💥UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (April Batch) + Access XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

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  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Jaswanth Jeenu, AIR 23, UPSC CSE 25 | Why UPSC Rankers Repeat Success | Strategy, Systems & Mindset Decoded | Join on 23rd April at 7PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Jaswanth Jeenu, AIR 23, UPSC CSE 25 | Why UPSC Rankers Repeat Success | Strategy, Systems & Mindset Decoded | Join on 23rd April at 7PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar


    Why do some UPSC aspirants succeed once…
    and then go on to repeat that success again?

    What separates consistent performers from one-time rankers?

    Join Me as I break down the strategy, systems, and mindset behind repeating success in UPSC.

    Jaswanth Jeenu, AIR 23, UPSC CSE 25

    What I’ll cover in this session:

    1. What Repeat Rankers Do Differently

    Why consistency beats intensity

    Moving from effort to efficiency

    Building systems instead of relying on motivation


    2. The Strategy Behind Sustained Success

    Avoiding common plateau traps

    How to refine preparation after one attempt

    Identifying high return areas


    3. Systems That Ensure Consistency

    Answer writing with direction

    Daily and weekly planning frameworks

    Revision systems that actually work


    4. The Mindset Shift Required

    Staying process driven, not result driven

    Handling pressure after initial success

    Avoiding complacency and burnout



    Success in UPSC is not luck.
    It’s a system that can be built, refined, and repeated.

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 23rd April at 7PM.

    See you in masterclass.



    It will be a 45 minute session, post which we will open up the floor for all kinds of queries which a beginner must have. No questions are taboo and Arvind sir is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 23rd April at 7 PM. This session is a must attend for you If you are attempting UPSC for the first time or have attempted earlier and now preparing for 2027, then it is going to be a valuable session for you too.

    See you in the session”

    Register for the session for a complete in-depth UPSC Prep


    In this Civilsdaily masterclass, you will get:

    1. A 45-minute deep dive on how to plan your UPSC strategy from the start to the end.
    2. How do first-attempt IAS Rankers get the most out of their one year prep?
    3. Insider tips that only the top IAS and IPS rankers know and apply to get rank.

    By the end, you’ll have razor-sharp clarity and a clear path to crack UPSC with confidence and near-perfect certainty. 

    Join UPSC session on 23rd April, at 7 PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until End April’ 26)



    These masterclasses are packed with value. They are conducted in private with a closed community. We rarely open these webinars for everyone for free. This time we are keeping it for 300 seats only.

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  • [22nd April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Lunar governance should be multilateral

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2019] What is India’s plan to have its own space station and how will it benefit our space programme?Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of space governance, future space economy, and strategic autonomy, which directly connects to debates on lunar resource exploitation. It links to global commons vs national interests, as lunar governance (Artemis Accords vs multilateralism) will shape future space missions and infrastructure like space stations.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The debate on lunar governance has intensified due to the rapid operationalisation of the U.S.-led Artemis programme and associated Artemis Accords, which for the first time enable private extraction and ownership of lunar resources. This marks a sharp departure from earlier norms under the Outer Space Treaty (1967) that treated outer space as the “province of all humankind.” The issue gains urgency as scarce lunar resources, especially water ice at the south pole, are becoming strategically valuable for future missions.

    How does current geopolitical conduct undermine credibility in space governance?

    1. Selective adherence to law: Demonstrates inconsistency in upholding international norms; e.g., continued military actions despite scrutiny by the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
    2. Institutional bypassing: Weakens dispute resolution mechanisms; e.g., blockage of appointments to the WTO Appellate Body since 2019.
    3. Due process concerns: Highlights erosion of legal safeguards; e.g., deportation policies criticised by the U.S. Supreme Court.
    4. Humanitarian violations: Undermines moral authority; e.g., findings by International Commission of Jurists and Red Cross on violations in conflict zones.

    What are the legal implications of the Artemis Accords on lunar resources?

    The Artemis Accords, launched in 2020 and signed by over 60 nations as of April 2026, represent a significant evolution in international space law regarding lunar resources. They establish a principled framework aimed at operationalizing the 1967 Outer Space Treaty (OST) for commercial lunar exploration, primarily focusing on the extraction and utilization of resources. 

    1. Resource ownership rights: Enables private possession and sale of extracted resources; backed by U.S. domestic law (2015).
      1. Commercial Extraction: The Accords explicitly affirm that the extraction and utilization of space resources, such as water ice or regolith, does not inherently constitute “national appropriation” under Article II of the OST.
      2. Legal Standing: This allows signatories to authorize their private sector to possess, use, and sell extracted lunar resources, bridging the gap between scientific exploration and commercial mining.
      3. Backed by U.S. Law: This stance aligns with the U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act of 2015, which already granted American citizens rights to own, transport, and sell space resources.
    2. Norm-setting mechanism: Establishes bilateral agreements outside UN framework; risks fragmentation of global norms.
      1. Soft Law Approach: The Accords are non-legally binding political commitments (“soft law”) but function as mandatory requirements for participation in NASA’s Artemis program.
      2. Counter to 1979 Moon Agreement: The Accords ignore the 1979 Moon Agreement’s requirement for an international regime to govern resource exploitation, opting instead for a “first-come, first-served” approach to mining.
    3. Interpretation bias: Expands meaning of “use” under Outer Space Treaty to include commercial extraction.
      1. Redefining “Use”: The Accords interpret the OST’s allowance of the “use” of space to include commercial extraction of resources, whereas historically, this was seen as limited to scientific or operational utilization.
    4. Legal precedent: Creates de facto customary norms without universal consent.
      1. Subsequent Practice: The U.S. and its partners seek to establish “subsequent practice” under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, which could elevate these principles into customary international law through repeated actions.

    Do “safety zones” risk creating exclusionary regimes on the Moon?

    Yes, safety zones on the Moon pose a significant risk of creating exclusionary regimes. While designed to prevent harmful interference, safety zones can function as a de facto means of controlling, accessing, and exploiting high-value lunar areas (such as resource-rich polar craters) without requiring formal territorial claims. 

    1. Safety zones provision: Prevents harmful interference around operational sites.
    2. De facto territoriality: Enables early movers to control high-value regions without formal sovereignty claims.
      1. Operational Control: These zones enable actors to restrict access, creating a, de facto sovereignty by controlling entry to scientific and economic sites.
      2. Legal Ambiguity: The “due regard” principle of the OST is used to justify these zones. But the lack of a standardized size or definition allows actors to create, large exclusion zones that inhibit the free movement of others. 
    3. Resource concentration: Targets scarce locations like lunar south pole water ice.
      1. High-Value Sites: The most strategic locations, water-rich peaks of light and deep, icy craters, are limited. A safety zone around one of these sites can essentially monopolize that resource.
    4. Inequitable access: Limits entry of latecomers, especially developing countries.
      1. Rise of Contested Territory: As nations plan permanent bases, the competition for these, “safe” zones could turn them into, contested, contentious territory, rather than areas for scientific collaboration. 

    Why is multilateral governance necessary for lunar resources?

    1. Global commons principle: Treats Moon as shared heritage of humanity.
    2. Equitable distribution: Ensures fair access to resources across nations.
    3. Conflict prevention: Reduces risk of geopolitical rivalry in space.
    4. Institutional legitimacy: Strengthens UN-based frameworks like Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS).

    What role can the Moon Agreement (1979) play in future governance?

    The Moon Agreement (1979), formally the Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, provides a, yet largely underutilized, legal framework for the future of space governance, particularly regarding natural resource exploitation and environmental protection. Although limited by low ratification from major space-faring nations, its principles remain relevant in shaping debates on equitable space use. 

    1. International regime framework: The Agreement mandates the establishment of an international regime to govern the exploitation of lunar resources “as such exploitation is about to become feasible”.
      1. This provides a mechanism for establishing rules before a free-for-all scenario occurs, ensuring orderly and safe development.
    2. Collective benefit principle: Ensures benefits are shared globally.
      1. The Agreement designates the Moon and its resources as the “common heritage of mankind” (Article 11). This shifts the focus from competitive exploitation to an equitable sharing of benefits derived from resources, with special consideration for developing nations.
    3. Regulatory gap filling: It fills crucial gaps in the 1967 Outer Space Treaty (OST) regarding the exploitation of celestial resources.
      1. While the OST prohibits national appropriation, it is ambiguous regarding resource extraction. The Moon Agreement clarifies this by establishing a framework for resource management.
    4. Adoption challenge: Limited ratification reduces enforceability.
      1. The main challenge is its poor adoption, with only 17 or 18 states (as of 2023-2024) party to it, and none being major spacefaring powers (USA, Russia, China).
      2. The rise of non-binding “soft law,” such as the U.S.-led Artemis Accords, demonstrates a shift away from the binding multilateralism of the Moon Agreement towards commercial-friendly frameworks.

    Is the emerging space order shifting towards unilateralism?

    1. Power asymmetry: Dominance of technologically advanced nations.
      1. Intensifying Rivalry: The space domain is becoming a primary theater for U.S.-China strategic competition, with Russia also looking to develop asymmetric counterspace capabilities.
      2. Sovereign Constellations: China is expanding its state-directed industrial model through sovereign constellations like GuoWang and Qianfan, aiming to challenge U.S. dominance.
    2. Private sector involvement: Expands corporate influence in governance.
      1. Dominance of Commercial Players: Commercial entities, particularly SpaceX, dominate the launch cadence, commercial, and constellation deployment markets, creating a “monopoly” that pushes other nations to seek sovereign alternatives.
      2. In-Space Operations: The role of private companies is growing, with initiatives like India’s IN-SPACe enabling private sector participation in satellite launches and data analytics. 
    3. Bilateral agreements trend: Sidelines multilateral negotiations.
      1. Minilateralism/Bilateralism: Due to UN gridlock, countries are shifting to agile, “small table” negotiations and minilateral groupings like the QUAD to achieve faster, more flexible results.
    4. Strategic Competition: U.S.-China Rivalry in Space 
      1. Weaponized Interdependence: Space is viewed as an “operational battlespace” where critical commercial infrastructure can be used as a bargaining tool.
      2. Nationalization of Space Policy: Nations are increasingly integrating their space programs with national security interests, moving from exploration to defensive-offensive capabilities.
      3. Sovereign Launch Focus: U.S. allies (e.g., Australia, Canada, Spain, Germany) are aggressively funding domestic rocket startups to avoid dependency on American commercial providers, signaling a rise in sovereign-centric space policies.

    Conclusion

    Unilateral frameworks risk transforming lunar governance into a power-driven regime. A treaty-based multilateral approach remains essential to ensure equity, sustainability, and legitimacy in managing extraterrestrial resources.

  • Government to tighten AI labelling rules for social media over ‘unsatisfactory compliance’

    Why in the News?

    The government’s decision to tighten AI labelling rules marks a clear step-up in digital regulation, triggered by poor compliance from platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and X. Earlier, platforms only needed to show “prominent” labels, but now they must display continuous and clearly visible labels throughout the content, making the rules much stricter. This change is important because cases of harmful AI content, such as deepfake images of women created by X’s Grok, have exposed serious gaps in regulation, raising concerns about privacy, dignity, and large-scale misinformation.

    What are the AI Content labelling rules for social media?

    1. The Government of India has notified the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Amendment Rules, 2026 (effective February 20, 2026), making AI content labelling mandatory on social media platforms. These rules are designed to curb the spread of deepfakes, misinformation, and non-consensual sexual content (CSAM).
    2. AI content labelling on social media is the mandatory or voluntary tagging of images, videos, and audio created or altered by artificial intelligence (AI) to distinguish them from human-made content. 
    3. It aims to increase transparency, reduce misinformation (deepfakes), and comply with regulations by using visible labels (e.g., “AI-generated”) or hidden metadata.

    Key Features of the Amended IT Rules (2026):

    1. Mandatory Labelling: Social media platforms must prominently label “synthetically generated” or AI-generated images and videos that appear realistic.
    2. User Declaration: Platforms with over five million users must obtain a user declaration for AI-generated content and conduct technical verification before publishing.
    3. Excluded Content: Routine smartphone photo editing, filters, and film special effects are exempt from mandatory labelling.
    4. Permanent Metadata: Platforms must try to embed permanent metadata or watermarks to trace the origin of AI content.
    5. Takedown Timelines:
      1. 2 hours: Non-consensual deepfakes and intimate imagery must be removed within 2 hours of a complaint.
      2. 3 hours: Other illegal content must be removed within 3 hours of a court/government order.
    6. Loss of Safe Harbour: Non-compliance with these rules can result in the loss of safe harbour protection under Section 79 of the IT Act, making platforms liable for the content.

    Key Proposed AI Labeling Amendments (April 2026) and how do the proposed amendments strengthen accountability of intermediaries?

    1. Continuous On-Screen Labels: The new proposal mandates that AI labels remain continuously and clearly visible throughout the entire duration of the video or audio content, rather than just in the beginning or occasionally.
    2. Expansion of Scope: The labeling requirement applies to “synthetically generated information” (SGI), which includes text, audio, images, and videos created or altered via AI to appear authentic.
    3. Platform Accountability: Social media intermediaries must ensure these labels are present. Failure to comply could lead to a loss of “safe harbour” protection, meaning platforms could be held liable for user-generated content.
    4. User Responsibilities: Users are required to declare if content is AI-generated upon uploading, which platforms must then verify using “reasonable and proportionate technical measures“.
    5. Stricter Takedown Timelines: The proposal includes a heavily reduced takedown timeline, requiring platforms to remove illegal, non-consensual deepfakes within 2 to 3 hours of a lawful order.
    6. Feedback Deadline Extended: The deadline for public feedback on these proposed changes has been extended to May 7, 2026. 

    These moves, which follow initial rules announced in February 2026, are designed to combat the rising misuse of deepfakes and misinformation, ensuring that AI-generated material is easily distinguishable from real content

    What regulatory gap prompted stricter AI labelling norms?

    The primary regulatory gap that prompted stricter AI labelling norms was the transition from a standard of “prominent visibility” to a mandate for “continuous and clearly visible display” throughout the entire duration of the content. 

    1. Unsatisfactory compliance: Social media platforms failed to ensure consistent labelling despite February notification. For instance, only about 30% of AI-generated test posts were correctly flagged across major platforms.
    2. Inconsistent visibility: Labels appeared briefly or were not prominently displayed throughout content duration.
      1. Under earlier guidelines, AI labels often appeared only briefly or were placed in a way that was easily missed by users. The new 2026 amendments specifically aim to eliminate “blink-and-miss” disclaimers by requiring the label to remain on screen from start to finish.
    3. Regulatory dilution: Earlier proposal mandating labels to occupy 10% space was diluted, reducing effectiveness.
    4. Traceability Gaps: To prevent the removal of disclosures, the new norms mandate embedding permanent metadata or unique identifiers into synthetic content to ensure it remains traceable even when shared. 

    What is the significance of redefining Synthetic Generated Information (SGI)?

    Redefining Synthetically Generated Information (SGI) under India’s IT Rules 2026 is significant because it shifts from a reactive, general content moderation model to a proactive, AI-specific regulatory framework.

    1. Definition of SGI (Feb 2026 Rules): Refers to information created, modified, or generated using AI tools that can mimic real persons, events, or content.
      1. Includes deepfakes, AI-generated videos, audio, images, or text that appear real.
      2. Focuses on content that can mislead users or distort reality.
    2. Scope in February 2026 Rules:
      1. Broad coverage: Any AI-generated content that resembles real-world entities.
      2. Mandatory labelling: Required “prominent” disclosure, but no clarity on duration or format.
      3. Carve-outs included: Routine editing (filters, enhancement, dubbing) excluded as “good-faith use”.

    What changes in the Proposed New Rules?

    1. Stricter visibility requirement:
      1. Continuous and clearly visible labelling throughout the content duration.
      2. Removes ambiguity of “prominent” labels.
    2. Sharper focus on harm:
      1. Targets SGI that violates laws or leads to misrepresentation of identity/events.
      2. Expands regulatory intent from disclosure for the prevention of misuse.
    3. Platform accountability strengthened:
      1. Requires verification of user declarations about SGI.
      2. Mandates technical safeguards to detect and prevent harmful SGI.
    4. Enforcement mechanism: Platforms must take immediate action (remove, disable access, suspend accounts) upon detection.

    Why is this significant?

    1. Clear classification: Defines AI-generated content as SGI, ensuring regulatory clarity.
    2. Carve-outs provision: Excludes routine and good-faith editing (audio/video enhancement) from SGI definition.
    3. Misrepresentation control: Targets content that violates laws or misrepresents real-world events or identities.

    What risks associated with AI-generated content triggered regulatory urgency?

    1. Deepfake misuse: Grok-generated images of women in revealing clothing raised dignity and privacy concerns.
    2. Misinformation threat: AI content risks distorting facts and influencing public perception.
    3. Identity manipulation: Enables impersonation and false representation of individuals.
    4. Global backlash: Incident led to bans in some countries and forced platform-level corrective measures.

    How does the amendment impact Big Tech platforms?

    1. Enhanced compliance burden: Requires continuous monitoring and enforcement mechanisms.
    2. Liability exposure: Failure to act may attract legal consequences under IT Rules.
    3. User accountability integration: Platforms must ensure users disclose AI-generated content.
    4. Content moderation expansion: Strengthens obligations for proactive detection and removal.

    What are the implications for digital governance in India?

    1. Regulatory evolution: Moves from reactive to proactive AI governance.
    2. Platform responsibility shift: Transfers greater accountability to intermediaries.
    3. Rights protection: Strengthens safeguards for privacy, dignity, and authenticity.
    4. Policy alignment: Aligns with global concerns on AI ethics and misinformation control.

    Conclusion

    The proposed amendments signal a decisive shift towards stricter AI governance, emphasizing transparency and accountability. Effective implementation will determine whether India can balance innovation with safeguards against misinformation and digital harm.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Social media and encrypting messaging services pose a serious security challenge. What measures have been adopted at various levels to address the security implications of social media? Also suggest any other remedies to address the problem.

    Linkage: AI labelling rules and SGI regulation fall under GS-3 (Cyber Security, Emerging Technologies), focusing on risks like deepfakes, misinformation, and platform accountability. They also link to GS-2 (Governance) through regulation of intermediaries and GS-4 (Ethics) via concerns of privacy, dignity, and responsible AI use.

  • A year from Pahalgam, tracking the security shift

    Why in the News?

    A year after the Pahalgam terror attack, there is a structural shift in Jammu & Kashmir’s security doctrine, from reactive containment in urban centres to a dispersed, intelligence-led grid extending into forests and high-altitude areas. This marks a significant transition from earlier patterns where militants operated with relative ease in remote terrains.

    How has the security doctrine shifted post-Pahalgam?

    1. Doctrinal shift: Moves from urban containment to dispersed rural-forest operations, expanding counter-terror grid into difficult terrains.
    2. Proactive operations: Ensures pre-emptive neutralisation rather than post-incident response.
    3. Grid expansion: Strengthens multi-layered deployment across Pir Panjal and Kashmir Valley.
    4. Example: Increased presence in forested belts and high-altitude zones previously under-monitored.

    What role has intelligence integration played in the new strategy?

    1. Intelligence-led operations: Enables targeted strikes against militant networks instead of broad sweeps.
    2. Human intelligence (HUMINT): Strengthens local informant networks for early warning signals.
    3. Inter-agency coordination: Ensures real-time intelligence sharing among Army, J&K Police, and central agencies.
    4. Example: Dismantling of overground worker (OGW) networks aiding militants.

    How has technology transformed counter-terror operations?

    1. Drone surveillance: Enhances real-time monitoring of inaccessible terrains.
    2. Digital tracking: Facilitates data-driven identification of suspects and networks.
    3. Smart checkpoints: Ensures efficient screening through QR-based and digital systems.
    4. Data point: Over 50,000 individuals linked to terrorism brought under Aadhaar-linked identification systems.
    5. Example: Use of drones and surveillance tech in forest operations.

    What are the key operational successes achieved?

    1. Neutralisation rates: Increases elimination of militants through targeted operations.
    2. Network disruption: Weakens logistical and recruitment channels.
    3. Area domination: Expands security presence into previously vulnerable regions.
    4. Example: Decline in large-scale coordinated attacks compared to earlier years.

    What structural gaps and challenges persist?

    1. Intelligence gaps: Limits complete pre-emption of attacks, especially in remote zones.
    2. Terrain advantage: Continues to favour militants in dense forests and mountains.
    3. Adaptive tactics: Enables militants to shift to smaller, decentralised cells.
    4. Local support: Sustains residual overground networks aiding infiltration and logistics.
    5. Example: Sporadic attacks despite enhanced surveillance indicate operational limitations.

    How sustainable is the current security model?

    1. Resource intensity: Requires continuous deployment and technological investment.
    2. Coordination dependency: Relies on seamless inter-agency collaboration.
    3. Civil-military balance: Necessitates public cooperation for intelligence gathering.
    4. Outcome: Ensures short-term control but demands long-term socio-political integration.

    Conclusion

    The post-Pahalgam shift reflects a strategic deepening of counter-terror operations, combining intelligence, technology, and terrain penetration. While operational successes are visible, persistent intelligence gaps and adaptive militant strategies underline the need for continuous innovation and socio-political stabilisation.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Winning of ‘Hearts and Minds’ in terrorism-affected areas is an essential step in restoring the trust of the population. Discuss the measures adopted by the Government in this respect as part of the conflict resolution in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Linkage: The PYQ highlights the shift from kinetic counter-terrorism to intelligence-led, people-centric strategy in J&K, as seen post-Pahalgam. It links trust-building, OGW disruption, and civil-military outreach with improved intelligence flow and long-term conflict resolution.

  • AI Labelling Rules  

    Why in the News?

    • The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology proposed stricter AI content labelling norms due to unsatisfactory compliance by social media platforms.

    Key Change

    • Under Information Technology Rules 2021:
      • AI-generated content must have:
      • Continuous and clearly visible labels
      • Displayed for the entire duration of content

    Scope

    • Applies to platforms like: YouTube, Instagram, and X

    Key Term

    • Synthetically Generated Information (SGI):
      • Includes AI-generated audio, video, images
      • Excludes routine editing and quality enhancement

    Platform Obligations

    • Ensure proper labelling
    • Require user disclosure of AI content
    • Remove unlawful content
    • Use safeguards to prevent misuse

    Significance

    • Enhances transparency
    • Reduces misinformation and deepfakes
    • Strengthens digital platform accountability
    [2025] Consider the following statements regarding Al Action Summit held in Grand Palais, Paris in February 2025: 
    I. Co-chaired with India, the event builds on the advances made at the Bletchley Park Summit held in 2023 and the Seoul Summit held in 2024. 
    II. Along with other countries, US and UK also signed the declaration on inclusive and sustainable AI. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] I only [B] II only [C] Both I and II [D] Neither I nor II
  • TRAWL System Procurement (₹975 Cr) 

    Why in the News?

    • The Ministry of Defence India signed contracts worth ₹975 crore for procurement of TRAWL systems for tanks.

    What is the TRAWL System

    • A minefield breaching equipment fitted on tanks
    • Used to:
      • Detect and neutralize landmines
      • Create safe lanes for troop and vehicle movement

    Key Features

    • Mounted on: T-72 and T-90 tanks
    • Clears:
      • Anti-tank mines
      • Mines with proximity magnetic fuses
    • Enables: Vehicle-safe lanes in combat zones

    Developed By

    • Defence Research and Development Organisation

    Procurement Details

    • Contracts signed with:
      • Bharat Earth Movers Limited
      • Electro Pneumatics and Hydraulics India Pvt Ltd
    • Category: Buy (Indian – Indigenously Designed, Developed and Manufactured)
    [2016] Which one of the following is the best description of ‘INS Astradharini’, that was in the news recently? 
    (a) Amphibious warfare ship 
    (b) Nuclear-powered submarine 
    (c) Torpedo launch and recovery vessel 
    (d) Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier
  • India–Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) 2026 

    Why in the News?

    • India will host the Fourth India–Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) 2026 after a gap of more than a decade (last held in 2015).

    What is IAFS

    • A platform for cooperation between India and African countries
    • Brings together: India and Members of the African Union

    Timeline

    • 1st IAFS → 2008 (New Delhi)
    • 2nd IAFS → 2011 (Addis Ababa)
    • 3rd IAFS → 2015 (New Delhi)
    • 4th IAFS → 2026 (New Delhi, upcoming)

    Key Focus Areas (2026)

    1. Development Cooperation

    • Infrastructure projects
    • Capacity building initiatives

    2. Education & Skills

    • Example: IIT Madras campus in Zanzibar

    3. Diplomatic Expansion

    • India has: Opened 16 new missions since 2018
    • Presence now in: 45 African countries

    4. Defence Cooperation

    • Training and security collaboration

    5. Trade & Investment

    • Shift from: Line of Credit (LoC) to Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
    [2016] Consider the following statements: 
    1 The India-Africa Summit Held in 2015 
    2 was the third such Summit Was actually initiated by Jawaharlal Nehru in 1951 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    a) 1 only b) 2 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2
  • Disabled-Friendly Prisons — Supreme Court Directions (2026) 

    Why in the News?

    • The Supreme Court of India directed a high-powered committee to prepare a comprehensive plan for disabled-friendly prisons across India.
    • Issue highlighted: Inhumane conditions faced by disabled prisoners

    Key Supreme Court Observations

    • Rights of disabled prisoners must be protected under:
      • Article 14 → Equality before law
      • Article 21 → Right to life and dignity
    • Incarceration should not dilute fundamental rights

    Key Directions of the Court

    1. Comprehensive Action Plan

    • Create uniform standards across India

    2. Accessibility Measures

    • Provide:
      • Assistive devices
      • Mobility aids
      • Special infrastructure

    3. Medical & Social Support

    • Ensure:
      • Specialized medical care
      • Enhanced visitation rights

    4. Procurement & Maintenance

    • Define:
      • Procurement mechanisms
      • Maintenance protocols
      • Security safeguards

    5. Monitoring

    • Committee to submit report in: 4 months
    [2023] Q. Consider the following statements: 
    Statement-1: In India, prisons are managed State Governments with their own rules and regulations for the day-to-day administration of prisons. 
    Statement-II: In India, prisons are governed by the Prisons Act, 1894 which expressly kept the subject of prisons in the control of Provincial Governments. 
    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 
    [A] Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-1 
    [B] Both Statement-1 and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-1 
    [C] Statement-1 1s correct but Statement-11 is incorrect 
    [D] Statement-1 Is incorrect but Statement-II is correct
  • [21st April 2026] The Hindu OpED: The puzzle of missing urgency around learning

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] The crucial aspect of the development process has been the inadequate attention paid to Human Resource Development in India. Suggest measures that can address this adequacy.
    Linkage: The PYQ directly links to the learning crisis and poor foundational literacy (FLN) as core human resource deficits affecting productivity. It highlights policy-outcome gaps and weak learning outcomes, aligning with issues of accountability, governance, and quality of education discussed in the article.

    Why in the News?

    Recent ASER findings continue to show that a significant proportion of Grade 5 students cannot read Grade 2 texts, despite flagship initiatives like NEP 2020 and NIPUN Bharat. This highlights a persistent learning crisis with low urgency and weak outcomes, even after increased policy focus and funding, making it a critical governance concern.

    What does the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) data reveal?

    The Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2024 confirms your observation, showing that 51.2% of Grade 5 students still cannot read a basic Grade 2 level text, meaning only 48.8% possess this foundational skill. While this represents a modest recovery from 42.8% in 2022, it remains below the 50.5% recorded in 2018, highlighting a “learning crisis” that persists despite the NIPUN Bharat Mission and NEP 2020.

    Key Learning Deficits (ASER 2024)

    1. Reading Gaps: 76.6% of Grade 3 students cannot read Grade 2 text, indicating that many children fall behind early and never catch up.
    2. Arithmetic Stagnation: Only 30.7% of Grade 5 students can perform basic division, a skill typically expected by Grade 3 or 4.
    3. Long-term Deficits: Even by Grade 8, approximately 32.5% of students still struggle to read Grade 2 level texts.

    Why does a severe learning crisis fail to generate urgency?

    1. Salience Deficit (Low Visibility): Unlike building toilets or classrooms, learning deficits are invisible and intangible, making it easier for administrators to overlook them.
    2. Policy-Implementation Gap: NEP 2020 and NIPUN Bharat emphasize Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) but fail to translate into field-level urgency.
    3. Outcome Invisibility: Learning deficits remain intangible compared to visible infrastructure gaps like buildings or toilets.

    How does international experience highlight the importance of salience?

    1. Vietnam Model: Achieves high learning outcomes despite limited resources.
    2. RISE Programme Findings: Demonstrates that intent (“wanting to improve learning”) drives outcomes more than funding.
      1. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE): This is a large-scale, multi-country research programme aimed at understanding how education systems in developing countries can overcome the “learning crisis.”
    3. Comparative Insight: India’s weak field-level salience contrasts with Vietnam’s strong societal focus on learning.

    What structural factors weaken accountability in learning outcomes?

    1. Power Asymmetry: Teachers and administrators dominate decision-making; children and parents lack voice.
      1. Dominance of Professionals: Teachers and administrators frequently use their “professional status” as a barrier against parental feedback or perceived interference.
      2. Disenfranchisement of Vulnerable Groups: Parents from low socioeconomic backgrounds or with low educational attainment may feel they lack the language or skills to challenge school personnel.
      3. Lack of Downward Accountability: When power is concentrated at the top, the system excels at financial reporting (upward accountability) but often ignores the interests and needs of students.
    2. Centralization: Limited role of local institutions reduces bottom-up accountability.
      1. Limited Local Role: Local institutions often have little authority to adapt curriculum or management to fit specific student needs.
      2. Slow Responsiveness: Decisions made by distant central authorities can be slow to reach the ground level, especially in emergencies or urgent local situations.
      3. Reduced Bottom-Up Pressure: Without effective decentralization, there is less incentive for local stakeholders to demand better outcomes, as they lack the power to implement changes.
    3. Middle-Class Exit: For a “self-serving middle class” that has secured its own children’s education in private institutions, the quality of government schools often becomes a low-priority, non-marketable issue.
    4. Institutional Weakness: Local governance bodies, such as School Management Committees (SMCs), are often designed to oversee schools but face significant operational hurdles.
      1. Lack of Awareness and Training: Members often lack the necessary training or awareness of their roles and powers to effectively hold school administrations accountable.

    Why is the scale of the crisis under-recognized?

    The scale of the learning crisis often remains hidden because it is a “silent” emergency. Unlike a crumbling bridge or a food shortage, a child sitting in a classroom who cannot read is not immediately visible to the naked eye.

    1. Perception Gap: Even officials underestimate the extent of poor learning.
    2. ASER Data: Shows significant proportion of children lacking basic reading ability.
    3. The “Illusion of Improvement“: Statistical gains can mask the remaining deficit. For example, if reading levels improve from 20% to 65%, the focus is usually on the 45% gain. However, this hides the alarming reality that 35% of children, more than one in three, are still being left behind with no basic literacy.
    4. Cognitive Bias: Learning deficits appear exaggerated due to lack of direct visibility.

    How do systemic and sociocultural factors distort responsibility for learning?

    1. State as a Provider of “Schooling“: Governments often view their responsibility as fulfilled once inputs, such as buildings, teachers, and textbooks, are provided.
    2. Learning as a “Child Property”: When students fail to learn, it is often framed as a deficit within the child (e.g., lack of “natural ability” or “weak students”) or their background, rather than a failure of the teaching process.
    3. Neglect of Systemic Factors: Pedagogy, curriculum design, teacher support overlooked.
      1. Pedagogical and Curricular Mismatch: Many systems utilize a “one-size-fits-all” curriculum that is too fast-paced for the average student, yet responsibility for this “over-ambitious” design is rarely addressed.
    4. Political Economy Constraints: Acknowledging crisis carries political risk.
      1. Resource Misallocation: Predatory elites may use education systems for patronage (e.g., job distribution) rather than for improving learning outcomes, as maintaining the status quo is often safer than disruptive reform. 
    5. Professional Resistance: Educators reluctant to accept systemic failure.
      1. “Survival Mode”: Teachers burdened by high pupil-teacher ratios or excessive administrative tasks often prioritize basic compliance over the complex, discretionary work required to improve actual learning.

    What role does visibility and measurement play in improving learning outcomes?

    1. Assessment Systems: Large-scale assessments bring learning outcomes into policy discourse.
    2. Local Evaluations: Village-level assessments make learning deficits visible.
    3. Behavioral Impact: Direct observation creates urgency among parents and officials.
    4. Evidence-Based Reform: Data-driven approaches strengthen accountability.

    What strategies can build salience and improve foundational learning?

    1. Teaching at the Right Level (TaRL): Aligns teaching with student ability.
    2. Structured Pedagogy: Standardizes teaching methods for measurable outcomes.
    3. Outcome Communication: Public dissemination of learning data.
    4. Administrative Incentives: Links performance to learning outcomes.
    5. Decentralization: Empowers local governance for accountability.

    Conclusion

    India’s learning crisis is not due to lack of policy or funding but due to lack of urgency and accountability. Making learning visible, measurable, and socially prioritized is essential for systemic reform.

  • The strategic vulnerability in India’s LPG supply model

    Why in the News?

    India’s LPG vulnerability has come into focus due to heightened geopolitical risks in the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor handling ~90% of India’s LPG imports. Unlike earlier assumptions of stable supply, the crisis highlights a shift from routine dependence to strategic vulnerability. The issue is significant because LPG is not an industrial input but a household necessity, meaning disruptions directly affect millions of kitchens.

    Why does India’s LPG demand structure increase vulnerability?

    While India has achieved high, clean-cooking access, this success has created a “just-in-time” supply model that is fragile during global disruptions.

    1. Household Dependence: LPG is primarily used for cooking; commercial use <10%, leaving limited flexibility to reduce demand during crisis.
    2. Rigid Consumption Pattern: Household kitchens cannot switch fuels easily, ensuring inelastic demand.
    3. Mismatch in Production vs Consumption: LPG demand at 250% of domestic production, indicating structural dependence.

    How does import concentration amplify supply risk?

    1. Import Dependence: Approximately 60% LPG is imported, reflecting high external reliance.
    2. Geographical Concentration: Around 90% imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, creating a single choke-point risk.
    3. Global Market Constraint: Exportable LPG pool is limited and pre-committed, reducing diversion flexibility.

    Why is India’s LPG storage capacity inadequate?

    1. Low Strategic Reserves: While India is the world’s second-largest LPG consumer, its strategic underground storage is limited to roughly 140,000 tonnes (60 TMT at Vizag and 80 TMT at Mangalore), covering only about 1.5 to 2 days of national consumption
    2. Insufficient Buffer Target: Proposed 2-3 weeks buffer of about 1.3-1.9 MMT, far above current capacity.
    3. Operational Fragility: Limited reserves reduce crisis response capability and increase exposure to supply shocks.

    How does India compare with other major LPG consumers?

    1. Japan’s Model(High Resilience):
      1. 108.3 days storage, ensuring strong resilience
      2. LPG covers only about 40% households, lowering dependency
    2. China’s Model(Flexible Demand): China is the world’s largest consumer, but its demand is driven heavily by the petrochemical sector, not solely residential cooking.
    3. South Korea’s Model(Diversified Portfolio): South Korea utilizes a robust mix of city gas and electricity, reducing its reliance on LPG for residential heating and cooking. It also maintains substantial storage capacity (50-60 days)
    4. India’s Position(Maximum Vulnerability): High household dependence combined with low storage, resulting in maximum vulnerability

    Why is treating LPG as a unified pool problematic?

    Treating LPG as a unified pool means managing the entire supply of Liquid Petroleum Gas, whether domestically produced or imported, as a single, undifferentiated resource that simultaneously feeds household cooking, commercial establishments (hotels, restaurants), and industrial users (petrochemical plants). 

    1. Demand-Supply Mismatch: A single LPG pool serves households, petrochemicals, and industry simultaneously.
    2. Asymmetric Demand: While demand for household cooking is inflexible (people cannot stop cooking), demand from industrial sectors is often flexible (plants can slow down or switch fuel).
    3. The Pool Dilemma: When the “single pool” faces shortages, the supply chain cannot easily differentiate between a family needing gas to cook and a factory needing it for production. This causes widespread supply anxiety and long waiting periods
    4. Shortage Management: During recent supply shortages, the government was forced to ration supplies to commercial and industrial users, causing a 48% drop in supply to those sectors to keep household supplies running. 
    5. Critical Sector Exposure: Household demand competes with industrial demand, increasing supply risk.
    6. Policy Gap: Lack of prioritization mechanisms weakens energy security planning.

    What structural reforms are required to reduce vulnerability?

    Structural reforms to reduce vulnerability in the liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) sector require a strategic shift from relying on a single, imported fuel to building a resilient, diversified energy ecosystem. Based on current policy discussions and supply chain issues, key structural reforms include: 

    1. Demand Segmentation: Separates household LPG from industrial consumption, ensuring protected supply.
    2. Targeted Subsidies: Reforming the subsidy structure to use Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) specifically for vulnerable households, while allowing commercial prices to reflect market realities to prevent diversion. 
    3. Underground Caverns: Investing in deep underground rock cavern storage, like those in Visakhapatnam and Mangalore, to provide safe, high-volume, long-term strategic reserves.
    4. Fuel diversification
      1. Promoting Alternatives: Actively promoting electric cooking (induction stoves) and Piped Natural Gas (PNG) to reduce structural dependence on LPG cylinders.
      2. Biogas Integration: Developing community-level, family-scale biogas plants, utilizing organic waste to provide an alternative, local clean fuel source. 
    5. Import Diversification:
      1. Reducing Gulf Dependence: Actively expanding LPG sourcing beyond the Persian Gulf to reduce risks associated with geopolitical chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz.
      2. Long-Term Contracts: Securing long-term contracts from alternative suppliers (e.g., US-sourced LPG), with a target to bring down Middle East import concentration below 70%.

    Conclusion

    India’s LPG vulnerability is structural, driven by high household dependence, concentrated imports, and weak storage capacity. Strengthening resilience requires segmented demand management, diversified supply sources, expanded storage infrastructure, and gradual transition to alternative cooking fuels.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Do you think India will meet 50 percent of its energy needs from renewable energy by 2030? Justify your answer. How will the shift of subsidies from fossil fuels to renewables help achieve the above objectives? Explain.

    Linkage: The PYQ highlights the need for reducing fossil fuel dependence like LPG, addressing import vulnerability and energy insecurity. It supports transition towards renewables and subsidy shift, aligning with long-term structural solutions to India’s LPG supply risks.

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