💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (July Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

GS Paper: GS1

  • Serengsia Battle 1837  

    Why in the News?

    Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren commemorated an Adivasi resistance event linked to the Serengsia battle of 1837, but historians and Adivasi activists have contested the official date of remembrance, calling for historically accurate commemoration.

    About the Serengsia Battle

    • Fought in 1837 between Ho Adivasis and the British East India Company
    • Took place in Serengsia Valley, present day West Singhbhum district, Jharkhand
    • Part of a broader phase of Adivasi resistance in the Kolhan region

    Who Were the Ho Adivasis

    • Indigenous inhabitants of the Kolhan region
    • Region includes East Singhbhum, West Singhbhum and Seraikela Kharsawan

    Background to the Uprising

    • Kolhan came under Bengal Presidency around 1820–21
    • British imposed revenue, allowed non Adivasi settlement and enforced Hindi and Oriya
    • Exploitation by zamindars and social oppression triggered resistance
    • Earlier uprising known as Kol Uprising of 1831
    [2011] Which amongst the following provided a common factor for tribal insurrection in India in the 19th century? (a) Introduction of a new system of land revenue and taxation of tribal products 

    (b) Influence of foreign religious missionaries in tribal areas 

    (c) Rise of a large number of money lenders, traders and revenue farmers as middlemen in tribal areas 

    (d) The complete disruption of the old agrarian order of the tribal communities

  • National Commission for Women marks 34th Foundation Day

    Why in the News?

    The National Commission for Women marked its 34th Foundation Day on 30 January 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, highlighting the link between women’s health and empowerment.

    About National Commission for Women

    • Statutory body constituted under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990
    • Established in 1992
    • Mandate includes safeguarding women’s rights, policy review, legal interventions, and grievance redressal

    Theme of Foundation Day

    • Swasthya hi Sashaktikaran
    • Stresses that women’s health is foundational to empowerment, social equity, and national development
    [2023] Consider the following organizations/bodies in India: 1. The National Commission for Backward Classes 

    2. The National Human Rights Commission 

    3. The National Law Commission 

    4. The National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission 

    How many of the above are constitutional bodies? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four

  • 3 Buddhist sites in UNESCO tentative list

    Why in the News?

    UNESCO has included the ‘Diamond Triangle’ Buddhist sites of Odisha in India’s Tentative List for future consideration as a World Heritage Site.The sites are located in Jajpur and Cuttack districts of Odisha

    What is the ‘Diamond Triangle’?

    • A cluster of three ancient Buddhist sites 
      • Ratnagiri
      • Udayagiri
      • Lalitgiri Known as the epicentre of Buddhism in eastern India

    Historical and Religious Significance

    • The sites witnessed the propagation of all three schools of Buddhism
      Hinayana
      Mahayana
      Vajrayana
      • Rich remains of Stupas, Monasteries, Relics, Sculptures of Lord Buddha and Buddhist deities

    What is a Tentative List?

    • Mandatory prerequisite for nomination to the World Heritage List
    • Identifies sites of Outstanding Universal Value
    • Can be cultural, natural or mixed
    • Only sites on the tentative list can be considered for final inscription

    India and the Tentative List

    • India currently has 70 sites on the tentative list
    • Categories include cultural, natural and mixed
    • Odisha sites already on the tentative list include
      • Ekamra Kshetra, Bhubaneswar
      • Chilika Lake
      • Chausathi Yogini temples group was added last year
      • Two located in Odisha at Bhubaneswar outskirts and Balangir

    Prelims Pointers

    • Tentative list inclusion does not guarantee World Heritage status
    • Diamond Triangle reflects pan Buddhist evolution in India
    • ASI is the official nodal agency for UNESCO nominations
    • Odisha is emerging as a major Buddhist heritage corridor
    [2024] Consider the following properties included in the World Heritage List released by UNESCO: 

    1. Shantiniketan 

    2. Rani-ki-Vav 

    3. Sacred Ensembles of the Hoysalas 

    4. Mahabodhi Temple Complex at Bodhgaya 

    How many of the above properties were included in 2023? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four

  • [27th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Mind the time: On the financial burden of India’s ageing population

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] What is the concept of a ‘demographic winter’? Is the world moving towards such a situation?

    Linkage: It falls under GS Paper I: Population and Associated Issues, with direct links to ageing, fertility decline, and socio-economic sustainability. The article reflects an emerging sub-national demographic winter in India, where States like Kerala and Tamil Nadu face rapid ageing, mirroring the global trend of falling fertility and rising old-age dependency.

    Mentor’s Comment

    This article is important because India’s population change is no longer a future issue, it is already happening unevenly across States. It is in the news as it questions the RBI’s advice that ageing States should cut subsidies to manage rising pension and healthcare costs, while younger States should focus on education, skills, and labour-intensive growth. The article highlights a key gap: without public, State-funded geriatric care, demographic advantage may turn into a serious social and fiscal burden.

    Why in the News

    India faces its first clear inter-State demographic divergence where ageing and youth coexist simultaneously at scale. Kerala and Tamil Nadu will become “ageing States” by 2036, with elderly populations exceeding 22% and 20%, respectively. This marks a sharp shift from earlier decades when demographic transition was gradual and nationally uniform.

    Why is India’s demographic transition uneven across States?

    1. Demographic divergence: Southern States experience rapid ageing due to sustained fertility decline, while Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Jharkhand retain expanding working-age populations beyond 2031.
    2. Middle-ground States: Karnataka and Maharashtra face simultaneous growth and ageing pressures, complicating fiscal planning.
    3. Policy implication: Uniform demographic assumptions no longer apply to inter-State fiscal transfers or social sector planning.

    How does the RBI propose managing ageing-related fiscal stress?

    1. Subsidy rationalisation: Advises ageing States to reduce subsidies to manage rising pension and healthcare expenditure.
    2. Human capital investment: Urges youthful States to invest heavily in education and skills to exploit a “window of opportunity.”
    3. Labour-intensive growth: Recommends expansion of labour-intensive sectors to absorb the growing workforce.

    Why is the RBI’s fiscal advice politically and structurally constrained?

    1. Fiscal federalism imbalance: Population-weighted Finance Commission formulas reduce tax devolution to ageing southern States despite higher welfare burdens.
    2. Delimitation impact: Upcoming delimitation reduces parliamentary representation of States that controlled population growth early.
    3. Double disadvantage: Successful population stabilisation results in lower fiscal transfers and reduced political voice.

    Are youthful States adequately positioned to harness demographic advantage?

    1. Education spending stagnation: Share of State expenditure on education has stagnated or declined despite workforce expansion.
    2. Employability gap: Persistent mismatch between education outcomes and job readiness.
    3. Technological disruption: Workforce entry coincides with rising automation and AI-driven manufacturing, reducing labour absorption capacity.
    4. Premature ageing risk: Possibility of “ageing before getting rich” due to weak industrial absorption.

    How does ageing disproportionately affect women

    1. Longevity-finance gap: Elderly women live longer but possess fewer financial assets.
    2. Workforce exclusion: Majority of elderly women were never part of the formal workforce and lack pension coverage.
    3. Policy blind spot: Workforce-centric ageing strategies exclude unpaid care workers and homemakers.
    4. Social dependency: Absence of income security deepens dependence on family or State transfers.

    Why can family-based elderly support no longer be assumed?

    1. Migration patterns: Youth migration weakens intergenerational co-residence.
    2. Nuclear families: Decline of joint family structures erodes informal care networks.
    3. Safety net collapse: Assumptions of familial support no longer hold as a universal fallback.

    What structural solutions does the article propose beyond fiscal adjustments?

    1. Industrial policy shift: Job creation in new sectors such as green energy and the care economy.
    2. Early institution-building: Youthful States must build healthcare and pension systems before fertility decline accelerates.
    3. Social pension expansion: Large-scale expansion of non-contributory social pensions despite fiscal consolidation pressures.
    4. Public geriatric care: Absence of State-funded geriatric infrastructure risks limiting “graceful ageing” to the wealthy.

    Conclusion

    India’s demographic transition demands a shift from narrow fiscal management to long-term social planning. Without early investment in public geriatric care, social pensions, and health systems, ageing will deepen inequality and strain federal finances. A balanced approach that links demographic responsibility with fiscal equity is essential to ensure that population change strengthens, rather than destabilises, India’s development trajectory.

  • Neolithic Relics Unearthed at Lakkundi, Karnataka

    Why in the News?

    Excavations begun on January 16 at the Kote Veerabhadreshwar Temple premises in Lakkundi village of Gadag have yielded Neolithic period relics, strengthening efforts to nominate Lakkundi for inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites list.

    About Lakkundi

    • Located about 12 km from Gadag district headquarters
    • Historically known as Lokkigundi
    • Referred to as the village of hundred wells and temples
    • Mentioned in 11th and 12th century inscriptions, compared to Amaravati for affluence
    • Known for tankashale or mint

    Historical Significance

    • Ruled by Kalyana Chalukyas, Yadavas and Hoysalas
    • Capital of Hoysala king Eradane Ballala (Veeraballala) in 1192 AD
    • Centre of Jainism and Shaivism

    Cultural and Religious Legacy

    • Associated with Queen Attimabbe, known as Daana Chintamani, patron of Jainism
    • Built temples, Jain basadis and wells for public welfare
    • Daana Chintamani Attimabbe Prashasti instituted by Karnataka government
    • Shelter to 12th century Sharanas like Ajaganna and Muktayakka linked to Basaveshwara movement

    Architectural Features

    • Temples built in Kalyana Chalukya architectural style
    • Mumbai State Gazetteer records 13 temples, including Kashi Vishveshwara, Mallikarjuna, Virupaksha, Nanneshwara and Someshwara. 
    • Wells are noted for ornate stone carvings

    Prelims Pointers

    • Neolithic findings indicate prehistoric human activity
    • Lakkundi reflects temple town planning with wells
    • UNESCO tentative list precedes final World Heritage inscription
    • Community participation is central to heritage conservation here
    [2024] Consider the following properties included in the World Heritage List released by UNESCO: 

    1. Shantiniketan 

    2. Rani-ki-Vav 

    3. Sacred Ensembles of the Hoysalas 

    4. Mahabodhi Temple Complex at Bodhgaya 

    How many of the above properties were included in 2023? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four

  • Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards 2025

    Why in the News?

    The President of India has approved the conferment of the Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards 2025 to 30 individuals for acts of exceptional courage in saving lives.

    • 6 Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak
    • 6 Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak
    • 18 Jeevan Raksha Padak
    • 6 awards are posthumous

    What are the Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards?

    • A civilian life saving gallantry award series
    • Recognises meritorious acts of humane nature involving personal risk to save another person’s life
    • Established in 1961
    • Originated as an offshoot of the Ashoka Chakra series of Gallantry Awards

    Categories

    • Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak: Conspicuous courage in saving life under very great danger to the rescuer
    • Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak: Courage and promptitude under great danger to the rescuer
    • Jeevan Raksha Padak: Courage and promptitude involving grave risk of bodily injury to the rescuer

    Eligibility

    • Open to persons of all genders and walks of life
    • Posthumous awards permitted
    • Acts considered include rescues during Drowning, Fires, Accidents, Electrocution, Mine rescues and Natural calamities.
    [2021] Consider the following statements in respect of Bharat Ratna and Padma Awards: 

    1. Bharat Ratna and Padma Awards are titles under Article 18(1) of the Constitution of India. 

    2. Padma Awards, which were instituted in the year 1954, were suspended only once

    3. The number of Bharat Ratna Awards is restricted to a maximum of five in a particular year. 

    Which of the above statements are not correct? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, and 3

  • Padma Awards 2026

    Why in the News?

    The Padma Awards 2026 were announced on the eve of Republic Day, with the President of India approving 131 awards across the Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, and Padma Shri categories.

    What are the Padma Awards?

    • Among India’s highest civilian honours
    • Conferred for distinguished and exceptional service with a clear element of public service
    • Instituted in 1954 by the Government of India

    Historical Background

    • Initially, two civilian awards were instituted in 1954
      • Bharat Ratna
      • Padma Vibhushan
    • In 1955, Padma Vibhushan was reclassified into three categories
      • Padma Vibhushan
      • Padma Bhushan
      • Padma Shri
    • Awards are announced annually on Republic Day
    • Not conferred during 1978 to 1979 and 1993 to 1997

    Categories and Purpose

    • Padma Vibhushan: Exceptional and distinguished service
    • Padma Bhushan: Distinguished service of a high order
    • Padma Shri: Distinguished service in any field

    Eligibility Criteria

    • Open to all persons, irrespective of race, gender, occupation, or position
    • Government servants, including PSU employees, are generally not eligible
      • Exception for doctors and scientists
    • Normally not awarded posthumously
      • Permitted in exceptional cases
    • Minimum gap of 5 years required for a higher Padma category
      • Can be relaxed in deserving cases
    • Award recognises excellence plus, not merely long service

    Fields Recognised

    • Art, Social Work, Public Affairs, Science and Engineering, Trade and Industry, Medicine, including AYUSH, Literature and Education, Civil Service, Sports and Others, such as culture, environment, wildlife conservation, and human rights
    Consider the following statements in respect of Bharat Ratna and Padma Awards: 

    1. Bharat Ratna and Padma Awards are titles under Article 18(1) of the Constitution of India. 

    2. Padma Awards, which were instituted in the year 1954, were suspended only once

    3. The number of Bharat Ratna Awards is restricted to a maximum of five in a particular year. 

    Which of the above statements are not correct? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, and 3

  • Satellite data show India’s major deltas sinking

    Why in the News

    A global study published in Nature on 14 January reports widespread land subsidence across India’s major river deltas, driven largely by human activities and observed using Sentinel 1 satellite data.

    Study at a Glance

    • Data source Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar from ESA Sentinel 1
    • Period 2014 to 2023
    • Coverage 40 major global deltas including 6 Indian deltas
    • Spatial resolution 75 metres
    • Population relevance Deltas support over 340 million people globally

    Indian Deltas Confirmed to be Sinking

    • Ganges Brahmaputra Delta, Brahmani Delta, Mahanadi Delta, Godavari Delta, Cauvery Delta and Kabani Delta.
    • More than 90 percent area affected in Ganges Brahmaputra, Brahmani and Mahanadi deltas.

    Key Quantitative Findings

    • Brahmani delta: 77 percent area sinking at more than 5 mm per year
    • Mahanadi delta: 69 percent area sinking at more than 5 mm per year
    • In Ganges, Brahmani, Mahanadi, Godavari and Kabani,
      Subsidence rate exceeds regional sea level rise
    • Godavari delta: Even 95th percentile subsidence exceeds projected global sea level rise under worst climate scenario
    • Kolkata: Subsidence equals or exceeds delta average due to urban load and resource extraction

    Major Human Drivers Identified

    • Unsustainable groundwater extraction: Ganges Brahmaputra and Cauvery deltas
    • Rapid urbanisation: Brahmani delta
    • Reduced sediment flux: Mahanadi and Kabani deltas
    • Population pressure: Intensifies compaction and land lowering
    [2018] Which of the following is/are the possible consequence/s of heavy sand mining in riverbeds? 

    1. Decreased salinity in the river 

    2. Pollution of groundwater 

    3. Lowering of the water-table 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • PM Modi highlights Parbati Giri’s contribution to freedom struggle

    Why in the news

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid tribute to Parbati Giri on her birth centenary, highlighting her role in India’s freedom movement and post independence social service. She was also remembered earlier in Mann Ki Baat.

    Who was Parbati Giri

    • Freedom fighter from Odisha
    • Known as “Mother Teresa of Western Odisha”
    • Actively participated in the Quit India Movement
    • Joined the freedom struggle at just 16 years of age

    Role in freedom struggle

    • Took part in the Quit India Movement of 1942
    • Represented the contribution of women and tribal regions in the national movement
    • Part of the broader mass based resistance against colonial rule

    Post-independence contributions

    • Dedicated her life to social service
    • Worked extensively for Tribal welfare, Healthcare and Women empowerment
    • Established orphanages and welfare institutions
    • Focused on upliftment of the poor and marginalised

    UPSC Prelims pointers

    • Parbati Giri was associated with Quit India Movement
    • Belonged to Odisha
    • Known for lifelong tribal and social welfare work
    • Frequently cited in context of unsung freedom fighters
    [2011] Which one of the following observations is not true about the Quit India Movement of 1942? 

    (a) It was a non-violent movement 

    (b) It was led by Mahatma Gandhi 

    (c) It was a spontaneous movement 

    (d) It did not attract the labour class in general

  • Thiruvalluvar Day 

    Why in the News?

    On Thiruvalluvar Day, Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid homage to Thiruvalluvar, highlighting the timeless relevance of his ideals and urging people to read the Tirukkural.

    About Thiruvalluvar

    • Celebrated Tamil poet philosopher of the Sangam age
    • Believed to have lived around 2000 years ago
    • Associated with Mylapore in present day Chennai
    • Also known as Valluvar
    • Revered as a saint across South India
    • In some traditions regarded as an incarnation of Brahma

    Social and Religious Context

    • Lived during a period when Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism coexisted
    • Scholars associate him with Jainism or Hinduism
    • Demonstrated that householder life can lead to spiritual excellence
    • Rejected the necessity of renunciation for moral and spiritual attainment

    Prelims Pointers

    • Tirukkural has 1330 couplets
    • Official birth year recognised as 31 BCE
    • Associated with Sangam literature
    • Emphasised ethics, governance, and social harmony
    • Revered across religious traditions
    [2020] Which one of the following statements about Sangam literature in ancient South India is correct? 

    (a) Sangam poems are devoid of any reference to material culture

    (b) The social classification of Varna was known to Sangam poets

    (c) Sangam poems have no reference to warrior ethic

    (d) Sangam literature refers to magical forces as irrational