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October 2025
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Citizenship and Related Issues

[11th October 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: The real need is a holistic demographic mission

PYQ Relevance:

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

Linkage: Demographic shifts in border regions can exacerbate tensions, linking the topic to communalism and regionalism.  Illegal migration links directly to organized crime, such as human trafficking, drug trafficking (India’s proximity to illicit opium-growing states is a major concern mentioned in 2018 PYQ), and the potential penetration by external state and non-state actors.

Introduction:

On August 15, 2025, the Prime Minister had announced the launch of India’s Demographic Mission, a comprehensive national initiative aimed at monitoring, managing, and interpreting India’s demographic transitions.

Initially projected as a mechanism to monitor undocumented immigration from Bangladesh and its demographic implications in India’s border regions, the mission’s vision extends to a broader national strategy for demographic management.

The initiative comes at a time when India, now the world’s most populous nation, stands at a demographic crossroads, balancing its youth potential with emerging challenges of migration, ageing, inequality, and social security.

What is the Demographic Mission?

  1. Launch: Unveiled by PM on 15 August 2025, it is a national initiative to monitor, manage, and interpret India’s demographic transitions in a holistic and strategic manner.
  2. Focus: Initially targeted at undocumented immigration from Bangladesh, addressing demographic and border-security implications through biometric systems, AI-based surveillance, and smart fencing.
  3. Expanded Mandate: Evolved into a comprehensive population governance framework, integrating security, social, and developmental objectives across ministries.
  4. Institutional Measures: Includes formulation of a National Refugee Law, implementation of the National Register of Indian Citizens (NRC), and demographic data integration across sectors.
  5. Policy Shift: Moves from population control to capability development, treating demographic potential as a source of economic strength and human capital formation.

Socio-Political Dimensions of Demography:

  1. Reframing the Debate: Shifts the focus from population control to issues of equity, inclusion, and sustainability.
  2. Migration and Identity Politics: Highlights that migration and fertility transitions shape social hierarchies and electoral narratives, influencing policy priorities and identity construction.
  3. Institutional Sensitivity: Calls for embedding demographic awareness in governance, particularly in urbanisation, labour mobility, and welfare systems.
  4. Demographic Diversity as Strength: Treats India’s multi-ethnic and multi-lingual population as an asset for national integration rather than division.
  5. National Integration Framework: Positions demography as a foundation for inclusive federal policy and cohesive nation-building.

Various Issues:

  1. Illegal Immigration: Ongoing influx from Bangladesh strains border security and regional demographics, complicating citizenship and resource distribution.
  2. Migration & Identity Exclusion: Internal migrants lack voting rights and welfare access due to “usual residence” definitions, leading to political marginalisation.
  3. Ageing and Longevity: Rising life expectancy necessitates rethinking retirement age, social security, and elder-care policies.
  4. Regional Inequality: Unequal spread of education, health, and skilling infrastructure widens developmental divides among states.
  5. Policy Insensitivity: Centralised, per capita-based planning ignores population composition, gender ratio, and dependency structures.
  6. Governance Centralisation: Demographic planning remains highly centralised, with limited state participation in design and monitoring.

Various Solutions for Demographic Balance:

  1. Migration Reform: Provide legal recognition of migrant rights, ensure voting portability and welfare mobility, and promote balanced internal migration.
  2. Education and Skill Equity: Build uniform educational and vocational infrastructure and establish regional skill hubs to reduce capability gaps.
  3. Active Ageing Policies: Redefine retirement norms, expand financial security, and create avenues for productive ageing.
  4. Technological Integration: Deploy AI, GIS, and big-data platforms for real-time demographic mapping, analysis, and predictive planning.
  5. Decentralised Demographic Planning: Create federal demographic councils linked with NITI Aayog for region-specific strategies.
  6. Demographic Sensitisation: Mainstream population literacy and demographic research in policymaking, academia, and public discourse.

Global Context and Strategic Positioning:

  1. Youth Advantage: With a median age of 29 years, India stands out amid ageing societies like Japan, Europe, and China.
  2. Human Capital Vision: The mission aligns with India’s aspiration to become the “Skill Capital of the World,” enhancing global labour competitiveness.
  3. Geopolitical Relevance: Integrates population policy into national security and global strategy, positioning demography as a tool of soft power and developmental diplomacy.
  4. Long-Term Significance: By combining population management, human development, and digital governance, the mission redefines India’s demographic policy for the 21st century — linking security, sustainability, and sovereignty.

Way Forward:

  1. Institutionalise Demographic Policy: Establish a National Demographic Council for cross-ministerial coordination.
  2. Focus on Human Capital: Prioritise investments in education, health, and skill ecosystems over mere population management.
  3. Protect Migrant Rights: Legislate a Migrant Workers’ Charter to ensure political and social inclusion.
  4. Reform Social Security: Develop portable pension and healthcare systems adaptable to mobility and longevity trends.
  5. Adopt Data Ethics: Balance demographic surveillance with privacy protection and civil liberties.
  6. Mainstream Demographic Literacy: Integrate population studies into governance, academia, and public administration.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Afghanistan

With new Great Game, India must engage with the Taliban and Kabul

Introduction

Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi arrived in New Delhi on an official visit, his first since the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021.

The visit represents a major recalibration in India’s Afghanistan policy, as New Delhi cautiously engages the Taliban regime without formal recognition. India’s approach blends strategic pragmatism and regional security concerns, focusing on maintaining influence in Afghanistan’s evolving geopolitical environment while avoiding premature diplomatic endorsement.

India-Taliban Ties: A Quick Recap

  1. India never formally recognized the Taliban regime prior to or after 2021.
  2. Initial contacts date back to the late 1990s (e.g., during the IC-814 hijacking), but India’s engagement remained limited due to Pakistan’s dominance over the Taliban.
  3. Post-2021, India has maintained pragmatic engagement of humanitarian aid, infrastructure projects, and limited diplomatic outreach without providing de jure recognition.

India’s Post-2021 Approach- Diplomatic Balancing and Western Response:

  1. India adopted a “cautious engagement” policy: restoring a technical mission in Kabul, resuming aid delivery, and holding diplomatic contacts.
  2. In 2025, India announced plans to reopen its embassy in Kabul, initially with a Chargé d’affaires, avoiding formal recognition.
  3. India’s silence on human rights and women’s issues during diplomatic talks reflects strategic restraint, balancing ideological concerns with geopolitical necessity.
  4. The Western response is ambivalent. India’s engagement is scrutinized to ensure it does not inadvertently legitimize the Taliban or dilute India’s democratic credentials.

Taliban and Its Geopolitical Realignments (2024–2025):

  1. China: First major power to exchange ambassadors with the Taliban (2024); deepening economic, mining, and infrastructure ties.
  2. Russia: Moving to delist Taliban as a terrorist group; promoting counterterror cooperation.
  3. Iran: Accepts Taliban rule pragmatically, balancing internal crises with regional influence.
  4. Pakistan: Relations strained — Taliban criticism of Pakistani interference; cross-border tensions with TTP.
  5. United States: Under Trump 2.0, US policy is transactionally disengaged; leaves India more space to engage diplomatically.

India’s Strategic Objectives in Engaging the Taliban:

  1. Maintain influence in Afghanistan to protect long-term investments (infrastructure, education, healthcare).
  2. Prevent Afghan territory from being used for anti-India terrorism.
  3. Counter Pakistan–China influence by remaining a relevant actor in Afghan affairs.
  4. Enable connectivity and trade, via Chabahar port and regional transit routes.
  5. Promote soft power through development cooperation, scholarships, and cultural engagement.

Challenges and Diplomatic Constraints:

  1. Non-recognition dilemma: Engagement without recognition may be seen as de facto endorsement by critics.
  2. Human rights dissonance: Taliban’s restrictions on women’s rights conflict with India’s democratic values.
  3. Visa and mobility barriers: Lack of operational consular services hampers people-to-people ties and educational exchanges.
  4. Aid delivery limitations: Security, monitoring, and distribution bottlenecks constrain effective humanitarian impact.
  5. Geopolitical competition: Pakistan and China retain deeper leverage in Afghan affairs; India must navigate their influence.

Way Forward:

  1. Engagement without endorsement: Maintain diplomatic contact while tying cooperation to counterterror assurances.
  2. Humanitarian focus: Channel aid for women and children through UN/trusted NGOs to avoid legitimizing Taliban governance.
  3. Regional coalition building: Leverage multilateral forums (SAARC, SCO, QUAD) to strengthen India’s Afghan policy.
  4. Expand economic roles: Prioritize mining, power, and infrastructure projects to anchor Indian presence.
  5. Broaden diplomatic contacts: Engage Afghan civil society, minorities, and regional stakeholders for balanced outreach.

PYQ Relevance:

[UPSC 2013] The proposed withdrawal of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) from Afghanistan in 2014 is fraught with major security implications for the countries of the region. Examine in light of the fact that India is faced with a plethora of challenges and needs to safeguard its own strategic interests.

Linkage: The instability in Kabul, coupled with the influence of external state and non-state actors, directly impacts India’s internal security landscape, especially concerning terrorism, border security challenges, and the potential linkage between organized crime and drug trafficking. Therefore, questions may assess India’s strategic autonomy, humanitarian diplomacy, connectivity projects (like Chabahar), and counter-terrorism strategies, requiring candidates to demonstrate applied knowledge linking foreign policy decisions with internal stability.

 

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India’s long history of resistance to economic domination

Why in the News?

Trade negotiations between India and the United States remain stalled after President Trump’s administration doubled tariffs on Indian goods to 50% and imposed an additional 25% duty on Russian oil imports by India.

Introduction

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar emphasised that while understanding with the US, “the world’s largest market” is essential, India’s economic sovereignty and red lines must be respected.

This impasse reflects the global shift from free trade to protectionism, echoing earlier eras when India resisted externally imposed economic dominance, first under colonial exploitation, and later through planned economic reconstruction after independence.

Colonial Economic Exploitation and India’s Resistance:

  1. Transformation of Economy: The British colonial system dismantled India’s self-sufficient agrarian and artisanal base, converting the country into a supplier of raw materials and a market for British-manufactured goods.
  2. Drain Theory and Fiscal Exploitation: Dadabhai Naoroji, in Poverty and Un-British Rule in India (1901), argued that India’s wealth was drained to Britain, financing its prosperity: “The British Indian Empire is formed and maintained entirely by Indian money and mainly by Indian blood.”
  3. Phases of Colonial Capitalism:
    • Mercantile Capitalism (EIC Era): Extraction through monopoly trade and taxation.
    • Industrial Capitalism (19th Century): India reduced to an exporter of raw cotton and importer of textiles.
    • Finance Capitalism (Early 20th Century): British private capital dominated infrastructure, plantations, and banking, reinforcing dependency.
  4. Economic Consequences: The structure produced de-industrialisation, agrarian stagnation, excessive taxation, and recurring famines, resulting in widespread impoverishment.

Intellectual Critiques of the Colonial Economy:

  1. R. C. Dutt – Industrial Destruction: In The Economic History of India (1901–02), he demonstrated how colonial policies deliberately destroyed indigenous industries to protect British manufacturers.
  2. M. G. Ranade – Economic Dependency: Criticised colonial economic dependence and advocated industrial regeneration through Indian entrepreneurship.
  3. R. Palme Dutt – Stages of Imperialism: In India To-day (1940), identified three stages of capitalist domination , mercantile, industrial, and finance , highlighting the evolution of imperial control.
  4. G. V. Joshi , an Economist, aptly described railway expenditure as an “Indian subsidy to British industry.”

Economic Reconstruction After Independence:

  1. Inherited Structural Weakness: At independence in 1947, India faced an agrarian, impoverished, and unequal economy drained of capital and industrial base.
  2. Ideological Synthesis: Rejecting Cold War binaries, India adopted a non-aligned mixed economy, blending socialist planning with capitalist pragmatism to ensure self-reliance and equity.
  3. Intellectual Precursors to Planning:
    • Visvesvaraya Plan (1934) – advocated industrialisation and state coordination.
    • National Planning Committee (1938) – set the foundation for state-directed development.
    • Bombay Plan (1944) – proposed large-scale industrialisation with public–private cooperation.
    • Gandhian and People’s Plans (1944–45) – emphasised decentralisation and rural self-sufficiency.
  4. First and Second Five-Year Plans:
    • First Plan (1951–56): Focused on agriculture, irrigation, and rural reconstruction.
    • Second Plan (1956–61): Based on P. C. Mahalanobis model, prioritising heavy industries, capital goods, and import substitution.

Planned Economy and Centralisation of Authority:

  1. Institutional Creation: The Planning Commission (1950), chaired by the Prime Minister, institutionalised centralised planning and target allocation.
  2. Fiscal Centralisation: The Finance Commission (Article 280), though constitutionally mandated for fiscal transfers, became secondary to plan-based resource allocation.
  3. Limited Federal Consultation: The National Development Council (1952) was created to involve states but lacked independent financial powers.
  4. Command Economy Features: India’s planning structure mirrored Soviet-style central control, aiming for rapid industrialisation, public sector expansion, and poverty eradication, yet it consolidated central dominance in economic governance.

Transition to Federal Economic Governance:

  1. Liberalisation Era (1991): The balance-of-payments crisis triggered wide-ranging reforms , ending the Licence–Permit–Quota Raj, deregulating industries, reducing tariffs, and inviting foreign investment.
  2. Market Orientation: The 1991 reforms replaced the state-led model with market-driven growth and integration into the global economy.
  3. Institutional Transformation:
    • Abolition of the Planning Commission (2014) reflected a shift from central command to federal cooperation.
    • Creation of NITI Aayog (2015) introduced cooperative and competitive federalism, emphasising state innovation and evidence-based policymaking.
  4. Fiscal Federal Tensions: The Goods and Services Tax (GST) exemplifies fiscal unity but has also constrained state autonomy, fuelling debates on vertical imbalance and fiscal equity.

India–US Trade Divergences in the Contemporary Context:

  1. Tariff Dispute Dynamics: The Trump tariff regime, justified on grounds of national security and domestic job protection, contradicted WTO’s comparative advantage principle, undermining global free-trade norms.
  2. India’s Strategic Response: Rooted in historical awareness, India’s trade policy seeks to balance self-reliance with pragmatic global engagement, defending domestic interests while avoiding isolationism.
  3. Philosophical Continuity: Jaishankar’s remark, “If trade becomes tariffs, where is competitiveness?”, encapsulates India’s enduring critique of externally imposed asymmetry, echoing nationalist economic thought since the colonial period.

Legacy of India’s Economic Resistance:

  1. Continuum of Policy Evolution: From colonial subjugation through planned reconstruction to liberal federalism, India’s economic trajectory reflects a consistent assertion of sovereignty and self-determination.
  2. Recurrent Themes: The pursuit of self-reliance, equitable growth, and resistance to external control runs through every policy phase from Naoroji’s drain theory to NITI Aayog’s cooperative model.
  3. Contemporary Relevance: The present India–US trade friction is not merely a tactical disagreement but a symbolic reaffirmation of India’s historical resolve to resist economic subordination and preserve strategic autonomy.

Way Forward:

  1. Strategic Engagement: Pursue trade negotiations with the US grounded in reciprocity, not submission.
  2. Institutional Resilience: Strengthen WTO-aligned frameworks for dispute resolution to safeguard multilateralism.
  3. Domestic Competitiveness: Expand manufacturing and exports through PLI schemes and innovation-driven incentives.
  4. Federal Balance: Reinforce fiscal autonomy of states to sustain broad-based economic growth.
  5. Economic Diplomacy: Integrate trade with technology partnerships, digital cooperation, and sustainable supply chains to mitigate external shocks.

PYQ Relevance:

[UPSC 2014] Examine critically the various facets of economic policies of the British in India from mid-eighteenth century till independence.

Linkage: This topic is critical because India’s historical experience of economic domination, marked by policies such as the Drain of Wealth and de-industrialisation during the colonial era, profoundly shapes its present-day foreign policy and economic decision-making.

 

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Air Pollution

Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity (GEI) Target Rules, 2025

Why in the News?

The Centre has notified the first legally binding Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity (GEI) Target Rules, 2025 for four high-emission sectors:  aluminium, cement, chlor-alkali, and pulp & paper.

This marks a critical step in operationalising the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), 2023.

Back2Basics: Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity (GEI)

  • Overview: GEI is the amount of GHGs emitted per unit of product output or economic activity;  for example, the emissions released in producing one tonne of cement, aluminium, or steel.
  • Unit of Measurement: Expressed in tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCOe) per unit of product.
  • Composition:
    • Primary gases: Carbon dioxide (CO₂), Methane (CH₄), Nitrous oxide (N₂O).
    • Synthetic gases: Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), Perfluorocarbons (PFCs), Sulphur hexafluoride (SF₆).
  • Purpose: GEI helps measure the efficiency of industrial production in terms of emissions.
  • Policy Significance: Reducing GEI aligns industrial operations with national and global climate commitments, particularly under the Paris Agreement (2015), where India has pledged to cut its emissions intensity of GDP by 45% by 2030 (from 2005 levels).

About Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity (GEI) Target Rules, 2025:

  • Notification: Issued by the MoEFCC on October 8, 2025, these are India’s first legally binding emission intensity targets for industries.
  • Objective: To limit greenhouse gas emissions per unit of product output in high-emission sectors, thereby promoting low-carbon industrial growth and aligning with India’s Paris Agreement commitment to reduce emission intensity of GDP by 45% by 2030 (from 2005 levels).
  • Coverage: Applies to 282 industrial units across four sectors– cement (186 units), aluminium (13), chlor-alkali (30), and pulp & paper (53).
  • Compliance Period: 2025–26 and 2026–27; emission limits expressed in tCOe (tonnes of CO equivalent) per unit of product.
  • Mechanism:
    • Units achieving targets earn carbon credits (certified by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency).
    • Non-compliant units must buy credits or face environmental compensation under CPCB oversight.
  • Purpose: To operationalise India’s domestic carbon market, encourage technology upgrades, and institutionalise market-based climate compliance.
  • Outcome: Marks transition from voluntary energy-efficiency drives (PAT Scheme) to a legally enforceable carbon-intensity regime, integrating emission monitoring, trading, and compliance.

What is the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), 2023?

  • Launched by: Ministry of Power in 2023 to establish a domestic carbon trading market under India’s Energy Conservation Act framework.
  • Objective: To create a structured mechanism for generating, certifying, and trading carbon credits earned through verified emission reductions.
  • Administered by: Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE), which issues Carbon Credit Certificates (CCC) to compliant industries.
  • Framework:
    • Industries meeting or exceeding GEI targets receive tradable credits.
    • Entities failing to meet targets must purchase credits to offset excess emissions.
    • Credits are traded on the Indian Carbon Market (ICM) platform.
  • Purpose: To make emission reduction economically incentivised, transforming carbon from a cost burden into a market asset.
  • Global Parallel: Similar to the EU Emissions Trading System (2005) and China’s National Carbon Market (2021).
  • Significance: Integrates energy efficiency, emission control, and fiscal instruments to drive India’s net-zero transition through a market-based, transparent, and measurable approach.
[UPSC 2025] Consider the following statements:

I. Carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions in India are less than 0.5 t CO₂/capita.

II. In terms of CO₂ emissions from fuel combustion, India ranks second in Asia-Pacific region.

III. Electricity and heat producers are the largest sources of CO₂ emissions in India.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Options:

(a) I and III only (b) II only (c) II and III only * (d) I, II and III

 

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough

AgriEnIcs Programme

Why in the News?

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology announced the transfer of technology for agricultural and environmental solutions developed under the Agricultural and Environmental Electronics (AgriEnIcs) Programme.

What is AgriEnIcs Programme?

  • Overview: A national initiative of the Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY) integrating electronics, IT, and digital technologies into agriculture and environmental management.
  • Objective: To promote research, development, deployment, and commercialization of advanced tools for precision agriculture and sustainable resource monitoring.
  • Nature of Programme: Serves as a national R&D and technology translation platform connecting academia, industry, and government for innovation-driven solutions.
  • Implementing Agency: Led by the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), Kolkata as nodal agency, with participation from IITs, ICAR institutes, and private entities.
  • Development: All technologies designed and tested in India for affordability and rural scalability.
  • Strategic Vision: Strengthens India’s push toward AI- and IoT-enabled agri-systems, aligning with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Digital India.

Key Features:

  • Integrated Tech Approach: Combines AI, IoT, machine vision, and sensor networks for intelligent agricultural and environmental systems.
  • Collaborative Framework: Operates through partnerships among MeitY, C-DAC, academic, and industrial institutions to speed up technology transfer.
  • Multi-Domain Focus: Addresses dairy health monitoring, crop quality estimation, odour detection, and waste-management automation.
  • AI & ML Applications: Enables predictive diagnostics, real-time data analytics, and automated decision support in farm operations.
  • Sensor-Based Systems: Deploys wearable sensors, vision devices, and automated analyzers for livestock, grain, and environment monitoring.
  • Scalable Architecture: Interoperable with AgriStack, Ayush Grid, and other government data platforms for nationwide expansion.

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AYUSH – Indian Medicine System

[pib] DRAVYA Portal

Why in the News?

The Ministry of Ayush has launched the Digitized Retrieval Application for Versatile Yardstick of Ayush Substances (DRAVYA) portal the largest digital repository of Ayurvedic ingredients and formulations.

About DRAVYA Portal:

  • Developed By: Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences (CCRAS) under the Ministry of Ayush.
  • Purpose: To build a centralized, open-access knowledge platform integrating classical Ayurveda with modern scientific data for global research and policy use.
  • Launch: Released on 10th Ayurveda Day (23 September 2025) at Goa, marking a major digital step in traditional medicine.
  • Phase I Coverage: Includes data on 100 medicinal substances, updated through a dedicated entry system ensuring precision and authenticity.
  • Integration Goal: Designed to connect with the Ayush Grid and allied Ministry databases for coordinated digital governance and research.
  • Scope: Merges textual, botanical, pharmacological, and chemical information for cross-disciplinary validation and innovation.

Key Features:

  • AI-Ready Design: Built with artificial intelligence capability for analytics, discovery, and predictive research.
  • Open-Access Repository: Consolidates validated data from classical texts, scientific literature, and field studies in searchable form.
  • Comprehensive Profiles: Details each substance’s pharmacotherapeutics, botany, chemistry, pharmacology, and safety aspects.
  • QR-Code Integration: Enables standardised display of plant data in gardens, repositories, and institutions.
  • Advanced Search Filters: Sorts substances by rasa (taste), virya (potency), vipaka (post-digestive effect), and therapeutic use.
  • Dynamic Database: Continuously updated for authenticity and scientific rigour.
  • Global Accessibility: Serves as a credible digital reference for researchers, policymakers, and innovators worldwide.
  • Future Expansion: Will interlink with Ayush Grid, National Medicinal Plants Database, and Ayush Drug Policy for an integrated digital health ecosystem.

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Nobel and other Prizes

Venezuela’s María Machado wins Nobel Peace Prize, 2025

Why in the News?

Maria Corina Machado won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize for defending democracy in Venezuela; President Trump praised her but criticised the Nobel Committee.

Venezuela’s María Machado wins Nobel Peace Prize, 2025

About Nobel Peace Prize:

  • Origin: Instituted in 1901 under the will of Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor and philanthropist, to honour outstanding contributions to peace and humanitarian cooperation.
  • Administered By: Managed by the Norwegian Nobel Committee, a five-member body appointed by the Parliament of Norway, distinct from Sweden’s Nobel institutions.
  • Purpose: Awards individuals or organisations advancing disarmament, peace negotiations, democracy, human rights, and a stable global order.
  • Expanded Focus: Now includes climate change, environmental protection, and global justice as integral to sustainable peace.
  • Prize Components: Laureates receive a gold medal, diploma, and 11 million Swedish krona (≈ US $1.2 million, 2025).
  • Venue: Presented in Oslo, Norway, the only Nobel Prize awarded outside Sweden, symbolising Norway’s neutral and humanitarian tradition.
  • Global Significance: Remains the world’s most prestigious peace honour, mirroring contemporary geopolitical and ethical realities.

These trivial facts are too unlikely to be asked in the CS prelims but may hold importance for CAPF and other exams. 

US Presidents who won Nobel Peace Prize:

  • Theodore Roosevelt (1906): Mediated the Russo–Japanese War settlement; first US President to win the prize.
  • Woodrow Wilson (1919): Recognised for ending World War I and founding the League of Nations, precursor to the UN.
  • Jimmy Carter (2002): Cited for human-rights mediation and the Camp David Accords, plus global work via the Carter Center.
  • Al Gore (2007): Shared with the IPCC for elevating climate change as a global peace and security issue.
  • Barack Obama (2009): Honoured for efforts toward nuclear disarmament and renewed international diplomacy; only US President got awarded while in office.

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