Crest Learning UPSC
رفتن به کانال در Telegram
An initiative to prepare for UPSC. We Cover important news articles from reputated news papers, PIB, YOJANA, KURUKSHETRA and other govt. Documents Aligned with static Syllabus of the UPSC.
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➡️INDIAN ARMY SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY (PASSIVE participation)
What has changed?
• Indian Army now allows “passive participation” on select social media platforms.
• Personnel can view/monitor content on platforms like Instagram, X (Twitter), YouTube, Quora.
• Active engagement remains prohibited.
What is Passive Participation?
• ✔ Viewing, reading, monitoring content
• ❌ Posting, commenting, liking, sharing, reacting, messaging
What remains prohibited?
• Uploading any content (text/image/video)
• Commenting or reacting
• Messaging strangers or groups
• Discussing operational, service-related, or sensitive matters
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➡️CITIES AS DYNAMIC ECOSYSTEMS – URBAN FUTURE
India’s urban future depends not merely on infrastructure expansion but on recognising cities as dynamic ecosystems, where social inclusion, cultural integration, and governance adaptability determine long-term sustainability.
1️⃣ Why Cities Must Be Viewed as Dynamic Ecosystems
Traditional urban planning assumes a static, homogeneous population, but Indian cities are shaped by continuous rural-urban migration, informal employment, and demographic churn. Ignoring this dynamism leads to exclusion, informality, and social friction.
• Migrants sustain cities economically but remain institutionally invisible.
• Cities succeed when they adapt, not when they rigidly control.
2️⃣ “Invisible Tax of Exclusion” in Indian Cities
New residents face non-monetary costs—language barriers, documentation hurdles, cultural alienation—which reduce access to jobs, housing, welfare, and justice. This exclusion weakens urban productivity and social cohesion.
3️⃣ Governance Failure: Planning Without Representation
Urban planning bodies often lack representation of migrants, informal workers, and minorities. This results in:
• Housing designed for formal residents only
• Transport & services misaligned with real users
• Growth of slums and informal settlements
Committee Reference
• Second Administrative Reforms Commission
• Emphasised inclusive, participatory urban governance
• Called for stronger local capacity & decentralisation
4️⃣ Supreme Court Perspective (Conceptual Application)
While not city-specific, SC jurisprudence repeatedly upholds:
• Right to life = right to live with dignity (Article 21)
🔹Urban exclusion that denies access to housing, healthcare, or identity documents undermines constitutional dignity.
5️⃣ Designing Cities “For All”, Not Just Infrastructure
Smart infrastructure without social inclusion creates “exclusive efficiency”. True urban resilience requires:
• Multilingual public services
• Flexible documentation systems
• Inclusive public spaces
Global Best Practice
• World Bank
• Promotes people-centred urban design over asset-centric models
6️⃣ Why Cultural Integration Is an Urban Governance Issue
Cultural friction increases conflict, reduces trust in institutions, and weakens democratic participation. Small investments in:
• Cultural sensitisation of frontline staff
• Community mediation
can yield large governance dividends.
🎯 PYQ LINKAGE (MAINS)
• “Urbanisation creates opportunities as well as challenges. Discuss” (GS-I, 2019)
• “Strengthening local governance is essential for inclusive development” (GS-II, 2021)
🔮 WAY FORWARD
Governance
• Strengthen 74th CAA implementation
• Empower ward committees & area sabhas
Planning
• Shift from master plans → adaptive planning
• Recognise informal economy in city design
Social Inclusion
• Multilingual service delivery
• Universal access to basic services independent of migration status
✅ Conclusion
Cities will shape India’s demographic and economic destiny. Viewing them as dynamic ecosystems rather than static structures is essential for inclusive growth, democratic governance, and sustainable urban futures.
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➡️India’s Foreign Policy: 2025
India’s foreign policy in 2025 reflects a tension between high diplomatic visibility and limited strategic outcomes, shaped by great-power rivalry, regional instability, and economic security concerns.
1️⃣ Great-Power Relations: Strategic Autonomy Under Stress
• India pursued multi-alignment (U.S., Russia, China simultaneously).
• However, rising U.S.–China rivalry reduced space for ambiguity.
• India faced pressure on trade, energy imports, and defence choices.
Data / Facts
• India imports ~85% of crude oil (energy vulnerability).
• Defence dependence: historically 60–70% Russian origin platforms.
🔹Strategic autonomy is viable only when backed by economic & military capacity, not diplomacy alone.
2️⃣ China Challenge: Unresolved Security Core
• Diplomatic engagement continued, but LAC disengagement remained incomplete.
• Economic ties persisted without restoring pre-2020 trust deficit.
SC / Constitutional Angle
• Article 51: Promotion of international peace must not compromise sovereignty.
Data
• China remains India’s largest goods trading partner, but with a persistent trade deficit.
3️⃣ Neighbourhood First: Mixed Outcomes
• Outreach to neighbours continued, but political instability in South Asia diluted outcomes.
• India’s influence faced competition from China’s infrastructure diplomacy.
Examples
• Fragile transitions in Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar affected regional predictability.
Committee Insight
• Second ARC: National security begins with a stable neighbourhood.
4️⃣ Economic & Energy Diplomacy: Key Weak Link
• Foreign policy goals were constrained by:
• Trade uncertainty
• Tariff shocks
• Supply-chain disruptions
Data
• Remittances form a major component of India’s forex stability.
• Energy price volatility directly affects CAD & inflation.
5️⃣ Global Governance & Normative Positioning
• India advocated Global South concerns and rule-based order.
• However, selective global conflicts exposed limits of norm-based diplomacy.
Institutional Context
• G20 Presidency (2023) elevated India’s agenda-setting role.
• Yet outcomes depend on follow-through capacity.
⚖️ Supreme Court Observations (Indirect Relevance)
• SC has repeatedly held that sovereignty & national security are non-negotiable, even while engaging globally (Manohar Parrikar case, national security jurisprudence).
• “India’s foreign policy balances realism with idealism” (GS-II, 2019)
• “Challenges of multi-alignment” (GS-II, 2022)
🔮 Way Forward (Institution-Backed)
• Economic strength first (RBI, Economic Survey repeatedly emphasise this).
• Diversify energy sources → reduce strategic vulnerability.
• Institutionalise National Security Strategy (India-specific).
• Align neighbourhood diplomacy with development finance + security.
• Convert global visibility into measurable outcomes.
✅ Conclusion
India’s 2025 foreign policy shows that diplomacy without economic and security depth delivers diminishing returns. Strategic autonomy must now be earned through capacity, not asserted through posture.
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➡️FRAGILE ATTRACTIVENESS OF INDIA’S FDI
India attracts FDI in absolute numbers, but its structural foundations remain weak, making inflows vulnerable to global shocks.
1️⃣ India’s FDI Position
• India ranks among the top 10 FDI destinations globally
(Source: UNCTAD World Investment Reports)
• However, FDI inflows fluctuate sharply during global uncertainty → sign of fragility.
2️⃣ Manufacturing vs Services
• Manufacturing share in India’s GDP: ~15%
• Services share: ~55%
(Source: Economic Survey, National Accounts)
Countries with durable FDI (China, S. Korea) first built manufacturing depth.
3️⃣ Sectoral Composition of FDI
• Services + IT + Telecom account for over 50% of cumulative FDI
• Manufacturing receives <20% of total FDI
🔹Indicates consumption-market FDI, not production-hub FDI.
4️⃣ Logistics & Cost Competitiveness
• Logistics cost in India: ~13–14% of GDP
• Global best practice: 8–9% of GDP
(World Bank, NITI Aayog)
🔹Higher costs reduce export-oriented FDI.
5️⃣ Employment Fact
• Manufacturing employs ~11–12% of workforce
• Services employ fewer people per unit of investment
🔹Explains why FDI has not generated mass employment.
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1️⃣ What is NATGRID?
National Intelligence Grid
NATGRID is a secure IT platform, not an intelligence agency. It enables real-time data sharing among authorised law-enforcement agencies.
Why created:
Post 26/11 Mumbai attacks, investigations revealed poor inter-agency data coordination. NATGRID was conceived (2009) to remove this fragmentation.
Core function:
It links existing databases (banking, telecom, travel, vehicle records) to speed up investigations in terrorism and organised crime cases.
2️⃣ What is NPR?
National Population Register
NPR is a register of usual residents of India. It records demographic and family-wise details, not citizenship.
Coverage:
It contains data of about 119 crore residents, collected through door-to-door enumeration (last updated in 2015).
Importance:
Because it is family-linked and nationwide, NPR is one of the most comprehensive population databases in India.
3️⃣ Why was NATGRID linked with NPR?
a) Faster investigation
Earlier, police had to verify family and address details manually, causing delays.
Linking NPR allows instant verification of family links and residences, reducing investigation time significantly.
b) Tackling organised crime
Criminal and terror networks often operate through family and community support systems.
NPR helps map these networks, while NATGRID connects financial, travel and communication trails.
c) Use of ‘Gandiva’ tool (clarified)
‘Gandiva’ is used only after a suspect is identified. It matches facial images with authorised databases to confirm identity.
It is targeted analysis, not mass or real-time surveillance.
4️⃣ What are the major concerns?
🔴 a) Right to Privacy
Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India
The Supreme Court held privacy as a fundamental right (Article 21).
Linking NPR (entire population) with intelligence platforms raises concerns of excessive data access beyond necessity.
🔴 b) Risk of profiling
Since NPR includes all residents, critics fear potential community or demographic profiling if safeguards weaken in future.
🔴 c) NPR–NRC linkage fear
Under Citizenship Rules, NPR is the first step towards NRC.
This creates apprehension that security databases could later be used for citizenship scrutiny.
5️⃣ Government’s justification (BALANCED)
• Access is restricted to authorised agencies
• Requests are logged and audited
• Data classified into non-sensitive, sensitive, highly sensitive
• No decision yet to update NPR with Census 2027
However, no independent oversight authority currently exists.
6️⃣ Committee & Institutional Recommendations
Justice B.N. Srikrishna Committee
• Warned against unchecked State surveillance
• Recommended data minimisation, purpose limitation, and independent regulator
Second Administrative Reforms Commission
• Supported intelligence coordination
• Emphasised accountability and parliamentary oversight
CONCLUSION
NATGRID–NPR linkage enhances security efficiency, but without strong legal and institutional safeguards, it risks infringing the constitutional right to privacy.
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➡️Russia plans a nuclear power plant on the Moon (by 2036)
Russia’s space agency Roscosmos plans a lunar nuclear power plant to support long-term Moon missions and a joint Russia–China lunar station.
1️⃣ What exactly is planned?
• A small nuclear fission reactor on the Moon
• Timeline: by 2036
• Purpose: continuous power for lunar base (unlike solar, which fails during lunar night)
2️⃣ Why nuclear power on the Moon?
• Lunar night lasts ~14 Earth days → solar power unreliable
• Extreme cold (–170°C) → batteries inefficient
• Nuclear gives stable, long-duration energy
📌 Similar concept = NASA’s Kilopower reactor (1–10 kW range)
3️⃣ Is nuclear power in space allowed?
✔ Yes, with restrictions
• Outer Space Treaty, 1967
• ❌ No nuclear weapons in space
• ✔ Nuclear power sources allowed for peaceful use
• UN Principles on Nuclear Power Sources in Outer Space (1992)
• Safety, risk minimisation, transparency
📌 Treaty bans nuclear weapons, not nuclear reactors.
4️⃣ Who else is working on this?
• USA → NASA’s Kilopower
• China–Russia → International Lunar Research Station (ILRS)
• India → No nuclear reactor yet; relies on solar + RTGs (limited)
1️⃣ Strategic significance
• Enables permanent human presence on Moon
• Supports:
• Life support systems
• Communication hubs
• Resource extraction (Helium-3, water ice)
🔹Continuous power is a prerequisite for lunar habitation
2️⃣ Geopolitical implications
• Signals space power competition (US vs China–Russia bloc)
• Moon emerging as strategic domain, similar to Antarctica
“Energy infrastructure is the first step towards territorial influence in space.”
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➡️ICJ vs ICC – MOST IMPORTANT DISTINCTIONS
1️⃣ Nature
• International Court of Justice (ICJ) → Civil court of international law (State responsibility)
• International Criminal Court (ICC) → Criminal court (individual criminal liability)
2️⃣ Who can be tried
• ICJ → Only States
• ICC → Only individuals (Presidents, generals, officials)
🔹States cannot be accused in ICC.
3️⃣ Type of cases
• ICJ → Treaty disputes, genocide obligations, boundary issues
• ICC → Genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity
📌 Genocide:
• State duty → ICJ
• Personal guilt → ICC
4️⃣ Outcome
• ICJ → Declares violation, orders cessation/reparations
• ICC → Can convict, imprison, issue arrest warrants
5️⃣ Binding nature
• ICJ → Binding only on parties, needs State consent
• ICC → Binding on States party to Rome Statute
🔹Both suffer from weak enforcement.
6️⃣ Relation with UN
• ICJ → Principal judicial organ of UN
• ICC → Independent of UN
📌 ICC is NOT a UN body.
📌 Advisory Opinion vs Judgment (ICJ)
• Advisory Opinion
• Given to UN organs
• Not binding, but high moral & legal value
• Judgment
• Given in State vs State cases
• Legally binding
📌 Intervention in ICJ
• Allowed under Article 63
• Third State can:
• ✅ Interpret treaty
• ❌ Not become a party
• ❌ Not accuse/defend
📌 Example: Belgium intervening in SA–Israel case
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Breast cancer accounts for ~22.8% of all cancers among Indian women
• Incidence rising by ~5–6% per year
🔹This shows breast cancer is not a rare disease, but the largest cancer burden among Indian women, making prevention crucial.
3️⃣ Age-related risk
• Women above 50 years → ~3 times higher risk than women below 35
🔹After menopause, hormonal imbalance + fat accumulation increases cancer risk.
This explains why screening is critical after 40–50 years.
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➡️Physical Activity & Breast Cancer Risk – ICMR Study
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among Indian women, and an ICMR study highlights that physical inactivity and lifestyle factors are now central drivers of this disease.
👉How Physical Activity Reduces Breast Cancer Risk
Explanation step-by-step:
1. Physical inactivity leads to fat accumulation
2. Fat tissue produces excess oestrogen
3. High oestrogen increases abnormal cell growth in breast tissue
🔹Physical activity breaks this chain, making it a preventive tool, not just fitness advice.
🔹Evidence: Lower risk observed in physically active women in Indian studies.
👉Why Breast Cancer Is Rising in India
Clearly explained causes:
• Urbanisation → sedentary lifestyle
• Rising obesity among women
• Delayed childbirth & hormonal exposure
• Poor awareness & late screening
🔹This explains why incidence is rising despite medical advances.
👉Why Early Detection Matters
• 81% survival if detected early
• Only 18% if detected after metastasis
🔹India’s problem is not lack of treatment, but late diagnosis due to stigma, access gaps, and weak primary screening.
👉Government & Policy Linkage
• Ayushman Bharat – Health & Wellness Centres: lifestyle counselling
• NPCDCS: screening for cancers at primary level
• National Health Policy 2017: shift towards preventive healthcare
🔹The study supports the policy shift from hospital-based care to preventive care.
👉Constitutional & Ethical Dimension
• Article 21 (SC interpretation): Right to life includes right to health
• Preventive health protects:
• Women’s dignity
• Economic productivity
• Gender justice
Conclusion
The ICMR study reinforces that breast cancer in India is increasingly lifestyle-driven, making physical activity, early screening, and preventive healthcare central to India’s public health strategy.
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NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) is the exclusive commercial arm of ISRO.
Since 2021, NSIL handles:
Commercial launch contracts
Satellite services
Transfer of ISRO technologies to industry
Antrix Corporation earlier played this role, but commercial launch responsibilities have shifted to NSIL.
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➡️Dowry as a Cross-Cultural Evil – Supreme Court
• Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961
• Prohibits giving, taking, or demanding dowry
• Punishment: imprisonment + fine
• Dowry Prohibition Officers (DPOs) mandated under the Act
• Constitutional Articles involved
• Article 14 – Equality before law
• Article 15 – Non-discrimination
• Article 21 – Right to life with dignity
• Dowry is not religion-specific → termed “cross-cultural evil”
👉CONTEXT OF THE CASE
• A 20-year-old woman died as dowry demands were unmet
• Bench led by Justice Sanjay Karol
• Court examined dowry as a social institution, not just a criminal offence
👉KEY SUPREME COURT OBSERVATIONS
1️⃣ Dowry violates constitutional morality
• Dowry is “at odds with the constitutional ethos of justice, liberty, fraternity and equality”
• Directly violates Article 14 (equality before law)
🔹Dowry is not merely illegal conduct but structural inequality embedded in marriage negotiations.
2️⃣ Dowry is a “cross-cultural evil”
• Exists across religions and regions
• Often disguised as:
• “Gifts”
• “Social expectations”
• “Customary practice”
🔹This neutralises the argument that dowry is a religious practice (Article 25 defence fails).
3️⃣ Link with patriarchy & hypergamy
• Dowry tied to:
• Patriarchal lineage
• Desire to marry daughters into “higher-status” families (hypergamy)
• Women treated as sources of financial extraction
🔹Sociological enrichment:
Dowry converts marriage from a social bond into an economic transaction.
👉DIRECTIONS ISSUED BY THE COURT
1️⃣ Educational reforms
• States & Union to revise curricula
• Emphasise:
• Equality of spouses
• Marriage as a partnership, not hierarchy
🔹Long-term preventive approach
2️⃣ Institutional enforcement
• Immediate appointment of Dowry Prohibition Officers
• Public access to DPO details
• Mandatory sensitisation training for:
• Police
• Judicial officers
📌 Why important: Law failure is due to weak enforcement, not absence of law.
3️⃣ Judicial monitoring
• High Courts asked to:
• Take stock of pending dowry cases
• Ensure expeditious disposal
👉DATA & FACTS
• NCRB (latest trends):
• Dowry deaths ≈ 6,000–7,000 annually
• Conviction rate remains below 40%
• Majority cases:
• Occur within first 5 years of marriage
• Linked to economic dependency of women
👉COMMITTEES & REPORTS
• Law Commission of India (243rd Report)
→ Need for better investigation & victim support
• Justice Malimath Committee
→ Victim-centric criminal justice reforms
• National Commission for Women
→ Stronger role for DPOs + community monitoring
PYQ THEMES
• Dowry, domestic violence, gender justice
• Role of courts in social transformation (2018, 2020, 2022)
CONCLUSION
By declaring dowry a cross-cultural constitutional wrong, the Supreme Court has shifted the discourse from crime control to structural gender justice, emphasising education, institutional accountability, and constitutional morality as the real antidotes.
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➡️Bureau of Port Security (BoPS)
What is BoPS?
• Statutory body created under Section 13, Merchant Shipping Act, 2025
• Functions under Ministry of Ports, Shipping & Waterways
• Modelled on Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS)
Purpose
• Central authority for port & maritime security regulation in India
International framework
• Enforces ISPS Code (International Ship and Port Facility Security Code) under SOLAS Convention
👉WHY WAS BoPS CREATED?
1️⃣ Fragmented coastal security
• Earlier handled by multiple agencies:
• Indian Coast Guard
• CISF
• State marine police
• Port authorities
• Result:
• Overlapping jurisdiction
• Coordination gaps
• Security loopholes
🔹BoPS = single-point regulatory authority
2️⃣ Rising non-traditional maritime threats
• Maritime terrorism (e.g., 26/11 Mumbai route)
• Drug & arms trafficking
• Human trafficking & illegal migration
• Port-related cybersecurity threats
🔹Ports now seen as critical infrastructure, not just trade hubs.
👉FUNCTIONS OF BoPS
1️⃣ Regulatory & Oversight Role
• Frames national port security standards
• Ensures compliance with ISPS Code
• Conducts security audits & risk assessments
2️⃣ Coordination Role
• Coordinates with:
• Coast Guard
• CISF
• Navy
• Cybersecurity agencies
• Ensures real-time intelligence sharing
3️⃣ Capacity Building
• CISF designated as Recognised Security Organisation
• BoPS:
• Trains port security personnel
• Standardises security plans
• Implements graded security levels (MARSEC I–III)
4️⃣ Cyber & Digital Security
• Dedicated focus on:
• Port IT systems
• Cargo tracking software
• Smart port infrastructure
📌 Critical because ports are increasingly digitised.
🔹 DATA & FACTS
• Cargo handling:
• 974 MMT (2014) → 1,594 MMT (2025)
• Port capacity:
• Increased by ~57% in a decade
• Coastal shipping:
• Growth of 118%
• Inland waterways cargo:
• 18.1 MMT (2014) → 145.5 MMT (2025)
📊 Source: Ministry of Ports, Shipping & Waterways
🔹Higher traffic = higher security vulnerability
👉LINK WITH PORT LAW REFORMS
Indian Ports Act, 2025
• Replaced colonial Indian Ports Act, 1908
• Objectives:
• Ease of doing business
• Uniform port governance
• Stronger security oversight
Coastal Shipping Act, 2025
• Promotes coastal trade
• Encourages Indian-flag vessels
• Requires robust security architecture → BoPS
👉CRITICISMS & CONCERNS (BALANCED VIEW)
1️⃣ Federalism concern
• States argue:
• Increased Union control over non-major ports
• “Silent erosion” of State powers
2️⃣ Port authority powers
• Port officers given inspection & entry powers
• Critics demand clearer procedural safeguards
📌 Criticism is of the law’s design, not BoPS’ intent.
CONCLUSION
The Bureau of Port Security marks a decisive shift from fragmented coastal policing to centralised, risk-based maritime security governance, aligning India’s rapidly expanding port infrastructure with global security standards while raising important federal balance questions.
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➡️Why Manufacturing Has Lagged in India
• Manufacturing share in GDP (India):
➝ ~15–16% (stagnant since 1990s)
• China: ~27–28%, South Korea: ~25%
• Employment:
• Manufacturing employs only ~11–12% of India’s workforce
• Target:
• National Manufacturing Policy (2011) target 25% of GDP → missed
• Exports:
• India’s merchandise exports dominated by low–mid tech goods
📍 Sources: World Bank, UNIDO, Economic Survey
1️⃣ Stagnant Structural Transformation
• In successful economies, labour shifts agriculture → manufacturing → services.
• In India, labour jumped directly to low-productivity services.
• Result: Manufacturing never became the mass employer.
📊 Economic Survey: Over 45% workforce still in agriculture, but contributes only ~18% GDP.
2️⃣ Public Sector Wage Effect (Dutch Disease-like Outcome)
• High government wages (7th Pay Commission) raised economy-wide wage expectations.
• Manufacturing productivity did not rise proportionately, raising unit labour costs.
• Led to:
• Higher domestic prices
• Reduced export competitiveness
🔹Similar to Dutch Disease, but driven by services & public sector, not natural resources.
3️⃣ Cheap Labour → Weak Technological Upgrading
• India relied on abundant low-skill labour, reducing pressure to automate.
• In contrast:
• Japan, South Korea faced labour scarcity → forced automation & innovation.
✅Daron Acemoglu:
“High wages induce innovation; cheap labour delays it.”
4️⃣ Labour Law Rigidities (Historically)
• Pre-reform:
• Complex hiring/firing rules
• High compliance burden on firms with >100 workers
• Result:
• Firms stayed small & informal
• Limited economies of scale
🔹Though 4 Labour Codes passed, implementation remains uneven.
5️⃣ Skewed Growth Towards Services
• IT & finance grew fast but:
• Employ high-skill minority
• Do not absorb surplus labour
🔹Manufacturing jobs generate 2–3x indirect employment (UNIDO).
6️⃣ Weak Industrial Ecosystems
• Gaps in:
• Logistics (cost ~13–14% of GDP, China ~8%)
• Power reliability
• MSME credit access
🔹National Logistics Policy (2022) aims to address this.
🏛️ COMMITTEE / POLICY REFERENCES
• National Manufacturing Policy, 2011
• PLI Scheme (2020) – correcting past failures
• Economic Survey 2022–23: Emphasises manufacturing-led job creation
• NITI Aayog: Advocates cluster-based industrialisation
⚖️ SUPREME COURT (INDIRECT RELEVANCE)
• Excel Wear vs Union of India (1978)
→ Over-protective labour laws can harm industrial growth & employment.
• GS-III 2014: “Why has manufacturing failed to generate employment in India?”
• GS-III 2020: “Structural transformation in Indian economy”
CONCLUSION
India’s manufacturing stagnation stems not from lack of growth, but from policy-induced cost pressures, weak technological upgrading, and premature service-led development, now being partially corrected through PLI and labour reforms.
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➡️North Indian Ocean (NIO) Cyclones
1️⃣ Decline in number, rise in intensity
• IMD (1901–2020):
• Total cyclonic disturbances declined from ~12/year (1950s–70s) to ~8/year (2000s–2010s).
• BUT Severe Cyclonic Storms (≥ 89 kmph) increased.
• Data:
• Share of severe cyclones rose from ~20% (pre-1970) to ~35–40% (post-2000).
• Why?
• Warmer oceans provide more latent heat, leading to stronger storms even if fewer form.
🔹: Climate change affects cyclone intensity more than frequency.
2️⃣ Arabian Sea becoming more dangerous
• IMD Atlas:
• Arabian Sea earlier contributed ~15–20% of NIO cyclones.
• Post-2000, contribution increased to ~30%+.
• Rapid Intensification:
• Probability of a storm intensifying into a severe cyclone is higher in the Arabian Sea than Bay of Bengal.
• Reason (FACT):
• Arabian Sea warming rate: ~1.2–1.4°C since 1950, higher than global average.
🔹Impact: Gujarat, Maharashtra, Oman now face new cyclone risk.
3️⃣ Seasonal shift to post-monsoon (Oct–Dec)
• Before 1980:
• Peak cyclone months: July–September.
• After 1980:
• ~60% of severe cyclones now form in Oct–Dec.
• IMD explanation:
• Oceans retain heat longer → delayed cyclone formation.
🔹Why it matters:
• Coincides with harvest season → higher livelihood losses.
4️⃣ Faster intensification near coast
• IMD + WMO:
• Cyclones now intensify from Cyclonic Storm → Very Severe Cyclone within 24–36 hours.
• Example pattern:
• Multiple post-2010 cyclones intensified within 200–300 km of coastline.
• Cause:
• High Ocean Heat Content (OHC) near Indian coasts.
🔹Disaster issue: Reduced evacuation time.
📊 Key Numbers to Memorise
• Wind classification:
• Depression: 31–49 kmph
• Cyclonic Storm: 62–88 kmph
• Very Severe Cyclone: ≥ 118 kmph
• Bay of Bengal: More cyclones
• Arabian Sea: Stronger cyclones
• Severe cyclone share post-2000: ~35–40%
• “Why Arabian Sea cyclones are increasing?” (2016)
• “Impact of climate change on Indian cyclones” (2020, 2022)
Conclusion
Despite fewer cyclones over the North Indian Ocean, warmer seas have made storms stronger, later, and faster-intensifying, escalating India’s coastal disaster risk.
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➡️The Digital Narcissus
1️⃣ What is “Digital Narcissus”?
Digital Narcissus refers to a situation where AI and digital platforms constantly show users what they want to hear, making them feel validated and correct all the time.
Why this matters:
When people see only their own opinions reflected back, they stop questioning themselves, which weakens thinking and judgment.
2️⃣ Why do digital platforms behave like this? (CAUSE)
Explanation:
Digital platforms earn money from user engagement.
Content that agrees with users keeps them online longer, while content that challenges them drives them away.
Result:
Algorithms are designed to please users, not to tell the truth.
3️⃣ What is the main danger? (CORE PROBLEM)
Explanation:
The biggest danger is loss of self-correction.
• No disagreement → no doubt
• No doubt → no reflection
• No reflection → no learning
Why important:
Societies progress by correcting mistakes. Without questioning, progress stops.
4️⃣ How does this affect democracy?
Explanation:
Democracy depends on:
• Debate
• Dissent
• Exposure to different views
But algorithmic echo chambers:
• Promote one-sided opinions
• Reduce exposure to opposing views
Result:
Citizens become passive approvers, not active participants in democracy.
5️⃣ Why is it called a “quiet” threat?
Explanation:
There is:
• No censorship
• No force
• No visible repression
Yet people voluntarily stop questioning because comfort feels easier than truth.
Why important:
Democracy weakens without resistance, which is more dangerous than open repression.
6️⃣ Ethical significance
Explanation:
Ethics requires the courage to accept criticism.
Digital flattery promotes:
• Intellectual laziness
• Moral comfort over truth
Why important:
A society choosing comfort over truth loses moral courage.
CONCLUSION
Digital Narcissus shows how AI-driven flattery replaces truth with comfort, silently weakening critical thinking and democracy.
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Rights once conferred cannot be withdrawn by executive convenience.” (paraphrased SC reasoning)
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➡️ISRO sends largest commercial communications satellite to orbit
ISRO successfully launched BlueBird Block-2, the largest commercial communication satellite placed in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) using LVM3, marking a major leap in India’s commercial space launch capability.
First: ISRO’s first dedicated commercial LEO communication launch for a foreign client
1. Why is this launch important?
(a) Commercial milestone for ISRO
• Demonstrates heavy-lift reliability of LVM3
• Positions India as a cost-effective alternative to SpaceX
• Supports India’s target of $10 bn space economy by 2030 (IN-SPACe vision)
(b) Shift from GEO to LEO era
• Global demand moving towards LEO constellations (Starlink, OneWeb)
• LEO offers low latency → real-time communication
• BlueBird satellites aim at space-based mobile towers
(c) Strategic & technological value
• Enhances dual-use capability (civil + strategic communication)
• Strengthens India’s launch-on-demand credibility
• Improves India’s standing in global space supply chains
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➡️Aravalli Orders
The Centre has asked States to strictly enforce Supreme Court directions to regulate mining in the Aravalli Range, closing definitional loopholes that enabled ecological degradation.
1️⃣ Why Aravallis matter
• Oldest fold mountains (~1.5–2 billion years)
• Barrier to desertification (checks Thar’s eastward spread)
• Groundwater recharge: ~30–35% of NCR recharge linked to Aravalli catchments (Central Ground Water Board)
• Air quality & biodiversity support for NCR
2️⃣ Core problem
• States used varying definitions (“non-forest/wasteland”) → unchecked mining
• Result: forest loss, groundwater depletion, NCR pollution
3️⃣ Supreme Court directions (essentials)
• No new mining leases until a scientific plan is finalised
• Uniform, scientific definition of Aravallis across States
• Ecologically sensitive areas = no-go
• Principles applied: Precautionary principle, Inter-generational equity
• Court: Aravallis are “ecologically fragile and significant” (link to NCR pollution)
4️⃣ Two key regulatory rules
• 100 m above local relief = Aravalli hill
(Stops revenue-record manipulation; in force in Rajasthan since 2006)
• 500 m buffer around adjoining hills
(Protects the ecosystem, not just peaks)
📊 FSI data: Only ~8% hills exceed 100 m, yet 92% remain ecologically functional
(Forest Survey of India)
5️⃣ Institutional recommendations
• Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education to prepare a Management Plan for Sustainable Mining:
• Map no-go, conservation-critical, restoration zones
• Allow mining only in exceptional, strictly regulated areas
6️⃣ Existing mines
• Allowed only with strict compliance
• No expansion / no automatic renewals
takeaway
Enforcing SC orders on the Aravallis shifts governance from fragmented State definitions to a science-based, ecosystem approach vital for India’s ecological security.
اکنون در دسترس! پژوهش تلگرام ۲۰۲۵ — مهمترین بینشهای سال 
