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General Studies – 1
Topic: Modern History
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question
The freedom struggle did not treat swaraj as a fixed political slogan; it evolved into a wider programme of social reform, moral regeneration and economic self-reliance. This evolution is central to understanding the rise of mass nationalism in India.Key Demand of the question
The question asks you to explain the historical evolution of swaraj from political freedom to social transformation, and then evaluate how this conceptual broadening influenced the scope, sustainability and social composition of mass mobilisation.Structure of the Answer:
Introduction
Begin with a crisp opening defining swaraj as a changing idea across phases of the national movement, and briefly indicate that its widening beyond politics helped convert nationalism into a people’s movement.Body
- Evolution of swaraj: Trace how the meaning shifted across phases such as early constitutional politics, swadeshi-era assertive nationalism, Home Rule, Gandhian mass politics, and later socio-economic rights-oriented nationalism.
- Impact on mass mobilisation: Evaluate how this widened idea enabled inclusion of wider social groups, strengthened legitimacy through social-ethical content, sustained participation through constructive work, and also produced internal debates on caste, class and representation.
Conclusion
End by stating that swaraj’s evolution ensured freedom was imagined as both political sovereignty and social justice, leaving a lasting imprint on India’s democratic and reform agenda.
Topic: Post Independence
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question
Language-based identity has been a defining factor in shaping India’s post-independence state structure, centre–state relations and unity. It remains relevant due to continuing debates on linguistic rights, administrative federalism and cultural pluralism.
Key Demand of the question-
The question demands an examination of how linguistic identity operated as a major force in post-independence India and how it shaped the process of federal reorganisation. It also requires linking linguistic accommodation and tensions to their impact on national integration.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction
A brief context on India’s linguistic diversity after 1947 and the challenge of balancing unity with recognition of identity.Body
- Role of linguistic identity in post-independence India as a driver of mobilisation, cultural assertion and democratic bargaining.
- How it shaped federal reorganisation through linguistic states, administrative rationality and constitutional recognition.
- How it influenced national integration by reducing alienation through accommodation, while also generating language-related tensions managed through compromise.
Conclusion
A forward-looking closing line that linguistic accommodation strengthened unity through flexible federalism, and that integration in India works best through constitutional recognition rather than forced uniformity.
General Studies – 2
Topic: Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question
Judicial neutrality, secular public reason, and how legitimacy of courts is sustained in a plural democracy amid allegations of bias, inconsistency and judicial overreach.Key Demand of the question
The question requires critical examination of why complete neutrality in judging is unrealistic but neutrality in reasoning is essential, followed by linking this to judicial legitimacy in India and then suggesting concrete institutional reforms to improve reasoned adjudication.Structure of the Answer
Introduction
Define the idea of neutrality in adjudication vs neutrality in justification with a constitutional-democracy context.Body
- Critically examine the statement by explaining why judges cannot be fully neutral but must justify decisions through public constitutional reasons.
- Discuss implications for judicial legitimacy such as public trust, secularism, predictability, accountability and restraint.
- Suggest institutional measures like structured reasoning standards, precedent discipline, transparent roster, recusal norms, research support and clarity in majority opinions.
Conclusion
Close with a forward-looking line on strengthening reasoned constitutionalism as the best safeguard for both judicial independence and public confidence.
Topic: India and its neighbourhood- relations
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question
How Asia’s power politics is shifting from pure great-power dominance to coalition-driven outcomes. It also checks your ability to analyse the limits of middle-power influence in a contested Indo-Pacific.
Key Demand of the question
You must comment on the claim that middle powers shape Asia’s balance of power alongside great powers, using contemporary strategic trends. You must also highlight the key challenges that restrict middle powers from exercising decisive influence.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction
Briefly define middle powers and link the concept to the evolving Indo-Pacific where alliances, minilaterals, and rule-setting increasingly shape outcomes.
Body
- Mention how middle powers influence outcomes through coalition-building, norm-setting, and strategic economic-security partnerships.
- The challenges such as capability gaps, domestic constraints, economic dependence, and fragmented regional consensus.
Conclusion
End with a forward-looking line that India’s middle-power role will depend on sustained capacity-building and credible regional delivery.
General Studies – 3
Topic: Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question
AI is emerging as the core infrastructure of the global digital economy, but its foundational layers are increasingly controlled by a few firms and countries. India’s MANAV vision brings a policy framework to expand access and prevent exclusion in the AI ecosystem.Key Demand of the question
The question demands explaining how concentration of compute, data and foundational models shapes global AI markets and power structures, and then discussing how MANAV can widen access to AI benefits by addressing exclusion risks.Structure of the Answer:
Introduction
Begin with AI as a general-purpose technology and the core AI stack as the new “strategic infrastructure”, highlighting the risk of monopolisation.Body
- Concentration shaping AI economy: Briefly cover compute chokepoints, data advantage, and foundation-model dominance creating entry barriers and dependency.
- MANAV reducing exclusion: Briefly link MANAV pillars to widening access through inclusion, accountability, sovereignty and legitimacy in AI deployment.
Conclusion
End with the idea that democratising access to the AI stack is essential for inclusive growth, and MANAV can be a scalable template for responsible AI diffusion.
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: DTE
Why the question
Coral reefs are facing unprecedented stress due to marine heatwaves and mass bleaching, directly threatening fisheries, tourism and coastal protection.Key Demand of the question
The question requires explaining the ecological and strategic relevance of coral reefs for India’s blue economy, then analysing the sector-wise impacts of mass bleaching on fisheries, tourism and coastal infrastructure, and finally suggesting practical adaptation measures for reef resilience and sustainable coastal livelihoods.Structure of the Answer
Introduction
Start with coral reefs as high-value natural capital and “natural infrastructure” supporting livelihoods, island stability and blue economy, with a current reference to mass bleaching and India’s reef regions.Body
- Ecological and strategic significance: Show how reefs underpin biodiversity, fisheries productivity, coastal protection and strategic stability of island territories.
- Impacts of mass bleaching: Explain how bleaching degrades reef habitat, disrupts fish stocks, reduces tourism value and increases coastal infrastructure vulnerability.
- Adaptation measures: Suggest monitoring and early warning, reducing local stressors, stronger MPAs, sustainable tourism norms, community stewardship and science-led restoration.
Conclusion
End with the idea that reef resilience is essential for climate-proofing India’s blue economy and coastal security, requiring integrated science-based governance.
General Studies – 4
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- Identify the ethical dilemma involved in the case.
- What are the options available to you in the given situation? Which option would you choose and why?
- Do you think providing the special squads with unlimited power to counter the anti-national issue is ethically justified?
Difficulty Level: Medium
Why the question
It tests ethical decision-making in high-stakes governance where national security, human rights, and institutional credibility clash. It also checks your ability to handle domestic political pressure and international scrutiny together.
Key Demand of the question
You must identify the ethical dilemma, evaluate response options with justification, and take a reasoned ethical stand on the idea of giving unlimited powers to security squads.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction
Briefly frame it as a conflict between restoring peace/order and upholding constitutional morality, human dignity, and accountability in a democracy.
Body
- Ethical dilemma: Show the tension between security imperatives and rights-based governance, along with transparency vs institutional integrity.
- Options and choice: Briefly mention the possible institutional responses (independent probe, internal inquiry, communication strategy) and justify the most balanced option with ethical reasoning.
- Unlimited powers: Give a nuanced stand that operational freedom is necessary but cannot be unlimited; it must be bounded by legality, proportionality, oversight, and safeguards.
Conclusion
End by emphasizing that long-term peace requires both effective security action and credible accountability, strengthening public trust and democratic legitimacy.
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