in India appears to be a consequence of rising cultural assertiveness? Argue.
- Intro: Regionalism in India is, in significant part, a consequence of rising cultural assertiveness — though it also springs from economic and political factors.
- cultural assertiveness driving regionalism: pride in language, ethnicity, culture, identity (the "sons of the soil"), demands for recognition/autonomy/statehood (linguistic states, the Dravidian movement, the Northeast)
- but also other roots: economic (regional disparities, demands for resources/development — Telangana), political (regional parties, federal tensions), historical/geographic
- forms: demand for statehood, autonomy, anti-migrant sentiment, secessionism (extreme)
- positive (cultural preservation, federalism) vs negative (parochialism, conflict)
- examples: linguistic reorganisation, the Dravidian/Assam movements
- identity + development
- accommodated by federalism.
- Concl: Rising cultural assertiveness — pride in language, ethnicity and identity — is indeed a major source of Indian regionalism, though economic disparity and politics also fuel it; channelled through federalism it preserves diversity, but unchecked it can turn parochial or secessionist.
- Add: regionalism (cultural assertiveness/"sons of the soil"); linguistic states/Dravidian movement; economic disparity (Telangana); regional parties/federalism; identity vs parochialism.
12[10m] COVID-19 pandemic accelerated class inequalities and poverty in India. Comment.
- Intro: The COVID-19 pandemic sharply accelerated class inequalities and poverty in India, hitting the poor and informal workers hardest while sparing the affluent.
- how it deepened inequality: the lockdown devastated informal/daily-wage workers (job/income loss, the migrant-worker crisis), the poor lacked savings/safety nets, while the wealthy/salaried/digital economy coped better (a "K-shaped recovery")
- widening gaps: the digital divide (online education/work — excluding the poor), health inequities, women's job loss, MSME collapse
- poverty: millions pushed back into poverty, hunger, distress
- wealth concentration (the rich got richer — billionaire wealth rose)
- data: rising poverty/unemployment (CMIE), the Oxfam reports
- measures: PMGKY/relief, but structural inequality exposed
- a regressive shock.
- Concl: COVID-19 was a deeply regressive shock — destroying informal livelihoods and pushing millions into poverty while the affluent and digital economy thrived — producing a "K-shaped" widening of class inequality that exposed and deepened India's structural disparities.
- Add: COVID lockdown/migrant crisis; informal-sector job loss; "K-shaped recovery"; digital divide; rising poverty/unemployment (CMIE/Oxfam); PMGKY relief; wealth concentration.
13[10m] Has caste lost its relevance in understanding the multi-cultural Indian society? Elaborate your answer with illustrations.
- Intro: Despite modernisation, caste has not lost its relevance in understanding multicultural Indian society — it persists, adapts and remains central to social, political and economic life.
- continued relevance: caste in marriage (endogamy persists), identity, discrimination/atrocities (against Dalits), reservations/affirmative action, caste in politics (vote banks, mobilisation), economic inequality (caste-class overlap), honour killings, manual scavenging
- adaptation: caste associations, "substantialisation", new assertions (Dalit/OBC politics), caste in urban/modern settings
- illustrations: caste-census debates, reservation politics, inter-caste-marriage resistance, caste atrocities (NCRB)
- but some erosion (urban anonymity, mobility)
- caste persists in new forms
- a key lens for Indian society
- not obsolete, but transformed.
- Concl: Caste remains highly relevant to understanding Indian society — persisting in marriage, discrimination, politics and economic life, and adapting into new assertive forms — even as urbanisation erodes some rigidities; it is transformed, not obsolete, and indispensable to social analysis.
- Add: caste (endogamy/discrimination/atrocities — NCRB); reservations/caste politics; caste-class overlap; "substantialisation"; Dalit/OBC assertion; caste census; persistence in new forms.
Geography
14[15m] Examine the status of forest resources of India and its resultant impact on climate change.
- Intro: India's forest resources, a vital ecological asset, are under pressure; their status critically affects, and is affected by, climate change.
- status: forest/tree cover ~24-25% of land (ISFR — the target is 33%), slowly increasing (afforestation, plantations) but with quality/dense-forest concerns, regional variation (the Northeast, Western Ghats rich; plains poor), degradation, deforestation pressure (mining, projects, encroachment)
- impact on climate change: forests as carbon sinks (mitigation — India's NDC pledges an additional 2.5-3 billion tonnes CO2 sink by 2030), biodiversity, the water cycle, soil, microclimate; deforestation → emissions
- climate impact on forests: shifting biomes, fires, pests
- measures: afforestation (the Green India Mission, CAMPA), the FRA, conservation
- forests central to climate goals
- a two-way relationship.
- Concl: India's forest cover (~24%, below the 33% goal) is slowly growing but quality-stressed; as carbon sinks they are central to climate mitigation (India's NDC sink target), even as climate change threatens them — making forest conservation and afforestation (the Green India Mission) vital to both ecology and climate.
- Add: forest cover ~24% (ISFR; 33% target); carbon sink (NDC — 2.5-3 bn tonnes CO2 by 2030); deforestation/degradation; Green India Mission/CAMPA; biodiversity/water cycle; FRA.
15[15m] India has immense potential for solar energy though there are regional variations in its developments. Elaborate.
- Intro: India has immense solar-energy potential, but its development is marked by significant regional variation tied to geography and policy.
- the potential: ~300 sunny days, high insolation (~5,000 trillion kWh/year potential), a leader in solar (the 500 GW renewable/solar target, the ISA)
- regional variations: high potential/development in sun-rich, arid states — Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra (deserts/plateaus, available land, clear skies)
- low in the cloudy/forested/hilly Northeast, the rainy/cloudy east, dense regions (less insolation, land scarcity)
- reasons: insolation differences, land availability, policy/investment, grid, the DISCOM health
- examples: Bhadla (Rajasthan), Pavagada (Karnataka)
- measures: rooftop solar, the Northeast push, storage
- geography-shaped but expanding.
- Concl: India's vast solar potential (300 sunny days) is unevenly developed — concentrated in the sun-rich, land-abundant western and southern states (Rajasthan's Bhadla, Karnataka's Pavagada) and limited in the cloudy, land-scarce Northeast and east — shaped by insolation, land and policy, with rooftop and storage solutions widening the spread.
- Add: solar potential (~300 sunny days; 500 GW target/ISA); regional concentration (Rajasthan/Gujarat/Karnataka); Bhadla/Pavagada parks; insolation/land variation; rooftop solar; Northeast gap.
16[15m] The interlinking of rivers can provide viable solutions to the multi-dimensional inter-related problems of droughts, floods and interrupted navigation. Critically examine.
- Intro: The interlinking of rivers (ILR) is proposed as a grand solution to India's droughts, floods and navigation problems, but it faces serious ecological, economic and social challenges.
- the proposal: the National River Linking Project — transferring water from surplus (Himalayan/eastern) to deficit (peninsular/western) basins via canals/reservoirs (the Himalayan + Peninsular components — e.g., Ken-Betwa)
- potential benefits: drought relief (water to dry regions), flood control (diverting surplus), irrigation, hydropower, navigation, water security
- critical concerns: huge cost, ecological damage (rivers, forests, biodiversity, the displacement of people), the disruption of river ecology/deltas, inter-state/international disputes (Bangladesh), the questionable assumption of "surplus", submergence, the monsoon's role
- alternatives: local water harvesting, watershed management, efficiency
- examples: Ken-Betwa (started)
- a contested mega-project.
- Concl: River interlinking could ease droughts, floods and navigation by transferring surplus water, but its enormous costs, ecological and social damage, displacement and inter-state/international disputes make it deeply contested — suggesting that local water management may often be wiser than grand inter-basin transfers.
- Add: National River Linking Project (Himalayan/Peninsular); Ken-Betwa link; drought/flood/navigation; ecological damage/displacement; inter-state/Bangladesh disputes; watershed alternatives.
17[10m] Account for the present location of iron and steel industries away from the source of raw material, by giving examples.
- Intro: Modern iron and steel industries increasingly locate away from raw-material sources, reflecting changing locational factors beyond proximity to ore and coal.
- traditional location: near raw materials (iron ore + coking coal) — the Chota Nagpur plateau (Jamshedpur, Bokaro, Durgapur — the mineral belt) to minimise transport of bulky inputs
- shift away from sources — reasons: coastal location (imported coking coal, ore export, port access — Vizag, Salem, Mangalore, Hazira), the market (demand centres), better technology/transport (cheaper to move), water/power availability, government policy/balanced regional development, labour
- examples: Vizag Steel (coastal), Bhadravati, the new coastal plants
- "footloose" tendencies, the pull of ports/markets
- globalisation (imported inputs)
- evolving location logic.
- Concl: While early iron and steel plants clustered near ore and coal (the Chota Nagpur belt), modern plants increasingly favour coastal sites (for imported coal and exports — Vizag), markets, and policy-driven locations — reflecting how technology, trade and demand have loosened the pull of raw-material sources.
- Add: iron-steel (Chota Nagpur — Jamshedpur/Bokaro); coastal shift (Vizag/Hazira — imported coal/ports); market pull; transport/technology; balanced regional policy; footloose tendency.
18[10m] How will the melting of Himalayan glaciers have a far-reaching impact on the water resources of India?
- Intro: The melting of Himalayan glaciers, accelerated by climate change, will have far-reaching and double-edged impacts on India's water resources.
- the Himalayas as the "Water Tower of Asia": glaciers feed the perennial rivers (the Ganga, Brahmaputra, Indus) — crucial for irrigation, drinking, hydropower; hundreds of millions dependent
- short-term impact: increased melt → more flow, floods, GLOFs (glacial-lake outburst floods — e.g., Chamoli 2021), disasters
- long-term impact: glaciers shrinking → reduced dry-season/summer flow, water scarcity, threats to irrigation/agriculture/hydropower, the lean-season crisis, river-flow changes
- also: sea-level/sediment, ecology
- trans-boundary water stress
- measures: monitoring, adaptation, water management, emission cuts
- a looming water-security threat.
- Concl: Himalayan glacial melt — feeding India's great perennial rivers — will first bring more floods and GLOFs, then a long-term decline in dry-season flows, threatening water, food and energy security for hundreds of millions; it is a grave water-security challenge demanding adaptation and climate action.
- Add: Himalayas ("Water Tower of Asia"); glacier-fed rivers (Ganga/Brahmaputra/Indus); GLOFs (Chamoli 2021); reduced dry-season flow; water/food/energy security; climate adaptation.
19[10m] The process of desertification does not have climate boundaries. Justify with examples.
- Intro: Desertification — land degradation in dryland and other areas — transcends climatic boundaries, occurring across diverse climates, not just deserts.
- desertification: the degradation of land (loss of productivity/vegetation/soil) — not just in arid zones
- "no climate boundaries": it occurs in arid, semi-arid, dry sub-humid AND even humid regions through human-induced degradation
- causes: deforestation, overgrazing, over-cultivation, unsustainable irrigation (salinisation), mining, climate change
- examples: the Sahel (semi-arid), but also degradation in humid areas (deforestation in the Amazon/Western Ghats → barren land), salinisation in irrigated plains, soil erosion in hills
- India: ~30% of land degraded (the Thar, but also ravines, deforested hills)
- a global problem (the UNCCD)
- human-driven, climate-wide
- land restoration needed.
- Concl: Desertification respects no climatic boundaries — driven by human activity (deforestation, overgrazing, salinisation), it degrades land across arid, semi-arid and even humid regions alike; as a global crisis (the UNCCD), it demands sustainable land management and restoration everywhere, not just in deserts.
- Add: desertification/land degradation; "no climate boundaries" (arid to humid); deforestation/overgrazing/salinisation; India (~30% degraded); UNCCD; land restoration.
20[10m] Discuss the geophysical characteristics of the Circum-Pacific Zone.
- Intro: The Circum-Pacific Zone — the "Pacific Ring of Fire" — encircling the Pacific Ocean is the Earth's most geophysically active region.
- what: a horseshoe-shaped belt around the Pacific (the Americas' west coast, Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia, New Zealand)
- geophysical characteristics: along convergent/subduction plate boundaries (the Pacific Plate subducting)
- ~75% of the world's volcanoes (active — Fuji, the Andes, the Cascades), ~80-90% of major earthquakes (subduction megathrust — Japan 2011, Chile), deep ocean trenches (the Mariana — the deepest), island arcs, tsunamis, mountain-building
- tectonic activity (the meeting of several plates)
- hotspots of disaster (densely populated)
- the most seismically/volcanically active zone
- plate tectonics in action.
- Concl: The Circum-Pacific Zone (the Ring of Fire), formed by subduction along the Pacific's margins, is the Earth's most active region — home to most of the world's volcanoes, major earthquakes, deep trenches and tsunamis — a vivid display of plate tectonics and a major disaster zone.
- Add: Circum-Pacific/Ring of Fire (horseshoe belt); subduction (Pacific Plate); ~75% volcanoes/~80% earthquakes; deep trenches (Mariana); tsunamis (Japan 2011); island arcs.
GS-1 · 2019
Art & Culture
1[10m] Highlight the Central Asian and Greco-Bactrian elements in Gandhara art.
- Intro: Gandhara art (c. 1st century BCE-5th century CE), a hybrid school of Buddhist art, prominently displays Central Asian and Greco-Bactrian (Hellenistic) elements, reflecting its cross-cultural milieu.
- context: the Gandhara region (NW India/Pakistan-Afghanistan), a crossroads of cultures (the Kushans, the Silk Road), patronised by the Kushans (Kanishka)
- Greco-Bactrian/Hellenistic elements: realistic, anatomical human forms; the Buddha depicted in human form (for the first time) with Apollo-like features, wavy/curly hair, a sharp nose, a halo, toga-like flowing drapery (Roman/Greek), muscular bodies
- Central Asian elements: motifs, themes, materials (grey schist), Kushan influence, foreign costumes
- a synthesis: Greco-Roman form + Buddhist/Indian content/themes
- vs the Mathura school (indigenous)
- a cosmopolitan, Indo-Greek art.
- Concl: Gandhara art fused Greco-Bactrian/Hellenistic naturalism (the human Buddha with Apollo-like features and toga-like drapery) with Central Asian and Buddhist Indian themes — a cosmopolitan synthesis born of Gandhara's position at the crossroads of cultures under Kushan patronage.
- Add: Gandhara art (1st c. BCE-5th c. CE; Kushan/Kanishka); Greco-Bactrian/Hellenistic (Apollo-like Buddha, toga drapery); grey schist; Silk Road crossroads; vs Mathura school; Indo-Greek synthesis.
World History
2[15m] Explain how the foundations of the modern world were laid by the American and French Revolutions.
- Intro: The American (1776) and French (1789) Revolutions together laid the foundations of the modern world — its political ideals, institutions and ideologies.
- American Revolution: independence from colonial rule (anti-colonialism), a written constitution, republicanism, federalism, the separation of powers, the Bill of Rights, "no taxation without representation", popular sovereignty
- French Revolution: "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity", the Declaration of the Rights of Man, the end of feudalism/absolute monarchy, secularism, nationalism, citizenship
- joint legacy: democracy, human rights, constitutionalism, the nation-state, popular sovereignty, the rule of law, inspiring later revolutions/anti-colonial movements (including India), the ideologies (liberalism)
- from monarchy/feudalism to democratic modernity
- the birth of the modern political order.
- Concl: The American and French Revolutions founded the modern world by establishing democracy, human rights, constitutionalism, popular sovereignty and the nation-state — replacing monarchy and feudalism with ideals that inspired global liberation movements, including India's, and define modern politics.
- Add: American Revolution (1776 — constitution/republicanism/Bill of Rights) + French Revolution (1789 — Rights of Man/"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"); popular sovereignty/nation-state; constitutionalism; global inspiration.
Modern History
3[15m] Assess the role of British imperial power in complicating the process of transfer of power during the 1940s.
- Intro: British imperial power played a complicating role in the transfer of power during the 1940s, its "divide and rule" and self-interest deepening the difficulties that culminated in Partition.
- how Britain complicated it: the "divide and rule" policy (fostering Hindu-Muslim/communal divisions — separate electorates, encouraging the Muslim League/Pakistan demand), delaying/manoeuvring (the Cripps Mission's failure, the Cabinet Mission's ambiguity), playing parties against each other, the rushed/hasty Partition (Mountbatten/the Radcliffe Line — communal violence), the princely-states question, vested imperial interests (post-war weakness, a desire to retain influence)
- outcome: Partition, mass violence/migration, the unresolved Kashmir
- vs nationalist unity
- a legacy of communalism
- imperial self-interest over an orderly transfer.
- Concl: British imperial power complicated the 1940s transfer of power through its divide-and-rule fostering of communalism, its delays and manoeuvres (the Cripps/Cabinet Mission), and the hasty, ill-managed Partition — prioritising imperial interest over an orderly, united transfer, with tragic consequences.
- Add: "divide and rule"/separate electorates; Muslim League/Pakistan demand; Cripps/Cabinet Mission; Mountbatten/Radcliffe Line; hasty Partition/communal violence; imperial self-interest.
4[15m] Many voices had strengthened and enriched the nationalist movement during the Gandhian phase. Elaborate.
- Intro: The Gandhian phase of the national movement (1917-47) was strengthened and enriched by many diverse voices beyond Gandhi, broadening and deepening the struggle.
- the many voices: the Left/socialists (Nehru, Subhas Bose — radical, socialist), revolutionaries (Bhagat Singh, the HSRA), the communists (workers/peasants), the Dalit movement (Ambedkar — social justice within/alongside), women (Sarojini Naidu, Kasturba, mass participation), peasants (the Kisan Sabhas), workers (trade unions), regional leaders, the moderates/liberals, Muslim nationalists
- how they enriched it: different methods (armed struggle, constitutional, mass), issues (caste, class, gender, economic), ideologies, a broader social base
- debates (Gandhi vs Bose/Ambedkar) sharpening the movement
- a pluralistic, multi-vocal struggle
- unity in diversity
- a richer nationalism.
- Concl: The Gandhian-phase movement was enriched by many voices — socialists (Nehru, Bose), revolutionaries (Bhagat Singh), Ambedkar's social-justice assertion, women, peasants and workers — whose diverse ideologies, methods and concerns broadened its base and deepened its vision beyond Gandhi alone.
- Add: Gandhian phase (1917-47); Nehru/Bose (socialist); Bhagat Singh (revolutionary); Ambedkar (Dalit/social justice); Kisan Sabhas/trade unions; women (Sarojini Naidu); pluralistic nationalism.
5[10m] Examine the linkages between the nineteenth century's 'Indian Renaissance' and the emergence of national identity.
- Intro: The 19th-century "Indian Renaissance" — the era of socio-religious and intellectual reform — was intimately linked to the emergence of a modern national identity.
- the Indian Renaissance: socio-religious reform (the Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, Ramakrishna Mission), the revival/reinterpretation of Indian culture/heritage (pride in the past), Western education/rationalism, the press/vernacular literature
- linkages to national identity: pride in India's civilisation (countering colonial denigration), a sense of unity/shared heritage, social reform creating a modern citizenry, the intellectual awakening, a critique of colonialism, the emergence of the educated middle class (the Congress)
- figures: Ram Mohan Roy, Vivekananda, Bankim (Vande Mataram), Tagore, Dayananda
- cultural nationalism + reform
- the intellectual roots of nationalism.
- Concl: The 19th-century Indian Renaissance — through socio-religious reform, cultural revival and rationalism — forged the intellectual and emotional foundations of national identity, instilling pride in India's heritage, a sense of unity and a reformed, awakened citizenry from which organised nationalism grew.
- Add: Indian Renaissance (Brahmo/Arya Samaj, Ramakrishna Mission); Ram Mohan Roy/Vivekananda/Bankim (Vande Mataram); cultural revival/pride; Western education/rationalism; cultural nationalism.
6[10m] The 1857 uprising was the culmination of the recurrent, big and small local rebellions that had occurred in the preceding hundred years of British rule. Elucidate.
- Intro: The Revolt of 1857, far from a sudden outburst, was the culmination of a century of recurrent local rebellions against British rule in the preceding hundred years.
- preceding rebellions (1757-1857): civil/peasant uprisings (the Sannyasi rebellion, the Fakir rebellion), tribal revolts (the Santhal 1855, Kol, Bhil, Khond), peasant/agrarian revolts (against revenue), military mutinies (Vellore 1806, Barrackpore), zamindar/dispossessed-ruler revolts
- accumulating grievances: economic exploitation (revenue, deindustrialisation), political (annexation — the Doctrine of Lapse), social/religious (interference, conversions), military (sepoy grievances — the greased cartridges as trigger)
- 1857 as the climax: the broadest, most widespread, uniting sepoys, peasants, artisans, rulers
- a culmination, not an aberration
- the "First War of Independence" debate
- a century of resistance peaking.
- Concl: The 1857 uprising was the climax of a hundred years of recurrent civil, tribal, peasant and military rebellions against British exploitation and annexation — a culmination of accumulated grievances rather than a sudden mutiny, marking the broadest challenge to colonial rule.
- Add: 1857 Revolt (culmination); preceding revolts (Sannyasi/Santhal 1855/Kol/Bhil; Vellore mutiny 1806); Doctrine of Lapse/annexation; economic exploitation; greased cartridges (trigger); "First War of Independence".
Indian Society
7[15m] Are we losing our local identity for the global identity? Discuss.
- Intro: In a globalising world, the tension between local and global identity is real, but rather than wholly losing the local, Indians increasingly hold layered, hybrid identities.
- the concern (losing the local): global culture (media, brands, English, consumerism) eroding local languages, traditions, cuisines, dress, festivals; homogenisation; the "global citizen" aspiration; youth disconnect from roots
- but: the local persists/revives — rooted identities (region, language, festivals, family), reactive assertion (regionalism, cultural pride), "glocalisation" (local-global blend), the diaspora retaining roots, digital revival of local culture
- multiple, layered identities (local + national + global coexisting)
- examples: festivals thriving, regional languages, yet global consumption
- not loss but transformation/layering
- identity as plural.
- Concl: Globalisation does pressure local identity through cultural homogenisation, but Indians are not simply losing the local — they hold layered, hybrid identities where local, national and global coexist ("glocalisation"); identity is being transformed and pluralised, not erased.
- Add: local vs global identity; cultural homogenisation (media/English/brands); "glocalisation"; reactive cultural assertion; layered/hybrid identities; diaspora roots.
8[15m] What are the continued challenges for women in India against time and space?
- Intro: Despite progress, women in India face continued, deep-rooted challenges that persist across time (historically) and space (across regions/contexts).
- continued challenges: patriarchy, gender discrimination, violence (domestic, sexual — high crime rates), the adverse sex ratio (female foeticide), dowry, unequal pay/low female LFPR, the double burden, lack of safety/mobility, political under-representation, son preference, child marriage, education gaps, health (maternal, anaemia)
- across time: persisting from tradition into modernity (old + new forms — cyber harassment)
- across space: rural vs urban, region/caste/class differences (intersectionality), public vs private spheres
- progress (laws, schemes — but an implementation gap)
- measures: empowerment, enforcement, mindset change
- a persistent, multidimensional struggle.
- Concl: Women in India face enduring challenges — patriarchy, violence, discrimination, the adverse sex ratio, economic and political inequality — that persist across time (tradition to modernity) and space (rural-urban, region, class); overcoming them needs not just laws and schemes but deep social and mindset change.
- Add: patriarchy/gender violence; adverse sex ratio/female foeticide; low female LFPR/double burden; intersectionality (region/caste/class); political under-representation; mindset change.
9[15m] Do we have cultural pockets of small India all over the nation? Elaborate with examples.
- Intro: India indeed has numerous "cultural pockets" — distinct micro-cultural enclaves across the nation — that embody its civilisational unity in diversity.
- what: small regions/communities preserving distinct cultures, languages, traditions and lifestyles — "little Indias" within India
- examples: tribal pockets (the Northeast — diverse tribes, central India — Gonds/Santhals, the Andaman tribes), linguistic/cultural enclaves (Tulu Nadu, Bhojpur, Coorg/Kodava, Ladakh, Bastar), religious/ethnic communities (Parsis, the Jews of Kerala, Tibetans), craft/folk pockets
- why: geography (isolation — hills, islands), history, migration, distinct evolution
- significance: cultural diversity/richness, heritage, but also marginalisation/integration challenges
- "unity in diversity"
- a mosaic, not a melting pot
- India as a "subcontinent of cultures".
- Concl: India is dotted with cultural pockets — tribal, linguistic, religious and craft enclaves (the Northeast, Bastar, Coorg, the Parsis) — each preserving distinct traditions; these "little Indias" embody the nation's mosaic of unity in diversity, even as they pose integration and preservation challenges.
- Add: cultural pockets ("little Indias"); tribal (Northeast/Bastar/Andaman); linguistic-cultural (Tulu Nadu/Coorg/Ladakh); religious (Parsis/Kerala Jews); geographic isolation; unity in diversity/mosaic.
10[10m] What are the challenges to our cultural practices in the name of secularism?
- Intro: In the name of secularism, certain cultural and religious practices face challenges — raising debates over the balance between secular principles and cultural-religious freedom.
- the challenges: state regulation/intervention in religious practices (in the name of reform/equality — e.g., temple entry, Sabarimala, triple talaq, animal sacrifice, festival/firecracker bans), restrictions on religious symbols, the perception of "appeasement" or "anti-tradition", debates over the Uniform Civil Code, judicial intervention (constitutional morality vs religious practice)
- the tension: secularism (reform, equality, rights) vs cultural/religious autonomy (Art 25-26)
- the "essential religious practices" test
- Indian secularism = principled distance (the State can intervene)
- balance needed: reform without alienation, equality with sensitivity
- a contested but evolving balance.
- Concl: Indian secularism's interventionist nature means cultural and religious practices are sometimes challenged in the name of reform and equality (Sabarimala, triple talaq) — creating tension with religious freedom (Art 25-26); the way forward is a sensitive balance that advances rights and reform without alienating communities.
- Add: secularism vs cultural-religious practice; state intervention (Sabarimala/triple talaq); Art 25-26; "essential religious practices" test; principled distance; Uniform Civil Code debate.
11[10m] "Empowering women is the key to control population growth." Discuss.
- Intro: Empowering women is indeed a key — arguably the most effective — lever to control population growth, as evidence and experience strongly affirm.
- how empowerment controls population: women's education → later marriage, fewer/spaced children, awareness of contraception, lower fertility
- economic empowerment → autonomy, the opportunity cost of children, decision-making
- reproductive autonomy/health (choosing family size), reduced son preference, lower infant mortality (→ fewer births)
- evidence: Kerala/the South (high female literacy → low TFR) vs the northern high-fertility states
- vs coercion (the failed Emergency sterilisation)
- the demographic transition
- "development is the best contraceptive" + women's agency
- measures: education, health, jobs, awareness
- empowerment over coercion.
- Concl: Empowering women — through education, economic opportunity and reproductive autonomy — is the most effective and humane key to controlling population growth, as Kerala's low fertility shows; it works far better than coercion, making women's agency central to demographic stabilisation.
- Add: women's education → lower fertility (TFR); reproductive autonomy/contraception; Kerala (high literacy/low TFR); "development is the best contraceptive"; vs coercion; demographic transition.
12[10m] What makes Indian society unique in sustaining its culture? Discuss.
- Intro: Indian society is uniquely successful in sustaining its ancient culture, owing to a distinctive combination of factors that have ensured continuity amid change.
- what makes it unique: civilisational continuity (one of the oldest living cultures — unbroken for millennia), assimilation/absorption (accommodating invaders/influences — "unity in diversity"), the oral/textual tradition (the Vedas, epics, guru-shishya), religion/festivals/rituals woven into daily life, the family/community transmission (socialisation), tolerance/pluralism, adaptability (reform within continuity), the caste/jati structure (preserving traditions), language/literature
- "synthesis, not replacement"
- resilience through assimilation
- examples: festivals, Sanskrit, yoga, classical arts surviving
- a living, adaptive heritage
- continuity + flexibility.
- Concl: India's culture endures uniquely through its civilisational continuity, remarkable capacity to assimilate diverse influences, deep transmission via family, religion and tradition, and an adaptive tolerance — sustaining an ancient living heritage by synthesising rather than discarding, blending continuity with change.
- Add: civilisational continuity (oldest living culture); assimilation/"unity in diversity"; oral-textual tradition (Vedas/epics); family/festival transmission; tolerance/pluralism; adaptability.
Geography
13[15m] How do ocean currents and water masses differ in their impacts on marine life and coastal environment? Give suitable examples.
- Intro: Ocean currents and water masses, though both bodies of ocean water, differ in their nature and in their distinct impacts on marine life and coastal environments.
- ocean current: a horizontal, directional movement/flow of surface (or deep) water (wind/density driven — the Gulf Stream, Kuroshio)
- water mass: a large body of water with uniform temperature/salinity (a homogeneous identity), often moving vertically/slowly (e.g., the Antarctic Bottom Water, the North Atlantic Deep Water)
- impacts differ — currents: distribute heat (climate), nutrients (upwelling → fisheries — Peru), affect coasts (warm/cold — climate, fog, ports), mixing
- water masses: vertical stratification, deep-ocean circulation (thermohaline), oxygen/nutrient supply to depths, long-term climate, deep-sea life
- currents = surface/lateral/dynamic impact; water masses = vertical/deep/slow
- both shape marine ecology
- complementary roles.
- Concl: Ocean currents are dynamic horizontal flows that redistribute heat and nutrients (driving fisheries and coastal climates), while water masses are uniform, slow-moving bodies governing deep vertical circulation and the supply of oxygen and nutrients to the depths — together shaping marine life and coastal environments in complementary ways.
- Add: ocean current (horizontal flow — Gulf Stream/Kuroshio) vs water mass (uniform T/S — Antarctic Bottom Water); upwelling/fisheries (Peru); thermohaline circulation; coastal climate; vertical vs lateral.
14[15m] How is efficient and affordable urban mass transport key to the rapid economic development in India?
- Intro: Efficient and affordable urban mass transport is key to India's rapid economic development, underpinning productivity, inclusion and sustainable urbanisation.
- how it drives development: cities are the engines of growth (~60%+ of GDP) → mobility enables productivity (reduced commute time/cost), connects labour to jobs, supports agglomeration
- affordability → inclusion (the poor's access to jobs/services), equity
- economic gains: less congestion (productivity loss), lower logistics cost, real-estate/economic activity along corridors
- environmental: reduced emissions/fuel import (vs private vehicles), sustainability
- examples: metros (Delhi, etc.), buses (BRTS), the need for last-mile
- challenges: funding, integration, last-mile
- schemes (the Metro Rail Policy, AMRUT, PM e-Bus)
- mobility as a growth multiplier.
- Concl: Efficient, affordable urban mass transport powers India's development by connecting labour to jobs, cutting congestion and logistics costs, enabling inclusion and reducing emissions — making investment in metros, buses and integrated last-mile transport a vital multiplier for productive, sustainable and equitable urban growth.
- Add: cities (~60% of GDP); mobility → productivity/agglomeration; affordability/inclusion; congestion cost; metros/BRTS/PM e-Bus; emissions/fuel saving; growth multiplier.
15[15m] How can the mountain ecosystem be restored from the negative impact of development initiatives and tourism?
- Intro: Mountain ecosystems, fragile and ecologically vital, are degraded by development and tourism, requiring careful restoration and sustainable management.
- the negative impacts: deforestation, construction (roads, dams, hotels), unregulated/mass tourism (waste, pollution, carrying-capacity breach), landslides, glacial retreat, biodiversity loss, water-source damage (e.g., the Himalayas, Western Ghats — Joshimath subsidence, Char Dham)
- restoration measures: afforestation/reforestation (native species), regulated/eco-tourism (carrying capacity, waste management), eco-sensitive zones, slope stabilisation, watershed management, banning/regulating construction, community participation (local stewardship), a Himalayan-states sustainable framework, "polluter pays"
- honour carrying capacity
- green/sustainable development
- ecology over unchecked growth.
- Concl: Restoring degraded mountain ecosystems requires afforestation, strictly regulated eco-tourism within carrying capacity, eco-sensitive zoning, slope and watershed management, and community participation — replacing unchecked development and mass tourism with sustainable, ecology-first practices to heal these fragile, vital landscapes.
- Add: fragile mountains (Himalaya/Western Ghats); deforestation/construction/mass tourism; Joshimath subsidence; eco-tourism/carrying capacity; eco-sensitive zones; afforestation/watershed; community stewardship.
16[15m] What is water stress? How and why does it differ regionally in India?
- Intro: Water stress — when water demand exceeds available supply or quality declines — varies markedly across India's regions due to differences in climate, geography and use.
- definition: demand > sustainable supply (per-capita availability falling — India is "water-stressed", ~1,100-1,500 cubic m/person)
- regional variation: high stress — the arid/semi-arid west (Rajasthan, Gujarat), the over-irrigated north-west (Punjab/Haryana — groundwater depletion), the peninsular hard-rock/rain-shadow (parts of the Deccan), water-scarce cities
- lower stress — the high-rainfall east/Northeast, the Himalayan/perennial-river belts
- reasons: uneven rainfall (monsoon variability), geography (hard rock vs alluvium), over-extraction (agriculture ~80%), pollution, population/demand, cropping patterns (paddy in dry zones)
- "physical" vs "economic" water scarcity
- measures: efficiency, harvesting, demand management
- a geography-and-policy challenge.
- Concl: Water stress in India varies regionally — acute in the arid west, the over-pumped north-west and the hard-rock Deccan, milder in the rainy east and perennial-river belts — driven by uneven rainfall, geology, over-extraction and cropping patterns; addressing it needs efficiency, harvesting and demand management.
- Add: water stress (per-capita <1,700 cubic m); arid west/Punjab groundwater/Deccan rain-shadow; monsoon variability/geology; agriculture (~80% use)/paddy; physical vs economic scarcity; demand management.
17[10m] Discuss the factors for localisation of agro-based food processing industries of North-West India.
- Intro: The localisation of agro-based food-processing industries in North-West India is shaped by the region's agricultural abundance and supporting infrastructure.
- NW India (Punjab, Haryana, western UP, Rajasthan)
- factors for localisation: an agricultural surplus/raw material (the Green-Revolution belt — wheat, rice, sugarcane, dairy, cotton — the "granary of India")
- irrigation/fertile alluvial soil → an assured raw-material supply
- infrastructure (roads, rail, cold chain, power), markets (proximity to Delhi NCR — demand), connectivity
- skilled/available labour, entrepreneurship, capital, government support (food parks, the PMKSY/PMFME), agro-climatic suitability
- examples: flour mills, sugar mills, dairy (Verka/Amul), rice processing
- raw-material + market + infrastructure
- a resource-and-market-oriented industry.
- Concl: Agro-based food processing concentrates in North-West India because of its assured agricultural surplus (the Green-Revolution granary), fertile irrigated land, strong infrastructure and proximity to the large Delhi-NCR market — a classic raw-material-and-market-oriented localisation, supported by food-processing policy.
- Add: NW India (Punjab/Haryana — Green Revolution granary); raw-material surplus (wheat/rice/dairy); irrigation/alluvial soil; Delhi-NCR market; food parks (PMKSY/PMFME); infrastructure.
18[10m] Can the strategy of regional resource-based manufacturing help in promoting employment in India?
- Intro: A strategy of regional resource-based manufacturing — processing local raw materials where they occur — can significantly promote employment in India by leveraging regional endowments.
- the strategy: industries based on regional resources (minerals, agriculture, forest, marine) located near their source — value addition locally
- employment potential: direct jobs (processing), indirect/ancillary, local/rural employment (curbing migration), MSMEs, skill use, balanced regional development, reducing disparities
- examples: mineral-based (steel, aluminium in the eastern belt), agro-based (food processing — Punjab; textiles — cotton belts), forest-based, marine/fisheries (coasts), handicrafts (One District One Product)
- leveraging the "demographic dividend" + resources
- challenges: infrastructure, skills, sustainability, value chains
- inclusive industrialisation
- jobs where resources are.
- Concl: Regional resource-based manufacturing — adding value to local minerals, agriculture, forest and marine resources where they occur — can generate widespread, especially rural, employment and balance regional development (as schemes like One District One Product show), harnessing India's resource and demographic strengths inclusively.
- Add: resource-based manufacturing (mineral/agro/forest/marine); local value addition/jobs; rural employment/anti-migration; One District One Product; MSMEs; balanced regional development.
19[10m] Discuss the causes of depletion of mangroves and explain their importance in maintaining coastal ecology.
- Intro: Mangroves — salt-tolerant coastal forests — are being depleted by multiple pressures, even as they perform crucial functions in maintaining coastal ecology.
- causes of depletion: aquaculture/shrimp farming, coastal development (urbanisation, ports, tourism), pollution, agriculture conversion, deforestation (fuelwood), damming (reduced freshwater/sediment), sea-level rise, cyclones
- importance in coastal ecology: a natural barrier (against cyclones, storm surges, tsunamis — "bioshields"), erosion control/sediment trapping, biodiversity/nurseries (fish, crabs — fisheries), carbon sequestration ("blue carbon"), water filtration, livelihoods
- examples: the Sundarbans (the world's largest), Bhitarkanika, Pichavaram
- protection: the CRZ, conservation, restoration (the MISHTI scheme)
- guardians of the coast.
- Concl: Mangroves are depleted by aquaculture, coastal development, pollution and damming, yet they are vital coastal guardians — buffering cyclones and tsunamis, nurturing fisheries, sequestering "blue carbon" and controlling erosion; protecting and restoring them (the Sundarbans, MISHTI) is essential for coastal ecological security.
- Add: mangrove depletion (aquaculture/coastal development/pollution); coastal "bioshield" (cyclone/tsunami buffer); fish nurseries/fisheries; "blue carbon"; Sundarbans/Bhitarkanika; CRZ/MISHTI.
20[10m] Assess the impact of global warming on the coral life system with examples.
- Intro: Global warming poses a grave threat to coral reef ecosystems, primarily through coral bleaching and ocean changes that endanger these biodiversity-rich systems.
- how warming harms corals: rising sea-surface temperatures → coral bleaching (corals expel symbiotic zooxanthellae algae → lose colour/food → die if prolonged), ocean acidification (CO2 → weaker calcium-carbonate skeletons), sea-level rise, stronger storms, deoxygenation
- impacts: mass die-offs, loss of biodiversity (reefs = "rainforests of the sea", ~25% of marine life), loss of fisheries, coastal protection, tourism
- examples: the Great Barrier Reef (repeated mass bleaching — 2016/2024), the Lakshadweep/Gulf of Mannar (India)
- a tipping-point ecosystem
- measures: emission cuts, marine protected areas, restoration
- a climate-change casualty.
- Concl: Global warming devastates coral reefs chiefly through bleaching (heat-driven loss of symbiotic algae) and ocean acidification, causing mass die-offs that imperil marine biodiversity, fisheries and coastal protection — as repeated Great Barrier Reef bleaching shows — making reefs a stark indicator of the climate crisis.
- Add: coral bleaching (warming → zooxanthellae loss); ocean acidification (weaker skeletons); Great Barrier Reef (mass bleaching 2016/2024); Lakshadweep/Gulf of Mannar; "rainforests of the sea"; emission cuts/MPAs.
GS-1 · 2018
Art & Culture
1[15m] The Bhakti movement received a remarkable re-orientation with the advent of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. Discuss.
- Intro: Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486-1534) gave the Bhakti movement a remarkable re-orientation, infusing it with ecstatic, emotional devotion (Gaudiya Vaishnavism) centred on Krishna.
- his re-orientation: intense, emotional, ecstatic devotion (prema-bhakti) to Krishna/Radha; congregational devotional singing (sankirtana/kirtana — chanting the Hare Krishna mahamantra), public/collective worship (dancing, singing)
- accessibility/egalitarianism: open to all castes (against Brahminical exclusivity), the Bengal/eastern revival
- Gaudiya Vaishnavism (a distinct school), the philosophy of achintya bheda abheda
- social impact: challenged caste, promoted bhakti as the path, mass appeal, devotional literature/music (Bengali), the Vaishnava tradition
- spread (Bengal, Odisha, Vrindavan), inspiring later movements (ISKCON)
- a transformative saint.
- Concl: Sri Chaitanya re-oriented the Bhakti movement toward ecstatic, congregational devotion to Krishna (sankirtana), open to all castes — founding Gaudiya Vaishnavism and reviving Bhakti in eastern India with a deeply emotional, egalitarian and musical spirituality that endures.
- Add: Sri Chaitanya (1486-1534); Gaudiya Vaishnavism; sankirtana/kirtana (Hare Krishna); prema-bhakti (Krishna-Radha); anti-caste/egalitarian; Bengal-Odisha-Vrindavan; ISKCON legacy.
2[10m] Assess the importance of the accounts of the Chinese and Arab travellers in the reconstruction of the history of India.
- Intro: The accounts of Chinese and Arab travellers are invaluable foreign sources for reconstructing India's history, offering an outsider's perspective on society, polity and economy.
- Chinese travellers: Fa-Hien (Gupta-era, Chandragupta II — society, Buddhism), Hiuen Tsang (Harsha's reign — a detailed account, Nalanda, society, religion), I-Tsing
- Arab travellers: Al-Biruni (Mahmud of Ghazni's time — Kitab-ul-Hind: society, religion, science, caste), Ibn Battuta (Muhammad bin Tughlaq — administration, society — the Rihla), Al-Masudi, Sulaiman
- value: fill gaps (where Indian sources are silent/eulogistic), detail on daily life/religion/economy/administration, an objective/comparative outsider view, the state of Buddhism, trade
- limitations: foreign bias/misunderstanding, partial, a religious lens
- complementary, corroborating sources
- a foreign mirror to Indian history.
- Concl: The accounts of Chinese (Fa-Hien, Hiuen Tsang) and Arab (Al-Biruni, Ibn Battuta) travellers are invaluable for reconstructing Indian history — vividly recording society, religion, polity and economy from an outsider's view, filling gaps left by indigenous sources, though their foreign lens warrants critical use.
- Add: Chinese travellers (Fa-Hien/Hiuen Tsang/I-Tsing); Arab travellers (Al-Biruni's Kitab-ul-Hind; Ibn Battuta's Rihla); outsider perspective; daily life/Buddhism/economy; foreign bias.
3[10m] Safeguarding the Indian art heritage is the need of the moment. Comment.
- Intro: Safeguarding India's rich and diverse art heritage is an urgent need, given the threats of neglect, decay, theft and modernisation.
- the heritage: monuments, paintings, sculptures, manuscripts, crafts, performing/folk arts, intangible heritage
- threats: neglect/decay, urbanisation/encroachment, vandalism/theft (idol smuggling), pollution (the Taj), climate/disasters, loss of traditional crafts/artisans, loss of intangible arts (languages, folk forms), commercialisation, inadequate funding/awareness
- why safeguard: cultural identity, history, tourism/economy, diversity, soft power, future generations
- measures: the ASI/conservation, the Antiquities Act, museums, the GI tag (crafts), documentation/digitisation, artisan support, awareness, community involvement, the retrieval of stolen artefacts
- heritage as a living legacy.
- Concl: Safeguarding India's art heritage — from monuments and manuscripts to crafts and folk arts — is urgent against neglect, theft, pollution and the loss of artisans; it needs robust conservation (the ASI), legal protection, documentation, artisan support and public awareness to preserve this living legacy and cultural identity.
- Add: art heritage (monuments/crafts/folk arts); threats (decay/theft/pollution); ASI/Antiquities Act; GI tag (crafts); digitisation/artisan support; retrieval of stolen artefacts; cultural identity.
Modern History
4[15m] Why was indentured labour taken by the British from India to their colonies? Have they been able to preserve their cultural identity over there?
- Intro: The British transported large numbers of Indian indentured labourers to their colonies in the 19th-20th centuries to meet labour demands, and these communities have remarkably preserved their cultural identity.
- why taken: after the abolition of slavery (1833), colonies needed cheap labour for plantations (sugar, rubber, tea) → indentured ("girmitiya") labour from India to Mauritius, Fiji, the Caribbean (Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname), South Africa, Malaya
- the system: a contract (5+ years), exploitative ("a new system of slavery"), poor conditions, deception
- cultural preservation: yes, remarkably — they retained religion (Hinduism, Islam), festivals (Diwali, Holi), language (Bhojpuri/Hindi — evolving creoles), food, music (chutney/Bhojpuri folk), family/caste (loosened), temples
- a diaspora identity (e.g., Mauritius — Indian-majority, Fiji, the Caribbean — V.S. Naipaul)
- resilience amid adversity
- "Little Indias" abroad.
- Concl: The British took indentured Indian labour ("girmitiyas") to their plantation colonies after slavery's abolition, under an exploitative system; yet these communities remarkably preserved their cultural identity — religion, festivals, language, food and music — creating enduring Indian diasporas across Mauritius, Fiji and the Caribbean.
- Add: indentured labour ("girmitiya"); post-slavery (1833) plantations; Mauritius/Fiji/Caribbean (Trinidad/Guyana); "a new system of slavery"; cultural preservation (Holi/Bhojpuri/temples); diaspora identity.
5[10m] Throw light on the significance of the thoughts of Mahatma Gandhi in the present times.
- Intro: The thoughts of Mahatma Gandhi remain profoundly significant and relevant in the present times, offering solutions to contemporary global challenges.
- his relevant ideas: non-violence (ahimsa) — for conflict resolution, peace (inspiring King, Mandela), countering terrorism/violence
- sustainability — simple living/limiting wants ("the earth has enough for everyone's need, not greed") — for climate/consumerism
- Sarvodaya/trusteeship — for inequality/CSR
- swadeshi/self-reliance — for Atmanirbhar/the local economy
- truth/satyagraha — for civil rights/protest
- decentralisation/village swaraj — for grassroots democracy
- sanitation (Swachh Bharat), communal harmony, the dignity of labour
- contemporary relevance: climate, conflict, inequality, ethics
- a timeless moral compass
- a guide for sustainable, peaceful, just development.
- Concl: Gandhi's thoughts — non-violence, sustainability and limiting wants, trusteeship, self-reliance, satyagraha and decentralisation — are deeply relevant today, offering moral and practical answers to climate change, conflict, inequality and consumerism; he remains a timeless guide for a peaceful, sustainable and just world.
- Add: Gandhi's ideas — ahimsa (peace/MLK-Mandela); "enough for need, not greed" (sustainability/climate); trusteeship/Sarvodaya (inequality); swadeshi (Atmanirbhar); satyagraha; village swaraj/Swachh Bharat.
Post-Independence History
6[15m] Discuss whether the formation of new states in recent times is beneficial or not for the economy of India.
- Intro: The formation of new states in recent times has had a mixed impact on India's economy, with both benefits and drawbacks for development.
- recent new states: Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand (2000), Telangana (2014)
- beneficial for the economy: focused governance/administration (smaller, manageable units), targeted development of neglected regions, better resource use, local accountability, addressing regional disparity, economic growth (some, e.g., Chhattisgarh's resources, Uttarakhand's tourism), an identity-development link
- drawbacks: division of resources/infrastructure, capital-city/administrative costs, water/resource-sharing disputes (Telangana-AP), potential instability, the viability of small states, duplication
- depends on governance/resources
- on balance: smaller states can aid focused development if well-governed
- administrative efficiency vs fragmentation.
- Concl: New states can benefit the economy through focused governance and the development of neglected regions (Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh), but also bring resource-division, administrative costs and disputes; their economic value ultimately depends on sound governance — smaller units aiding development when well-managed.
- Add: new states (Jharkhand/Chhattisgarh/Uttarakhand 2000; Telangana 2014); focused governance/regional development; resource/water disputes (Telangana-AP); administrative costs; state viability.
Indian Society
7[15m] 'Communalism arises either due to power struggle or relative deprivation.' Argue by giving suitable illustrations.
- Intro: Communalism in India arises from a combination of power struggles (political competition) and relative deprivation (perceived socio-economic disadvantage), often intertwined.
- power-struggle dimension: political mobilisation along religious lines (vote banks, polarisation), elite competition for power/resources, the instrumental use of religion, divide-and-rule (the colonial legacy — separate electorates)
- relative-deprivation dimension: perceived/real socio-economic backwardness or threat (jobs, status) → grievance → scapegoating the "other", insecurity, identity assertion
- illustrations: communal riots (Partition, post-independence riots), political communalism, economic competition feeding tension
- both often combine (deprivation exploited by power-seekers)
- vs the syncretic tradition
- measures: equity, secularism, employment, justice
- a political + socio-economic phenomenon.
- Concl: Communalism in India springs from both power struggles (elites politically mobilising religious identity) and relative deprivation (socio-economic grievance scapegoating the "other") — usually intertwined, as power-seekers exploit deprivation; countering it needs equity, justice and genuine secularism alongside political will.
- Add: communalism (power struggle + relative deprivation); political mobilisation/vote banks; separate electorates (colonial); scapegoating/insecurity; communal riots/Partition; equity/secularism.
8[15m] 'Globalisation is generally said to promote cultural homogenisation but due to this cultural specificities appear to be strengthened in Indian society.' Elucidate.
- Intro: Paradoxically, even as globalisation promotes cultural homogenisation, it has in many ways strengthened cultural specificities in Indian society — a reactive assertion of identity.
- homogenisation: global/Western consumer culture, brands, English, media and lifestyles spreading
- but cultural specificities strengthened — the paradox: reactive assertion of local/traditional identity (defending against homogenisation), revival of festivals/rituals/languages, pride in heritage (yoga, Ayurveda going global), identity politics (regional, religious), "glocalisation" (local adapting global)
- globalisation provides platforms to project local culture (the diaspora, digital, tourism)
- examples: festivals more elaborate, regional cinema, traditional revival, yoga's global rise
- identity reinforced by exposure to the "other"
- both homogenising and particularising
- a dialectic of global and local.
- Concl: Globalisation, while spreading homogenising consumer culture, paradoxically strengthens Indian cultural specificities — provoking a reactive, proud assertion and revival of local traditions, festivals and identities, and giving them global platforms ("glocalisation") — making exposure to the global reinforce rather than erase the local.
- Add: globalisation/homogenisation vs cultural specificities; reactive identity assertion; revival (festivals/yoga/Ayurveda); "glocalisation"; identity politics; global-local dialectic.
9[15m] 'Women's movement in India has not addressed the issues of women of lower social strata.' Substantiate your view.
- Intro: The Indian women's movement, while achieving much, has been substantially critiqued for inadequately addressing the issues of women from lower social strata (Dalit, tribal, poor, rural women).
- the critique: the mainstream movement was often led by/focused on urban, educated, upper/middle-class women → issues like Dalit/tribal/poor women's concerns (caste discrimination, manual scavenging, labour, land, livelihood, intersectional oppression) under-addressed
- intersectionality ignored (gender + caste + class) — the "Brahminical feminism" critique
- examples: Dalit feminism emerging separately (the "double/triple burden"), the divide over priorities (e.g., reservation debates)
- but: the movement has evolved (broader concerns, SHGs, grassroots movements — SEWA, anti-liquor, Chipko, Dalit women's groups)
- a need for inclusivity/intersectional feminism
- a partial truth, evolving.
- Concl: The Indian women's movement has been validly critiqued for being led by and centred on urban, upper-caste women, under-addressing the intersectional oppressions of Dalit, tribal and poor women — prompting separate Dalit feminism; though it is evolving toward grassroots inclusivity (SEWA), a more intersectional feminism is still needed.
- Add: women's movement (urban/upper-caste critique); intersectionality (gender+caste+class); Dalit feminism/"Brahminical feminism"; SEWA/grassroots groups; manual scavenging/land; inclusivity.
10[15m] Mention the core strategies for the transformation of aspirational districts in India and explain the nature of convergence, collaboration and competition for its success.
- Intro: The Aspirational Districts Programme (2018) aims to transform India's most under-developed districts through focused, data-driven development built on convergence, collaboration and competition.
- core strategies: identifying 112 backward districts (across health/nutrition, education, agriculture, financial inclusion, skills, infrastructure — the key sectors), real-time monitoring (the Champions of Change dashboard, ranking), focused governance (a "whole-of-government" approach)
- the "3 Cs": convergence (of central/state schemes — aligning resources), collaboration (between the Centre, states, districts, and prabhari officers), competition (ranking/the spirit of healthy competition among districts, incentivising performance)
- data-driven, outcome-based, decentralised
- examples: improvements in district indicators
- a model of focused, competitive federalism for backward regions
- inclusive development.
- Concl: The Aspirational Districts Programme transforms India's most backward districts through data-driven, outcome-based development across key sectors, powered by the "3 Cs" — convergence of schemes, collaboration among governments, and healthy competition via ranking — a model of focused, competitive cooperative federalism for inclusive growth.
- Add: Aspirational Districts Programme (2018; 112 districts); key sectors (health/education/agriculture); "3 Cs" — convergence/collaboration/competition; Champions of Change dashboard; prabhari officers; outcome-based.
11[10m] How is the Indian concept of secularism different from the Western model of secularism? Discuss.
- Intro: India's concept of secularism differs significantly from the Western model — being positive and accommodative rather than a strict separation of religion and state.
- Western secularism: a strict separation ("wall of separation"), the State stays out of religion, no state religion, religion privatised, religion-blind
- Indian secularism: "principled distance"/positive secularism — equal respect for all religions (sarva dharma sambhava), no state religion but the State can engage/intervene in religion (reform — untouchability, regulate religious institutions, fund), protect minorities (Art 25-30), accommodate diversity
- rooted in India's plural, religious society (vs the West's post-Christian context)
- India: an interventionist, accommodative model; the West: a non-interventionist, separationist one
- both protect religious freedom differently
- context-shaped secularisms.
- Concl: Indian secularism, unlike the Western "wall of separation," is a positive, accommodative model of "principled distance" — equal respect for all religions with the State free to engage and reform — suited to India's deeply religious, plural society rather than privatising religion as the West does.
- Add: Indian secularism ("principled distance"/positive) vs Western ("wall of separation"); sarva dharma sambhava; Art 25-30; State intervention/reform; plural society; interventionist vs non-interventionist.
12[10m] Despite the implementation of various programmes for the eradication of poverty by the government in India, poverty still exists. Explain by giving reasons.
- Intro: Despite numerous government anti-poverty programmes, poverty persists in India due to a range of structural, implementation and systemic reasons.
- reasons: population pressure, jobless/inequitable growth, leakage/corruption in schemes (poor targeting, exclusion/inclusion errors), implementation gaps, inadequate human capital (health/education), regional disparities, the informal economy/low wages, landlessness, social barriers (caste/gender), inflation eroding incomes, indebtedness, lack of assets, vulnerability (shocks — COVID), the multidimensionality of poverty
- programmes' limits: piecemeal, leakage, dependency, not addressing root causes
- vs measures: DBT (reducing leakage), inclusive growth, human capital, employment
- progress made (the MPI fell) but persistence
- structural + delivery failures
- a multidimensional challenge.
- Concl: Poverty persists despite anti-poverty programmes because of jobless and unequal growth, scheme leakages and poor targeting, inadequate human capital, social barriers and the multidimensional nature of deprivation — requiring not just welfare but inclusive growth, employment, human-capital investment and effective, leak-proof delivery (DBT).
- Add: poverty persistence; jobless/unequal growth; leakage/targeting errors; human capital (health/education); informal economy/low wages; multidimensional poverty (MPI); DBT/inclusive growth.
13[10m] "The Caste system is assuming new identities and associational forms. Hence, the caste system cannot be eradicated in India." Comment.
- Intro: The caste system in India, far from disappearing, is assuming new identities and associational forms — adapting to modernity, which makes its eradication deeply challenging.
- new identities/forms: caste associations (modern organisations — for welfare, politics, mobility), caste in politics (vote banks, identity mobilisation, reservation politics), "substantialisation" (Dumont — caste as competing blocs), Sanskritisation, caste in matrimonials/networks, virtual caste (social media), economic caste networks
- why hard to eradicate: it adapts (not vanishes), endogamy persists, political/economic utility, identity/belonging, discrimination continues, deep social roots
- but: some erosion (urbanisation, mobility, inter-caste marriage), reform
- "caste cannot be eradicated easily" — but can be weakened
- from ritual hierarchy to political/social identity
- persistence through transformation.
- Concl: Caste persists by adapting — taking new associational and political forms (caste associations, vote banks, "substantialisation") rather than disappearing — which makes its eradication very difficult; though urbanisation erodes some rigidities, weakening caste requires sustained social reform, equity and inter-caste integration, not just legal abolition.
- Add: caste (new associational/political forms); caste associations/vote banks; "substantialisation" (Dumont); Sanskritisation; endogamy persistence; reform/inter-caste marriage; transformation not eradication.
Geography
14[15m] What is the significance of Industrial Corridors in India? Identifying industrial corridors, explain their main characteristics.
- Intro: Industrial corridors are integrated, infrastructure-backed industrial zones along major transport routes, significant for accelerating India's manufacturing and balanced development.
- significance: integrated infrastructure (transport, power, ports, smart cities), boosting manufacturing ("Make in India"), employment, exports, investment, regional development, multimodal connectivity, reducing logistics cost
- major corridors: the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC — the flagship), Amritsar-Kolkata, Chennai-Bengaluru, Bengaluru-Mumbai, the East Coast (Vizag-Chennai), Chennai-Kanyakumari
- characteristics: anchored on freight corridors (the DFC), node-based (industrial nodes/smart cities), PPP, plug-and-play infrastructure, planned, export-oriented
- part of the National Industrial Corridor Programme/Gati Shakti
- catalysts of industrialisation
- engines of growth.
- Concl: Industrial corridors — like the flagship Delhi-Mumbai (DMIC) and Chennai-Bengaluru corridors — are integrated, infrastructure-rich industrial belts along freight routes that boost manufacturing, employment, exports and balanced regional development, serving as engines of India's "Make in India" industrialisation.
- Add: industrial corridors (DMIC/Amritsar-Kolkata/Chennai-Bengaluru); Dedicated Freight Corridor anchor; "Make in India"/manufacturing; node-based/smart cities; National Industrial Corridor Programme/Gati Shakti; multimodal.
15[15m] Defining the blue revolution, explain the problems and strategies for pisciculture development in India.
- Intro: The Blue Revolution refers to the rapid development of India's fisheries and aquaculture (pisciculture) sector to boost fish production, though it faces several challenges.
- definition: the emphasis on developing fisheries/aquaculture (inland + marine) for production, income and food security — India a top fish producer
- pisciculture (fish farming)
- problems: overfishing/declining marine stocks, pollution/habitat loss, lack of infrastructure (cold chain, harbours), disease, poor-quality seed/feed, the unorganised sector, post-harvest losses, fishermen's poverty, climate change, EEZ/coastal issues
- strategies: the Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY), the Blue Revolution scheme, sustainable aquaculture, infrastructure (harbours, cold chain), technology, seaweed/cage culture, fishermen welfare, exports
- a sustainable blue economy
- from production to sustainability.
- Concl: The Blue Revolution boosts India's fish production through aquaculture and fisheries development, but faces problems of overfishing, pollution, weak infrastructure and fishermen's poverty; strategies like the PMMSY, sustainable aquaculture and infrastructure aim to make pisciculture a productive, sustainable pillar of the blue economy.
- Add: Blue Revolution (fisheries/aquaculture); pisciculture; PMMSY; overfishing/pollution/infrastructure gaps; cold chain/harbours; sustainable blue economy; food security/exports.
16[15m] The ideal solution for depleting groundwater resources in India is a water harvesting system. How can it be made effective in urban areas?
- Intro: With groundwater depleting rapidly, rainwater harvesting is an ideal solution for India, and it can be made effective in urban areas through deliberate design and policy.
- the problem: depleting groundwater (over-extraction, urbanisation/concretisation reducing recharge)
- rainwater harvesting (RWH): capturing/storing rainwater for use or recharge
- making it effective in urban areas: mandatory rooftop RWH (building bye-laws), recharge wells/pits, permeable pavements, restoring/de-silting urban lakes/ponds, blue-green infrastructure ("sponge cities"), reviving traditional structures (stepwells/tanks), incentives/penalties, public awareness, integrating into urban planning, decentralised storage
- examples: Chennai (mandatory RWH), Bengaluru
- co-benefits: flood reduction, water security
- "catch the rain where it falls"
- a decentralised, mandated, ecological solution.
- Concl: Rainwater harvesting is an ideal answer to India's groundwater depletion; making it effective in cities needs mandatory rooftop harvesting and recharge structures, permeable surfaces, revival of urban water bodies and "sponge city" planning — turning urban runoff into recharge and water security ("catch the rain").
- Add: groundwater depletion; rainwater harvesting (rooftop/recharge wells); mandatory building bye-laws (Chennai); permeable pavements/"sponge city"; reviving lakes/stepwells; "catch the rain".
17[10m] What are the consequences of the spreading of 'Dead Zones' on the marine ecosystem?
- Intro: "Dead zones" — oxygen-depleted (hypoxic) areas of the ocean — are spreading, with severe consequences for marine ecosystems.
- what: areas of very low dissolved oxygen (hypoxia/anoxia) where most marine life cannot survive
- cause: eutrophication — excess nutrients (nitrogen/phosphorus from fertiliser runoff, sewage) → algal blooms → decomposition consumes oxygen
- consequences: death/migration of fish and marine organisms (mass mortality), loss of biodiversity, collapse of fisheries/livelihoods, disruption of food chains, the spread of "lifeless" zones, economic loss
- examples: the Gulf of Mexico (the largest), the Baltic Sea, the Bay of Bengal (a major one)
- aggravated by warming (less oxygen in warm water)
- measures: reduce nutrient runoff, sustainable agriculture, sewage treatment
- an ocean-health crisis.
- Concl: Spreading ocean "dead zones" — hypoxic areas caused by nutrient-runoff eutrophication — devastate marine ecosystems through mass die-offs, biodiversity loss and fishery collapse (as in the Gulf of Mexico and Bay of Bengal); reversing them needs cutting nutrient pollution from agriculture and sewage.
- Add: dead zones (hypoxia/anoxia); eutrophication (fertiliser/sewage runoff → algal blooms); mass mortality/fishery collapse; Gulf of Mexico/Baltic/Bay of Bengal; warming; nutrient-runoff control.
18[10m] Define mantle plume and explain its role in plate tectonics.
- Intro: A mantle plume is an upwelling column of abnormally hot rock rising from deep within the Earth's mantle, playing a notable role in plate tectonics and volcanism.
- definition: a narrow, hot, buoyant column of mantle material rising from the deep mantle (possibly the core-mantle boundary) toward the surface
- role: creates "hotspots" — volcanic activity independent of plate boundaries (intra-plate volcanism)
- as a plate moves over a stationary plume → a chain of volcanoes (e.g., the Hawaiian islands, the Deccan Traps from the Réunion plume)
- relation to plate tectonics: a possible driver/influence (mantle convection), continental rifting/break-up (large igneous provinces), the heat engine
- a complement to plate-boundary tectonics
- explaining hotspot volcanism
- a deep-Earth process.
- Concl: A mantle plume is a hot, buoyant upwelling from the deep mantle that creates intra-plate "hotspot" volcanism — building volcanic chains like Hawaii as plates drift over it (and the Deccan Traps via the Réunion plume) — complementing plate-boundary tectonics and influencing continental break-up.
- Add: mantle plume (hot upwelling/deep mantle); hotspot/intra-plate volcanism; Hawaiian island chain; Deccan Traps (Réunion plume); large igneous provinces; mantle convection.
19[10m] Why is India taking a keen interest in the Arctic region?
- Intro: India is taking a keen interest in the Arctic region for scientific, economic, strategic and environmental reasons, reflected in its Arctic Policy.
- reasons: scientific research (climate change — the Arctic-monsoon link, the Himalayan "Third Pole" connection; the Himadri research station, Ny-Ålesund), climate monitoring
- economic: resources (oil, gas, minerals, fisheries) opening up due to ice melt, new shipping routes (the Northern Sea Route — a shorter Europe-Asia link)
- strategic/geopolitical: a voice in Arctic governance (Observer status in the Arctic Council since 2013), countering China's "Polar Silk Road", balancing major powers
- environmental: the Arctic's impact on global/Indian climate (monsoon, sea level)
- India's Arctic Policy (2022)
- a stakeholder in the global commons
- science + strategy + resources.
- Concl: India's keen Arctic interest is driven by climate science (the Arctic-monsoon link), economic prospects (resources, the Northern Sea Route), and strategic stakes (Arctic Council observer status, countering China) — formalised in its 2022 Arctic Policy, positioning India as a responsible stakeholder in this changing global commons.
- Add: Arctic (Himadri station/Ny-Ålesund); climate-monsoon link/"Third Pole"; Northern Sea Route/resources; Arctic Council (Observer 2013); China's "Polar Silk Road"; India's Arctic Policy (2022).
20[10m] Why is the Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System (IRNSS) needed? How does it help in navigation?
- Intro: The Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS/NavIC) is India's indigenous satellite-navigation system, needed for strategic autonomy and accurate regional positioning.
- why needed: independence from foreign systems (the US GPS, which can be denied/degraded — recall the Kargil experience), strategic/military autonomy, accurate positioning over India and the region (~1,500 km around)
- NavIC (IRNSS) — a constellation of 7 satellites (ISRO)
- how it helps navigation: provides position/timing — for terrestrial/marine/aerial navigation, disaster management, fleet/vehicle tracking, precision agriculture, surveying, fishermen (alerts), timing for networks, defence
- dual-use (a civilian SPS + a restricted service)
- accuracy (~20 m or better)
- part of self-reliance (Atmanirbhar)
- a strategic and civilian asset.
- Concl: NavIC (IRNSS), India's indigenous 7-satellite navigation system, was needed for strategic autonomy from foreign systems like GPS and for accurate regional positioning; it aids navigation, disaster management, agriculture, fishermen and defence — a key civilian and strategic self-reliance asset.
- Add: IRNSS/NavIC (ISRO, 7 satellites); independence from GPS (Kargil lesson); regional coverage (~1,500 km); navigation/disaster/agriculture/fishermen alerts; dual-use; Atmanirbhar.
GS-1 · 2017
Art & Culture
1[10m] How do you justify the view that the level of excellence of the Gupta numismatic art is not at all noticeable in later times?
- Intro: Gupta coinage (4th-6th century) represents the zenith of ancient Indian numismatic art, a level of excellence unmatched in later times.
- Gupta coins (mostly gold — dinaras; also silver/copper): exquisite artistry, intricate detail, realistic/aesthetic depictions
- features: portraits of kings in various poses (Samudragupta playing the veena, as an archer, performing the Ashvamedha; Chandragupta II hunting a lion), deities (Lakshmi, Durga), legends in Sanskrit, fine execution
- reflecting power, religion, culture, the "Golden Age"
- why not noticeable later: post-Gupta decline — debased coinage (less gold, cruder), the decline of long-distance trade/economy (urban decay), feudalisation, loss of artistic patronage/skill, fewer gold coins
- examples: the crude later coins
- a high-water mark of coin art
- art reflecting prosperity.
- Concl: Gupta gold coins, with their exquisite, detailed portrayals of kings (Samudragupta's veena, Chandragupta II's lion hunt) and deities, mark the apex of Indian numismatic art — an excellence not seen later as post-Gupta economic decline, debased coinage and feudalisation eroded both the gold economy and the artistic skill behind it.
- Add: Gupta coins (gold dinaras); Samudragupta (veena/archer/Ashvamedha)/Chandragupta II (lion hunt); deities/Sanskrit legends; "Golden Age"; post-Gupta debasement/urban decay; feudalisation.
Modern History
2[15m] Highlight the importance of the new objectives that got added to the vision of Indian Independence since the twenties of the last century.
- Intro: From the 1920s, India's vision of independence expanded beyond mere political freedom to embrace new social, economic and ideological objectives, broadening and deepening the nationalist goal.
- pre-1920s: largely political (self-government/swaraj, reforms)
- new objectives added: Purna Swaraj (complete independence — 1929/1930, vs dominion status), social justice (anti-untouchability, Harijan upliftment — Gandhi), economic objectives (the Karachi Resolution 1931 — fundamental rights, an economic programme, socialism — Nehru/the Left), the rights of workers/peasants, women's emancipation, secularism, a constituent assembly (people's sovereignty)
- the influence of socialism (the USSR), Gandhi's mass focus
- from elite political reform to a holistic vision (political + social + economic freedom)
- a deepened, inclusive nationalism
- swaraj as social transformation.
- Concl: From the 1920s, the vision of independence broadened from political self-rule to Purna Swaraj plus social justice, economic transformation, fundamental rights and the empowerment of peasants, workers and women (the Karachi Resolution) — turning the freedom goal into a holistic vision of political, social and economic emancipation.
- Add: new objectives (post-1920s); Purna Swaraj (1929/30); Karachi Resolution (1931 — fundamental rights/economic programme); social justice/anti-untouchability; socialism (Nehru/Left); holistic freedom.
3[15m] Examine how the decline of traditional artisanal industry in colonial India crippled the rural economy.
- Intro: The decline of India's traditional artisanal industry under colonial rule ("deindustrialisation") devastated the rural economy, deepening agrarian distress and poverty.
- how artisans declined: cheap machine-made British goods flooded India (textiles), discriminatory colonial trade policy, loss of court/patron demand, the drain of wealth
- impact on the rural economy: ruined artisans/weavers thrown back onto agriculture → over-crowding of land/over-dependence on agriculture ("ruralisation"/de-urbanisation), pressure on land, falling per-capita income, the decline of village self-sufficiency (the village economy), unemployment, poverty/famines
- the disruption of the traditional handicraft-agriculture balance
- a self-reliant village economy destroyed
- examples: the ruin of Dhaka/Murshidabad weavers
- deindustrialisation → agrarian crisis
- rural impoverishment.
- Concl: Colonial deindustrialisation ruined India's traditional artisans through cheap machine goods and discriminatory policy, forcing them onto already-strained agriculture — overcrowding the land, destroying village self-sufficiency, and deepening rural poverty and agrarian distress, crippling the rural economy.
- Add: artisanal decline/deindustrialisation; cheap machine textiles/colonial policy; over-crowding of agriculture ("ruralisation"); decline of village self-sufficiency; Dhaka/Murshidabad weavers; agrarian distress.
4[10m] Why did the 'Moderates' fail to carry conviction with the nation about their proclaimed ideology and political goals by the end of the nineteenth century?
- Intro: By the end of the 19th century, the Moderates had failed to carry conviction with the nation about their ideology and goals, owing to their limited methods, narrow base and meagre achievements.
- reasons for failure: their methods ("the 3 Ps" — petitions, prayers, protests; constitutional agitation) seemed timid/ineffective; faith in British justice/goodwill betrayed (few concessions)
- elitist/narrow social base (urban, educated middle class — not the masses), no mass contact
- meagre achievements (the 1892 Act underwhelming), slow progress
- growing disillusionment, rising expectations, repression (famines, plague, the partition of Bengal)
- the rise of the Extremists (Tilak, Lajpat Rai, Bipin Chandra Pal) criticising their "mendicancy"
- a generational/ideological shift
- from petitioning to assertion
- the Moderates' phase exhausted
- paving the way for militant nationalism.
- Concl: The Moderates failed to convince the nation because their timid "petition-and-prayer" methods yielded few concessions, their base was narrow and elitist, and their faith in British goodwill proved misplaced — breeding disillusionment that gave rise to the assertive Extremists by the century's end.
- Add: Moderates (petitions-prayers-protests); narrow elitist base/no mass contact; meagre concessions (1892 Act); betrayed faith in British justice; Extremists' critique ("mendicancy"); shift to assertion.
5[10m] Clarify how mid-eighteenth century India was beset with the spectre of a fragmented polity.
- Intro: Mid-18th-century India was beset by a fragmented, unstable polity following the decline of the Mughal Empire, a power vacuum that facilitated British conquest.
- the fragmentation: the decline of the Mughal Empire (after Aurangzeb, 1707 — weak successors, wars of succession, Nadir Shah's/Ahmad Shah Abdali's invasions)
- rise of regional/successor states — the Marathas, the Nizam of Hyderabad, Bengal (the Nawabs), Awadh, Mysore, the Sikhs, the Rajputs
- no central authority, constant warfare/rivalry among them, shifting alliances
- economic disruption, instability
- the power vacuum exploited by the European companies (the British/French — playing rivalries, Plassey 1757)
- a "fragmented polity"/political disunity
- enabling colonial conquest
- the twilight of the Mughals
- disunity as opportunity.
- Concl: Mid-18th-century India was politically fragmented as the declining Mughal Empire gave way to mutually warring successor and regional states (the Marathas, Hyderabad, Bengal, Mysore) with no central authority — a disunited power vacuum that the British East India Company exploited to begin its conquest.
- Add: Mughal decline (post-1707/Aurangzeb); successor states (Marathas/Hyderabad/Bengal/Awadh/Mysore); invasions (Nadir Shah/Abdali); power vacuum/disunity; British exploitation (Plassey 1757).
World History
6[10m] What problems are germane to the decolonization process in the Malay Peninsula?
- Intro: The decolonization of the Malay Peninsula (Malaya/Malaysia) was beset by distinctive problems, chiefly its complex ethnic plurality and a communist insurgency.
- problems: ethnic/communal complexity (Malays, Chinese, Indians — a plural society, racial tensions over power-sharing/citizenship/economic disparity)
- the communist insurgency (the Malayan Emergency 1948-60 — the largely Chinese-led MCP), British counter-insurgency
- the challenge of forging a united nation from diverse groups
- economic interests (tin, rubber — British)
- the integration of the Malay states + Straits Settlements, the creation of Malaysia (1963 — including Singapore, Sabah, Sarawak), Singapore's later separation (1965), confrontation with Indonesia (Konfrontasi)
- a managed, gradual decolonization (1957 independence)
- communal balance (the "Bargain")
- plural-society nation-building.
- Concl: Malay Peninsula decolonization was complicated by its deeply plural society (Malay-Chinese-Indian tensions over power and citizenship) and a communist insurgency (the Malayan Emergency), requiring delicate communal bargaining and counter-insurgency before independence (1957) and the contested formation of Malaysia.
- Add: Malaya decolonization; plural society (Malay/Chinese/Indian tensions); Malayan Emergency (1948-60, MCP insurgency); independence (1957)/Malaysia (1963); Singapore separation (1965); communal "Bargain".
Indian Society
7[15m] "The growth of cities as I.T. hubs has opened up new avenues of employment, but has also created new problems." Substantiate this statement with examples.
- Intro: The growth of cities as IT hubs has opened vast new employment avenues but also generated significant new socio-economic and urban problems.
- new employment: a booming IT/ITeS/services sector — direct jobs (engineers, professionals), indirect/ancillary (real estate, retail, transport, hospitality), high incomes, women's employment, a new middle class, start-ups, exports/forex (Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Gurugram)
- new problems: urban stress (congestion, traffic, pollution, housing/rent, cost of living), infrastructure strain, inequality (IT haves vs informal have-nots), rural-urban/regional skew, work-life stress/health, cultural change, the digital divide, gentrification, water/waste crises
- an uneven "islands of prosperity" growth
- examples: Bengaluru's growth + its traffic/water woes
- opportunity with disruption
- inclusive, sustainable urban planning needed.
- Concl: IT hubs have generated vast employment and a new middle class (Bengaluru, Hyderabad), powering India's services economy — but also brought urban stress (congestion, housing, pollution), inequality and infrastructure strain; harnessing their benefits needs inclusive, sustainable urban planning.
- Add: IT hubs (Bengaluru/Hyderabad/Pune); services jobs/new middle class; urban stress (congestion/housing/pollution); inequality (formal vs informal); infrastructure strain; sustainable planning.
8[15m] Distinguish between religiousness/religiosity and communalism, giving one example of how the former has transformed into the latter in independent India.
- Intro: Religiosity (personal faith and devotion) and communalism (the political use of religious identity against others) are fundamentally different, though the former can be manipulated into the latter.
- religiousness/religiosity: personal/private faith, devotion, spirituality, morality, ritual — inward, benign, tolerant
- communalism: a political ideology using religious identity to mobilise one community against another (us vs them), seeking power/dominance — an ideology, not faith
- the distinction: religiosity is about belief; communalism is about politics/identity/antagonism
- how the former transforms into the latter: when religious identity is politicised/mobilised for power (vote banks, polarisation), grievances exploited
- example: the politicisation of religious identity around events/movements (e.g., the Ramjanmabhoomi-Babri Masjid mobilisation) turning devotion into communal antagonism
- faith weaponised
- secularism vs communalism.
- Concl: Religiosity is private, benign faith, while communalism is the divisive political weaponisation of religious identity against the "other"; the former transforms into the latter when religious sentiment is politically mobilised for power — as the Ramjanmabhoomi mobilisation in independent India illustrates.
- Add: religiosity (private faith) vs communalism (political ideology/antagonism); us-vs-them mobilisation; politicisation of religion/vote banks; Ramjanmabhoomi-Babri example; faith weaponised; secularism.
9[15m] The women's questions arose in modern India as a part of the 19th-century social reform movement. What are the major issues and debates concerning women in that period?
- Intro: The "women's question" emerged as a central concern of the 19th-century social reform movement in India, raising major issues and debates about women's status and rights.
- context: colonial modernity, reformers (Ram Mohan Roy, Vidyasagar, Jyotirao/Savitribai Phule, Ranade)
- major issues/debates: sati (its abolition — 1829, Roy), widow remarriage (Vidyasagar — the 1856 Act), women's education (the central reform), child marriage (the Age of Consent debates — 1891), purdah, polygamy, the condition of widows, female infanticide, property rights
- debates: tradition vs reform, the role of religion/scripture (reform within tradition), the colonial state's role (legislation), nationalist anxieties (women as the "inner/spiritual domain")
- from "women as objects of reform" (by men) toward agency
- examples: the reform legislations
- the social-reform-nationalism link
- the birth of the women's question.
- Concl: The 19th-century reform movement made the "women's question" central — debating and acting on sati, widow remarriage, women's education, child marriage and purdah — through reformers like Roy and Vidyasagar; though largely led by men "for" women, it laid the foundation for women's emancipation and later agency.
- Add: women's question (19th-c. reform); sati abolition (1829, Roy); widow remarriage (Vidyasagar, 1856); women's education; child marriage/Age of Consent (1891); tradition vs reform; Phule (girls' education).
10[15m] "The spirit of tolerance and love is not only an interesting feature of Indian society from very early times, but it is also playing an important part at the present." Elaborate.
- Intro: The spirit of tolerance and love has been a defining feature of Indian society from ancient times and continues to play a vital role in sustaining its pluralism today.
- from early times: the assimilative, accommodative ethos — Vedic pluralism, Ashoka's tolerance (Dhamma), the Bhakti-Sufi syncretism, "sarva dharma sambhava", Akbar's sulh-i-kul, the composite culture (Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb), hospitality ("atithi devo bhava"), non-violence (ahimsa — Buddhism, Jainism, Gandhi)
- at present: secularism (constitutional), unity in diversity, coexistence of religions/cultures, festivals shared, the spirit countering communalism/conflict
- challenges: communalism, intolerance, polarisation testing it
- its importance: national integration, social harmony, democracy, peace
- a civilisational value
- tolerance as the glue of a plural India.
- Concl: Tolerance and love — rooted in India's ancient assimilative ethos (Ashoka, Bhakti-Sufi syncretism, sarva dharma sambhava) — remain vital today as the foundation of its secularism, pluralism and national integration, even as communalism and intolerance test this enduring civilisational value.
- Add: tolerance/love (Indian ethos); Ashoka's Dhamma; Bhakti-Sufi syncretism/sarva dharma sambhava; Akbar's sulh-i-kul; composite culture; secularism/unity in diversity; "atithi devo bhava".
11[10m] What are the two major legal initiatives by the State since Independence addressing discrimination against Scheduled Tribes (STs)?
- Intro: Since independence, two major legal initiatives stand out in addressing discrimination against Scheduled Tribes (STs): the SC/ST atrocities law and forest/self-governance rights legislation.
- initiative 1: the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 — criminalises atrocities/discrimination against SCs/STs, special courts, protection from caste-based violence/humiliation, deterrence
- initiative 2: the Forest Rights Act (the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers — Recognition of Forest Rights — Act, 2006) — recognising tribals' rights over forest land/resources they traditionally depend on, correcting "historical injustice", community forest rights
- also: PESA 1996 (self-governance), the Protection of Civil Rights Act
- from protection (atrocities) to empowerment (rights)
- addressing both discrimination and dispossession
- legal safeguards for tribal dignity and rights.
- Concl: Two landmark legal initiatives address ST discrimination: the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 — penalising caste-based violence and humiliation — and the Forest Rights Act, 2006 — restoring tribals' forest rights and correcting historical injustice; together they move from protection against discrimination toward empowerment.
- Add: SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989; Forest Rights Act 2006 ("historical injustice"); PESA 1996; protection + empowerment; tribal rights/dignity.
12[10m] In the context of the diversity of India, can it be said that the regions form cultural units rather than the States? Give reasons with examples for your viewpoint.
- Intro: In the context of India's diversity, regions often form more authentic cultural units than the administrative states, as culture frequently transcends state boundaries.
- the argument: cultural regions (defined by language, customs, cuisine, dress, history, geography) often cut across or differ from state lines (which are administrative/political, even if linguistically based)
- examples: cultural regions like Bundelkhand (across UP/MP), the Bhojpur region (UP/Bihar), Vidarbha/Marathwada (within Maharashtra), Telangana (was within AP), Tulu Nadu (Karnataka/Kerala), Kongu Nadu, the Konkan coast
- sub-regional cultural identities within states; some cultures spanning states
- states = political units; regions = cultural/lived units
- but: linguistic states do largely align with cultural-linguistic regions
- a nuanced view — both, with regions often the deeper cultural reality
- culture vs administration
- a mosaic finer than the states.
- Concl: Regions frequently form truer cultural units than states, as language, customs and history define lived cultural identities (Bundelkhand, Bhojpur, Vidarbha, Tulu Nadu) that often cut across or sub-divide administrative state boundaries — making India's cultural mosaic finer and deeper than its political map.
- Add: cultural regions vs administrative states; sub-regional identities (Bundelkhand/Vidarbha/Tulu Nadu/Bhojpur); culture transcending state lines; linguistic states (partial alignment); cultural mosaic.
Geography
13[15m] What characteristics can be assigned to the monsoon climate that succeeds in feeding more than 50 percent of the world population residing in Monsoon Asia?
- Intro: The monsoon climate, with its distinctive seasonal rhythm of heavy rainfall and warmth, sustains intensive agriculture that feeds over half the world's population in Monsoon Asia.
- characteristics: seasonal reversal of winds (the monsoon), concentrated heavy summer rainfall (the wet season) + a dry winter, high temperatures (a long growing season), high humidity
- why it feeds so many: abundant water (rainfall) + heat + fertile alluvial soils (river deltas/plains) → intensive (often multiple-crop) agriculture, especially wet-rice cultivation (the staple, high-yielding, labour-intensive) supporting dense populations
- regions: India, China, Southeast Asia (the great river valleys — Ganga, Mekong, Yangtze)
- rice + monsoon → dense populations
- but: monsoon variability (droughts/floods) = a risk
- the basis of Asian agrarian civilisation
- climate sustaining humanity.
- Concl: The monsoon climate's seasonal heavy rainfall, warmth and long growing season, combined with fertile river plains, enable the intensive wet-rice agriculture that feeds the dense populations of Monsoon Asia (over half the world) — though its variability brings droughts and floods, making it both a lifeline and a risk.
- Add: monsoon climate (seasonal wind reversal/heavy summer rain); wet-rice cultivation; fertile alluvial plains (Ganga/Mekong/Yangtze); dense populations; monsoon variability (drought/flood); agrarian Asia.
14[15m] In what way can floods be converted into a sustainable source of irrigation and all-weather inland navigation in India?
- Intro: With careful management, India's recurrent floods can be converted from a destructive hazard into a sustainable resource for irrigation and all-weather inland navigation.
- harnessing floods for irrigation: storing floodwater (reservoirs, tanks, check dams), groundwater recharge (managed aquifer recharge, the "underground storage"), flood-water spreading/spate irrigation, diverting surplus to deficit areas, river interlinking (debated)
- for navigation: maintaining river flow/depth (the National Waterways), barrages/locks for year-round navigability, dredging, integrated river management
- co-benefits: drought-proofing, water security, cheap transport
- examples: traditional flood-harvesting (inundation canals — Bengal), tank systems
- "room for the river"/integrated basin management
- challenges: ecology, cost, displacement
- turning a hazard into a resource
- flood management as opportunity.
- Concl: India's floods can become a sustainable resource through storing and recharging floodwater for irrigation (reservoirs, recharge, spate irrigation) and regulating river flow for year-round navigation (waterways, barrages) — turning a destructive hazard into water security and cheap transport via integrated basin management.
- Add: flood harnessing (reservoirs/managed aquifer recharge/spate irrigation); inundation canals (Bengal); National Waterways/barrages (navigation); integrated basin management; "room for the river"; hazard to resource.
15[15m] Petroleum refineries are not necessarily located nearer to crude oil producing areas, particularly in many of the developing countries. Explain its implications.
- Intro: Petroleum refineries, especially in developing countries, are increasingly located away from crude-oil-producing areas — driven by market, port and economic factors with notable implications.
- why away from crude sources: market-orientation (near consumption centres — demand), port/coastal access (importing crude — many developing countries import oil), better infrastructure/transport, government policy (balanced development, strategic location), cheaper to transport crude than refined products (in some cases), avoiding depletion-dependence
- examples: coastal refineries (Jamnagar, Mangalore — India), market-located ones
- implications: economic (regional development, jobs, trade), strategic (energy security, import dependence), environmental (pollution near cities/coasts), the geography of energy
- "market vs raw-material" location
- a footloose-ish industry
- shaped by trade and demand.
- Concl: Petroleum refineries in developing countries often locate near markets and ports rather than crude sources — because most import oil and refining is best sited near demand and coasts (Jamnagar, Mangalore); this shapes regional development, energy security and pollution patterns, reflecting a market- and trade-oriented location logic.
- Add: refinery location (market/port-oriented, not crude source); import dependence (developing countries)/coastal siting; Jamnagar/Mangalore; transport economics; energy security/regional development; pollution.
16[15m] Account for variations in oceanic salinity and discuss its multi-dimensional effects.
- Intro: Oceanic salinity — the salt content of seawater — varies spatially due to several factors and has multi-dimensional effects on climate, marine life and ocean circulation.
- causes of variation: evaporation (high → high salinity — the tropics/subtropics, the Red Sea ~40‰), precipitation (high → low salinity — the equator, high rainfall), freshwater influx (rivers/ice melt → low — near river mouths, the Baltic, the poles), temperature, mixing/currents, enclosed seas (high — the Dead Sea)
- the average ~35‰
- multi-dimensional effects: ocean density/circulation (thermohaline — the "global conveyor belt", driven by salinity/temperature), marine life (organisms adapted to salinity — distribution), climate (heat distribution, the AMOC), fishing, evaporation/rainfall, sea-ice formation, navigation (buoyancy)
- salinity as an ocean driver
- interconnected ocean systems.
- Concl: Oceanic salinity varies with evaporation, precipitation and freshwater influx (from the highly saline Red Sea to the diluted poles); its effects are multi-dimensional — driving thermohaline circulation and the global conveyor belt, shaping marine life distribution, climate (the AMOC) and fisheries — making it a key regulator of ocean and climate systems.
- Add: salinity (avg ~35‰); evaporation vs precipitation/freshwater influx; Red Sea (high)/poles (low)/Dead Sea; thermohaline circulation ("global conveyor belt"); AMOC/climate; marine life distribution.
17[10m] How does the cryosphere affect global climate?
- Intro: The cryosphere — the Earth's frozen water (ice sheets, glaciers, sea ice, snow, permafrost) — profoundly affects global climate through several mechanisms.
- what: ice sheets (Greenland/Antarctica), glaciers, sea ice, snow cover, permafrost
- how it affects climate: albedo — ice/snow reflect solar radiation (high albedo → cooling); melting → darker surfaces absorb heat → warming (the ice-albedo feedback)
- sea level — melting land ice raises sea levels
- ocean circulation — meltwater (freshwater) affects the thermohaline circulation/AMOC
- carbon — permafrost stores carbon/methane (melting → release → warming feedback)
- regulating temperature, the global heat balance
- a climate regulator + amplifier
- vulnerability — warming shrinks the cryosphere → feedback loops
- "the Earth's air conditioner"
- a critical climate component.
- Concl: The cryosphere regulates global climate chiefly through albedo (reflecting sunlight and cooling the planet), influencing sea level and ocean circulation, and storing carbon in permafrost; its warming-driven shrinkage triggers feedback loops (ice-albedo, methane release) that amplify climate change — making it a critical climate regulator and the "Earth's air conditioner."
- Add: cryosphere (ice sheets/glaciers/sea ice/permafrost); ice-albedo feedback (reflection/cooling); sea-level rise (land ice); thermohaline/AMOC (meltwater); permafrost carbon/methane; climate regulator.
18[10m] Mention the advantages of the cultivation of pulses because of which the year 2016 was declared as the International Year of Pulses by the United Nations.
- Intro: Pulses, recognised by the UN through the International Year of Pulses (2016), offer remarkable nutritional, agricultural and environmental advantages.
- nutritional: rich in protein ("poor man's meat" — vital for vegetarian/protein-deficient diets), fibre, minerals, low fat — combating malnutrition
- agricultural: nitrogen-fixing (leguminous — enrich soil fertility, reduce fertiliser need), suit dryland/rain-fed farming (drought-tolerant, low water), short duration, intercropping/crop rotation
- environmental: a low water footprint, a low carbon footprint (vs animal protein), sustainability, biodiversity
- economic: income for small farmers, food security, reducing import dependence (India a major importer)
- examples: India the largest producer/consumer; schemes to boost pulses
- a "smart food"
- nutrition + soil + sustainability
- a sustainable food-security solution.
- Concl: Pulses are a "smart food" — protein-rich (combating malnutrition), soil-enriching through nitrogen fixation, drought-tolerant and water-efficient, and climate-friendly — making them vital for nutrition, sustainable agriculture and food security, which is why the UN designated 2016 the International Year of Pulses.
- Add: pulses (UN International Year 2016); protein-rich ("poor man's meat")/nutrition; nitrogen-fixing (soil fertility); drought-tolerant/low water footprint; sustainability; India (largest producer/importer).
19[10m] "In spite of adverse environmental impact, coal mining is still inevitable for development." Discuss.
- Intro: Despite its adverse environmental impacts, coal mining remains, for now, inevitable for India's development, given its central role in energy and industry.
- why inevitable: coal = the backbone of energy (~55-70% of India's electricity), cheap/abundant (large domestic reserves — Gondwana), industry (steel, cement), energy security (reducing import dependence), jobs/livelihoods, base-load power, affordability, the development imperative (a growing economy)
- adverse impacts: air/water pollution, GHG emissions (climate change), land degradation, deforestation, displacement (tribal areas), health (mining/burning), the just-transition challenge
- the dilemma: development/energy need vs sustainability
- the transition: a gradual shift to renewables (the 500 GW target), cleaner coal, a "just transition" (jobs), but coal still needed in the interim
- a transitional necessity
- balancing growth and ecology.
- Concl: Coal mining, despite its serious environmental and social costs (pollution, emissions, displacement), remains inevitable for India's development in the near term — as the backbone of affordable, secure base-load energy and industry; the path forward is a gradual, just transition to renewables rather than abrupt abandonment.
- Add: coal (~55-70% of electricity/base-load); cheap/abundant (Gondwana reserves)/energy security; pollution/GHG emissions/displacement; development vs sustainability; just transition; 500 GW renewables.
20[10m] How does the Juno Mission of NASA help to understand the origin and evolution of the Earth?
- Intro: NASA's Juno Mission, studying Jupiter, helps scientists understand the origin and evolution of the solar system — and thereby the Earth — by probing the solar system's oldest planet.
- Juno (launched 2011, reached Jupiter 2016): orbits Jupiter, studying its composition, gravity, magnetic field, atmosphere, deep interior, the Great Red Spot, auroras
- how it helps understand Earth's origin/evolution: Jupiter, the oldest/first-formed planet, retains the primordial composition of the early solar nebula → studying it reveals how the solar system (and planets like Earth) formed
- its core/water/composition → clues to planetary formation, the building blocks
- understanding the early solar system → the context of Earth's origin
- a "time capsule" of solar-system history
- planetary science
- deciphering planetary evolution
- a window into the past.
- Concl: NASA's Juno Mission, by probing Jupiter's composition, interior and magnetic field, illuminates the conditions of the early solar nebula from which the solar system and Earth formed — using the oldest planet as a "time capsule" to decode the origin and evolution of planets, including our own.
- Add: Juno (NASA, Jupiter, 2016); Jupiter's composition/interior/magnetic field; oldest planet/primordial solar nebula; planetary formation clues; "time capsule"; Earth's origin/solar-system evolution.
GS-1 · 2016
Art & Culture
1[12.5m] Krishnadeva Raya, the king of Vijayanagar, was not only an accomplished scholar himself but was also a great patron of learning and literature. Discuss.
- Intro: Krishnadeva Raya (r. 1509-1529), the greatest ruler of the Vijayanagara Empire, was both an accomplished scholar and a renowned patron of learning, literature and the arts — making his court a golden age.
- his own scholarship: a polyglot; authored Amuktamalyada (a Telugu literary classic on statecraft/devotion) and Sanskrit works (Jambavati Kalyana)
- patronage: the famed "Ashtadiggajas" (eight poets) in his court (Allasani Peddana — the "Andhra Kavita Pitamaha", etc.); patronised Telugu, Sanskrit, Kannada and Tamil literature
- a golden age of Telugu literature (the "Prabandha" era)
- art/architecture: temples (the Vittala/Hazara Rama temples, Hampi — UNESCO, the Vijayanagara style, gopurams), music, dance
- a "Sahitya Samrajya"
- his reign = the zenith of Vijayanagara culture
- a scholar-king.
- Concl: Krishnadeva Raya was himself a distinguished author (Amuktamalyada) and a great patron — nurturing the Ashtadiggajas, a golden age of Telugu literature, and magnificent temple architecture at Hampi — making his reign the cultural zenith of Vijayanagara.
- Add: Krishnadeva Raya (1509-29, Vijayanagara); Amuktamalyada (Telugu); Ashtadiggajas (Allasani Peddana); Telugu "Prabandha" era; Hampi temples (Vittala/UNESCO); scholar-king.
2[12.5m] Early Buddhist Stupa-art, while depicting folk motifs and narratives, successfully expounds Buddhist ideals. Elucidate.
- Intro: Early Buddhist stupa-art, though rich in folk motifs and secular narratives, was skilfully employed to expound and propagate core Buddhist ideals.
- stupa art: the carved railings (vedika) and gateways (toranas) of stupas — Sanchi, Bharhut, Amaravati (c. 2nd century BCE-2nd century CE)
- folk motifs/narratives: yakshas/yakshis (fertility spirits), animals, trees (the sacred tree), nature, lotus, daily life, popular tales — drawing on pre-Buddhist folk traditions
- expounding Buddhist ideals: the Jataka tales (the Buddha's past lives — teaching virtues — dana, ahimsa, sacrifice), symbolic representation of the Buddha (aniconic — the empty throne, footprints, the wheel/Dharmachakra, the Bodhi tree, the stupa) before his image
- accessible/popular communication of the dharma
- a folk + sacred synthesis
- art as a teaching tool
- Buddhism's mass appeal.
- Concl: Early Buddhist stupa-art at Sanchi and Bharhut wove folk motifs (yakshas, animals, nature) and narratives (the Jataka tales) into the symbolic, aniconic expression of Buddhist ideals — making art an accessible, popular vehicle for teaching the dharma, blending the folk and the sacred.
- Add: stupa art (Sanchi/Bharhut/Amaravati); torana/vedika; folk motifs (yakshas/yakshis/nature); Jataka tales (virtues); aniconic symbols (Dharmachakra/Bodhi tree); dharma teaching.
Modern History
3[12.5m] Highlight the differences in the approach of Subhash Chandra Bose and Mahatma Gandhi in the struggle for freedom.
- Intro: Though both were towering nationalist leaders devoted to India's freedom, Subhas Chandra Bose and Mahatma Gandhi differed sharply in ideology, methods and vision.
- methods: Gandhi — non-violence (ahimsa), satyagraha, mass civil disobedience, a moral/spiritual struggle; Bose — willing to use armed struggle/force, militant means (the INA), "give me blood, I will give you freedom"
- ideology: Gandhi — village-centric, decentralised, spiritual, trusteeship; Bose — socialist, modern, industrial, statist, leftist
- strategy: Gandhi — constitutional + mass movements, faith in non-violence; Bose — allying with the Axis powers (Germany, Japan) to oust the British (the INA), "the enemy's enemy"
- vision: differing on the means to swaraj
- the Tripuri Congress split (1939)
- both patriots, divergent paths
- non-violence vs armed struggle.
- Concl: Gandhi pursued freedom through non-violence, satyagraha and a spiritual, village-centric vision, while Bose embraced armed struggle (the INA), socialism and alliances with the Axis to expel the British — two devoted patriots whose contrasting methods and ideologies represented the diversity of the freedom struggle.
- Add: Gandhi (non-violence/satyagraha/village swaraj) vs Bose (armed struggle/INA/socialism); "give me blood..."; Axis alliance; Tripuri split (1939); non-violence vs force.
4[12.5m] Discuss the role of women in the freedom struggle, especially during the Gandhian phase.
- Intro: Women played a vital and expanding role in India's freedom struggle, especially during the Gandhian phase, which opened mass participation to them.
- how Gandhi enabled it: his non-violent, mass methods (satyagraha, picketing, khadi, salt) suited and welcomed women's participation — bringing them out of the home into the public/political sphere
- leaders: Sarojini Naidu (Congress president), Kasturba Gandhi, Kamala Nehru, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, Aruna Asaf Ali (Quit India — hoisted the flag), Sucheta Kripalani, Rani Gaidinliu (Northeast), Captain Lakshmi Sahgal (the INA's Rani Jhansi Regiment)
- activities: picketing liquor/foreign-cloth shops, the Salt Satyagraha, spinning khadi, prabhat pheris, prison, the Quit India underground, the INA
- a transformation of women's status/political awakening
- from the home to the freedom struggle
- a milestone for women's empowerment.
- Concl: During the Gandhian phase, women emerged as vital participants in the freedom struggle — from Sarojini Naidu and Aruna Asaf Ali to the INA's women soldiers — joining satyagraha, picketing, the Salt March and Quit India; their mass involvement marked a milestone in women's political awakening and empowerment.
- Add: women in freedom struggle (Gandhian phase); Sarojini Naidu/Aruna Asaf Ali/Kasturba; Salt Satyagraha/picketing/khadi; Quit India; Captain Lakshmi Sahgal (INA Rani Jhansi Regiment); women's awakening.
5[12.5m] Explain how the uprising of 1857 constitutes an important watershed in the evolution of British policies towards colonial India.
- Intro: The Revolt of 1857, though suppressed, was a major watershed that fundamentally transformed British policies towards colonial India.
- political changes: the end of Company rule → direct Crown rule (the Government of India Act 1858), the Queen's Proclamation (1858 — promises of non-interference), the end of the Mughal dynasty and the Doctrine of Lapse (no more annexation, alliances with princes)
- military reorganisation: more British troops, divide-and-rule in the army (caste/region/religion balancing), artillery in British hands
- administrative/social: cautious non-interference in religion/society (after the cartridge episode), but deepening racism/distrust, divide-and-rule (communal), conservatism (alliance with landlords/princes)
- economic exploitation continued
- from a trading company to a racial imperial state
- a turning point in colonial policy.
- Concl: The 1857 uprising was a watershed that ended Company rule, brought direct Crown governance (the 1858 Act and Proclamation), reorganised the army on divide-and-rule lines, and shifted British policy toward cautious non-interference, princely alliances and deeper racial division — fundamentally reshaping colonial rule.
- Add: 1857 Revolt (watershed); end of Company rule → Crown (GoI Act 1858/Queen's Proclamation); army reorganisation (divide-and-rule); end of Doctrine of Lapse; princely alliances; racial state.
World History
6[12.5m] The anti-colonial struggles in West Africa were led by the new elite of Western-educated Africans. Examine.
- Intro: The anti-colonial struggles in West Africa were largely led by a new elite of Western-educated Africans, who turned the coloniser's education against colonial rule.
- the new elite: African intellectuals/professionals educated in Western (European/American) institutions (lawyers, teachers, journalists) — exposed to ideas of liberty, democracy, self-determination and nationalism
- leaders: Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana — Pan-Africanism), Nnamdi Azikiwe (Nigeria), Léopold Senghor (Senegal — Négritude), Sékou Touré (Guinea)
- how they led: founding parties/movements, using Western ideals/education to demand rights/independence, the press, Pan-Africanism, mass mobilisation
- the paradox: colonial education created the leaders who overthrew colonialism
- "the educated elite" vs traditional leaders
- but also mass/grassroots support
- Western education as a double-edged colonial legacy.
- Concl: West Africa's anti-colonial struggles were indeed spearheaded by a Western-educated elite — Nkrumah, Azikiwe, Senghor — who harnessed the liberal ideas and skills of their colonial education to lead nationalist movements and Pan-Africanism, turning the coloniser's tools against colonial rule.
- Add: West African decolonisation; Western-educated elite (Nkrumah/Azikiwe/Senghor); liberty/self-determination ideals; Pan-Africanism/Négritude; the press/nationalist parties; education as double-edged.
Post-Independence History
7[12.5m] Has the formation of linguistic states strengthened the cause of Indian unity?
- Intro: The formation of linguistic states, initially feared as divisive, has on balance strengthened rather than weakened the cause of Indian unity.
- context: the demand for linguistic states (post-independence), the States Reorganisation Act (1956)
- fears: it would encourage separatism/fragmentation, sub-nationalism
- how it strengthened unity: accommodated linguistic/cultural identity democratically (reducing grievance), gave cultural-administrative autonomy (better governance), defused secessionist tendencies (channelling identity within the union), "unity in diversity", emotional integration, development of regional languages/cultures
- residual concerns: some sub-regional/inter-state disputes (water, borders), "sons of the soil", language conflicts (Hindi imposition)
- but no major secession (it accommodated, not divided)
- federal flexibility
- accommodation strengthening the nation.
- Concl: Far from dividing India, linguistic reorganisation strengthened national unity by democratically accommodating linguistic and cultural identities within the federal union — defusing grievances and secessionism while fostering "unity in diversity," though minor inter-state and language tensions persist.
- Add: linguistic states/States Reorganisation Act (1956); fear of fragmentation vs accommodation; "unity in diversity"; defusing secessionism; sub-regional/water disputes; federal flexibility.
Indian Society
8[12.5m] What is the basis of regionalism? Is it that unequal distribution of benefits of development on a regional basis eventually promotes regionalism? Substantiate your answer.
- Intro: Regionalism in India has multiple bases, but the unequal distribution of development benefits across regions is a major and recurrent driver.
- bases of regionalism: language, ethnicity/culture, geography/history, identity, and — crucially — economic/development disparity
- how unequal development promotes it: backward regions feel neglected/exploited (the "internal colonialism" perception), demand a fair share/separate statehood (Telangana, Vidarbha, Bundelkhand), resentment toward developed regions/migrants ("sons of the soil"), competition for resources/jobs
- examples: Telangana (development grievance), the Northeast (neglect), demands for special status
- relative deprivation → regional assertion
- also cultural/political bases
- balanced regional development as the remedy
- development + identity intertwined.
- Concl: While regionalism rests on language, culture and identity, the unequal distribution of development benefits is a powerful driver — breeding a sense of neglect and "internal colonialism" that fuels demands for statehood and special status (Telangana); balanced regional development is key to addressing it.
- Add: regionalism (language/culture + development disparity); "internal colonialism"/relative deprivation; Telangana/Vidarbha (development grievance); "sons of the soil"; balanced regional development.
9[12.5m] With a brief background of the quality of urban life in India, introduce the objectives and strategy of the 'Smart City Programme'.
- Intro: Against a backdrop of declining urban quality of life, the Smart Cities Mission (2015) was launched to make Indian cities more liveable, sustainable and efficient through technology.
- background: rapid urbanisation straining cities — poor infrastructure, congestion, pollution, housing/slums, water/sanitation, declining quality of life
- objectives: improve quality of life, sustainable/inclusive cities, economic growth, "smart" technology-driven solutions
- strategy: area-based development (retrofitting, redevelopment, greenfield) + pan-city smart solutions (ICT — smart traffic, water, waste, e-governance, surveillance), 100 cities, the SPV model, citizen participation, the convergence of schemes
- technology + infrastructure + governance
- critiques: an enclave focus, exclusion
- aspirational urban transformation
- liveable, sustainable cities.
- Concl: The Smart Cities Mission responds to India's deteriorating urban quality of life by aiming for liveable, sustainable cities through area-based development and pan-city ICT solutions (smart utilities, e-governance) across 100 cities — a technology-driven strategy for urban transformation, though equity concerns remain.
- Add: Smart Cities Mission (2015, 100 cities); urban quality of life/rapid urbanisation; area-based + pan-city ICT solutions; SPV model; smart utilities/e-governance; liveable/sustainable cities.
10[12.5m] Why are the tribals in India referred to as 'the Scheduled Tribes'? Indicate the major provisions enshrined in the Constitution of India for their upliftment.
- Intro: Tribals are termed "Scheduled Tribes" (STs) because they are specified/scheduled in the Constitution for special protection, with numerous provisions for their upliftment.
- why "Scheduled": listed/notified in the Schedule under Art 342 (the President specifies STs) — for targeted protection (based on distinct culture, geographical isolation, shyness of contact, backwardness)
- constitutional provisions: political — reservation in the Lok Sabha/assemblies (Art 330/332) and in local bodies
- administrative — the 5th Schedule (mainland tribal areas) and 6th Schedule (Northeast autonomous councils), the Governor's role, the Tribes Advisory Council
- social/educational — Art 15(4), 46 (educational/economic promotion), reservations (Art 16(4))
- protective — Art 19(5) (land), the NCST (Art 338A), PESA, the FRA
- cultural/economic safeguards
- a framework of protective discrimination.
- Concl: Tribals are "Scheduled Tribes" because they are constitutionally scheduled (Art 342) for special protection; their upliftment is secured through political reservation (Art 330/332), the 5th/6th Schedules, educational and economic safeguards (Art 15(4)/46), the NCST (Art 338A), PESA and the FRA — a comprehensive framework of protective discrimination.
- Add: Scheduled Tribes (Art 342); reservation (Art 330/332); 5th/6th Schedules; Art 15(4)/16(4)/46; NCST (Art 338A); PESA/Forest Rights Act; protective discrimination.
11[12.5m] "An essential condition to eradicate poverty is to liberate the poor from the process of deprivation." Substantiate this statement with suitable examples.
- Intro: Eradicating poverty requires more than income support — it demands liberating the poor from the multidimensional "process of deprivation" that perpetuates their poverty.
- the "process of deprivation": poverty is not just low income but deprivation of capabilities/opportunities — lack of education, health, assets, voice, dignity, social exclusion (caste/gender), powerlessness (Amartya Sen's capability approach)
- this process traps the poor (a vicious cycle — deprivation → poverty → deprivation)
- liberating them: build capabilities (education, health, skills), assets (land, credit), empowerment (voice, rights, organisation — SHGs), social inclusion, removing structural barriers
- examples: SHGs, the RTE, NRLM, land reform, Kerala's model
- from welfare/handouts to empowerment/agency
- addressing root causes, not symptoms
- poverty as deprivation, not just income.
- Concl: Eradicating poverty means liberating the poor from the multidimensional process of deprivation — building their capabilities (education, health), assets and empowerment (Sen's capability approach) rather than merely transferring income — addressing the structural roots that trap them, as SHGs and human-capability investment show.
- Add: "process of deprivation"; Amartya Sen (capability approach); multidimensional poverty; capabilities (education/health/assets); empowerment/SHGs; structural barriers; agency over handouts.
12[12.5m] To what extent has globalisation influenced the core of cultural diversity in India? Explain.
- Intro: Globalisation has significantly influenced the surface of India's cultural diversity, but the deep "core" of its plural culture has remained largely resilient.
- globalisation's influence: spreading global/consumer culture, English, media and lifestyles, homogenising tastes (food, dress, entertainment) — affecting the "surface" (urban youth, consumption)
- but the core resilient: India's deep-rooted diversity (languages, religions, festivals, customs, family, values) persists; "glocalisation" (adapting, not replacing); revival/reassertion of traditions; the core (philosophy, spirituality, social structure) adapts but endures
- some erosion (languages, crafts, local cultures under pressure)
- both change and continuity
- India absorbs/synthesises (its civilisational strength)
- surface change, core continuity
- a resilient plural core.
- Concl: Globalisation has reshaped the surface of Indian culture — consumption, lifestyles, language — but the deep core of its diversity (religions, languages, values, social fabric) has proved resilient, adapting and synthesising global influences ("glocalisation") rather than being dissolved, even as some local cultures face erosion.
- Add: globalisation/homogenisation (surface) vs resilient core; "glocalisation"; languages/festivals/values persistence; civilisational assimilation; erosion of local cultures; change + continuity.
Geography
13[12.5m] In what way do micro-watershed development projects help in water conservation in drought-prone and semi-arid regions of India?
- Intro: Micro-watershed development projects are an effective, decentralised approach to water conservation in India's drought-prone and semi-arid regions.
- what: treating a small watershed (a drainage unit) holistically — soil and water conservation on a ridge-to-valley basis
- how they conserve water: rainwater harvesting (check dams, percolation tanks, farm ponds, contour bunds, trenches), groundwater recharge, reduced runoff/soil erosion, increased soil moisture, the revival of springs/wells
- co-benefits: improved agriculture/productivity, fodder, livelihoods, reduced migration, drought-proofing, afforestation
- community participation (a participatory, decentralised model)
- examples: Ralegan Siddhi/Hiware Bazar (Maharashtra — model villages), the Watershed Development Programme/PMKSY, MGNREGA works
- "more crop per drop"/watershed-plus
- a sustainable, local water solution.
- Concl: Micro-watershed development conserves water in drought-prone, semi-arid India by harvesting rainwater (check dams, percolation tanks, bunds) and recharging groundwater on a ridge-to-valley basis — drought-proofing agriculture and livelihoods through community participation, as Ralegan Siddhi and Hiware Bazar exemplify.
- Add: micro-watershed (ridge-to-valley); check dams/percolation tanks/contour bunds; groundwater recharge/reduced runoff; Ralegan Siddhi/Hiware Bazar; PMKSY/MGNREGA; community participation.
14[12.5m] Enumerate the problems and prospects of inland water transport in India.
- Intro: Inland water transport (IWT) — moving goods and people along rivers, canals and backwaters — holds significant prospects for India but faces persistent problems.
- prospects: cheap, fuel-efficient, eco-friendly (low emissions), reduces road/rail congestion, ideal for bulk cargo, employment, connectivity (the Northeast, the hinterland)
- potential: ~14,500 km navigable, the National Waterways (NW-1 Ganga, NW-2 Brahmaputra etc.), the Jal Marg Vikas Project, Sagarmala
- problems: seasonal water/siltation (low water in the lean season), inadequate depth/dredging, lack of terminals/infrastructure, multiple uses (irrigation/dams reducing flow), pollution, navigation hazards, low private investment, competition from road/rail
- measures: dredging, terminals, the IWAI, RoRo, multimodal
- an underutilised mode
- green, cheap transport potential.
- Concl: Inland water transport offers India cheap, fuel-efficient, eco-friendly bulk movement (the National Waterways, Jal Marg Vikas) but is held back by siltation, seasonal water shortages, poor infrastructure and dredging needs; realising its prospects requires investment in terminals, dredging and multimodal integration.
- Add: inland water transport (cheap/eco-friendly/bulk); National Waterways (NW-1 Ganga); Jal Marg Vikas Project/IWAI; siltation/seasonal water/dredging; infrastructure gaps; multimodal.
15[12.5m] Present an account of the Indus Water Treaty and examine its ecological, economic and political implications in the context of changing bilateral relations.
- Intro: The Indus Waters Treaty (1960), brokered by the World Bank, governs the sharing of the Indus river system between India and Pakistan, with significant ecological, economic and political implications amid changing relations.
- the treaty (1960, Nehru-Ayub Khan, World Bank): allocated the three eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) to India and the three western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) to Pakistan (India gets limited non-consumptive use)
- ecological: river ecology, flow, sediment, the impact of dams, climate change (glaciers)
- economic: irrigation/agriculture (Pakistan heavily dependent on the western rivers), hydropower (India's projects — Kishanganga, Ratle), water security
- political: a symbol of cooperation (survived wars) but now strained — India's threats to review/abeyance (post-terror attacks — "blood and water cannot flow together"), disputes (the PIC, arbitration), leverage
- a resilient but contested treaty
- water as strategic.
- Concl: The 1960 Indus Waters Treaty — allocating the eastern rivers to India and the western to Pakistan — has endured wars as a model of cooperation, but its ecological (flow, dams), economic (irrigation, hydropower) and political (a strategic lever amid terrorism tensions) implications make it increasingly contested as bilateral relations sour.
- Add: Indus Waters Treaty (1960, World Bank); eastern rivers (Ravi/Beas/Sutlej — India) vs western (Indus/Jhelum/Chenab — Pakistan); hydropower (Kishanganga/Ratle); "blood and water"; strategic leverage; cooperation under strain.
16[12.5m] Major cities of India are becoming vulnerable to flood conditions. Discuss.
- Intro: India's major cities are increasingly vulnerable to flooding, a result of unplanned urbanisation colliding with climate change.
- causes: encroachment on lakes/wetlands/floodplains/natural drains (lost drainage), concretisation (reduced infiltration), inadequate/clogged stormwater drains, poor solid-waste management, climate change (extreme rainfall/cloudbursts), unplanned growth, the heat-island effect
- examples: Mumbai (2005), Chennai (2015), Hyderabad (2020), Bengaluru, Delhi
- consequences: loss of life/property, disruption, disease, economic loss
- remedies: restore drainage/water bodies ("sponge cities"), permeable surfaces, enforce zoning/building norms, desilt drains, early warning, climate-resilient planning
- ecology-sensitive urbanism
- an avoidable, recurring disaster.
- Concl: India's cities are growing flood-prone because unplanned urbanisation encroaches on water bodies and drainage while climate change intensifies rainfall (Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad); preventing it requires restoring drainage and wetlands ("sponge cities"), enforcing zoning, and climate-resilient, ecology-sensitive urban planning.
- Add: urban flooding (Mumbai 2005/Chennai 2015/Hyderabad 2020); encroached drains/wetlands; concretisation; extreme rainfall (climate change); "sponge city"/zoning; climate-resilient planning.
17[12.5m] The South China Sea has assumed great geopolitical significance in the present context. Comment.
- Intro: The South China Sea has assumed immense geopolitical significance as a contested maritime arena central to global trade, resources and great-power rivalry.
- why significant: a vital sea lane (~one-third of global shipping/trade passes through), rich resources (oil, gas, fisheries), a strategic location (connecting the Pacific and Indian Oceans)
- disputes: overlapping claims (China's "nine-dash line" vs Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Taiwan), China's island-building/militarisation, the 2016 PCA ruling (against China — ignored)
- great-power rivalry: US-China (freedom of navigation), the Indo-Pacific, ASEAN
- for India: trade (the Malacca route), the Act East policy, ONGC in Vietnam, freedom of navigation, balancing China
- a flashpoint of the Indo-Pacific
- trade + resources + power.
- Concl: The South China Sea is geopolitically pivotal as a conduit for a third of world trade, a resource-rich zone, and the arena of China's expansive claims versus its neighbours and the US — a key Indo-Pacific flashpoint where India too has trade, energy and strategic stakes (freedom of navigation, Act East).
- Add: South China Sea (~1/3 global trade); "nine-dash line"/China's claims; island-building/militarisation; 2016 PCA ruling; US-China/freedom of navigation; India (Act East/ONGC Vietnam).
18[12.5m] The effective management of land and water resources will drastically reduce human miseries. Explain.
- Intro: The effective management of land and water resources — the foundations of life and livelihood — can drastically reduce human miseries like poverty, hunger, disasters and conflict.
- land management: soil conservation, sustainable agriculture, preventing degradation/desertification, land reform, afforestation → food security, livelihoods, reduced erosion
- water management: irrigation efficiency, rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge, watershed development, equitable distribution, clean water → drought/flood mitigation, food/water security, health
- how it reduces miseries: food security (hunger), livelihoods (poverty), disaster mitigation (floods/droughts), health (clean water), reduced conflict (over resources), climate resilience
- examples: watershed projects, the Green Revolution, Jal Jeevan
- integrated, sustainable management
- resources as the basis of well-being.
- Concl: Effective, integrated management of land and water — through soil and water conservation, efficient irrigation, watershed development and equitable distribution — can drastically reduce human miseries by ensuring food and water security, mitigating droughts and floods, supporting livelihoods and reducing resource conflict.
- Add: land/water management; soil/water conservation; watershed development/rainwater harvesting; food-water security; drought-flood mitigation; resource conflict; sustainable management.
19[12.5m] "The Himalayas are highly prone to landslides." Discuss the causes and suggest suitable measures of mitigation.
- Intro: The Himalayas are highly prone to landslides owing to their young, fragile geology and steep terrain, demanding effective mitigation.
- causes — natural: young, tectonically active (rising) fold mountains, fragile/fractured rock, steep slopes, frequent earthquakes (a seismic zone), heavy monsoon rainfall/cloudbursts, snowmelt/glacial activity
- anthropogenic: deforestation, unplanned construction (roads, dams, hotels — Char Dham, hydro projects), mining/quarrying, slope cutting, tourism pressure
- examples: Uttarakhand (Kedarnath 2013, Joshimath), Himachal, Sikkim
- mitigation: afforestation/slope stabilisation (retaining walls, bioengineering), regulated construction (zoning, EIA), early warning/hazard mapping (GSI), drainage management, controlling deforestation/tourism, an "ecology-first" approach
- disaster-resilient mountain development.
- Concl: The Himalayas are landslide-prone due to their young, fragile, seismically active geology, steep slopes and heavy rain, aggravated by deforestation and unplanned construction; mitigation needs afforestation, slope stabilisation, regulated construction (zoning, EIA), hazard mapping and early warning — an ecology-first approach to mountain development.
- Add: Himalaya landslides (young/fragile/seismic geology); steep slopes/cloudbursts; deforestation/construction (Char Dham/hydro); Kedarnath 2013/Joshimath; slope stabilisation/afforestation; hazard mapping (GSI)/zoning.
20[12.5m] Discuss the concept of air mass and explain its role in macro-climatic changes.
- Intro: An air mass is a large body of air with relatively uniform temperature and humidity, playing a central role in driving macro-climatic changes and weather.
- concept: a vast body of air (horizontally homogeneous in temperature/moisture) acquiring the characteristics of its "source region" (where it forms — staying long over uniform surfaces)
- classification: by source — maritime (m, moist)/continental (c, dry) + tropical (T, warm)/polar (P, cold)/arctic — e.g., mT, cP
- role in macro-climate: air masses move from source regions, carrying their properties → influencing the weather/climate of the regions they reach
- fronts: where contrasting air masses meet (warm/cold fronts) → cyclones, precipitation, storms
- macro-climatic changes: shifting air masses drive seasonal/regional climate (e.g., the monsoon — maritime tropical air), temperature/rainfall patterns
- the building blocks of weather systems
- atmospheric circulation.
- Concl: An air mass is a large, homogeneous body of air taking its temperature and moisture from its source region; as air masses move and interact at fronts, they transport their characteristics and generate cyclones and precipitation — making them key drivers of regional weather and macro-climatic patterns like the monsoon.
- Add: air mass (uniform temperature/humidity); source region; classification (mT/cP — maritime/continental, tropical/polar); fronts (warm/cold → cyclones); monsoon (maritime tropical air); macro-climate.