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  • [Prelims Spotlight] Important Seas

    Tasman Sea

    The Tasman Sea is a marginal sea of the South Pacific Ocean, situated between Australia and New Zealand. It measures about 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) across and about 2,800 kilometres (1,700 mi) from north to south. The sea was named after the Dutch explorer Abel Janszoon Tasman, who was the first recorded European to encounter New Zealand and Tasmania. The British explorer Captain James Cook later extensively navigated the Tasman Sea in the 1770s as part of his first voyage of exploration.

    PERSIAN GULF

    This inland sea of some 251,000 square kilometres (96,912 sq mi) is connected to the Gulf of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz; and its western end is marked by the major river delta of the Shatt al-Arab, which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris. Its length is 989 kilometres (615 miles), with Iran covering most of the northern coast and Saudi Arabia most of the southern coast. The Persian Gulf is about 56 km (35 mi) wide at its narrowest, in the Strait of Hormuz. The waters are overall very shallow, with a maximum depth of 90 metres (295 feet) and an average depth of 50 metres (164 feet).

    Countries with a coastline on the Persian Gulf are (clockwise, from the north): Iran; Oman’s exclave Musandam; the United Arab Emirates; Saudi Arabia; Qatar, on a peninsula off the Saudi coast; Bahrain, on an island; Kuwait; and Iraq in the northwest. Various small islands also lie within the Persian Gulf, some of which are the subject of territorial disputes between the states of the region.

    Mediterranean Sea
    The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa, and on the east by the Levant. The sea is sometimes considered a part of the Atlantic Ocean, although it is usually identified as a separate body of water.

    The countries with coastlines on the Mediterranean Sea are

    1. Albania
    2. Algeria
    3. Bosnia and Herzegovina
    4. Croatia
    5. Cyprus
    6. Egypt
    7. France
    8. Greece
    9. Israel
    10. Italy
    11. Lebanon
    12. Libya
    13. Malta
    14. Morocco
    15. Monaco
    16. Montenegro
    17. Slovenia
    18. Spain
    19. Syria
    20. Tunisia
    21. Tukey

    In addition  the Gaza Strip (“Palestine” has been associated with the geographical area that currently covers the State of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip) and the British Overseas Territories of Gibraltar and Akrotiri and Dhekelia have coastlines on the sea.

    Caspian Sea

    The Caspian Sea is the largest enclosed inland body of water on Earth by area, variously classed as the world’s largest lake or a full-fledged sea. It is in an endorheic basin (a basin without outflows) located between Europe and Asia.

    The Caspian Sea is bordered on the northwest by Russia, on the northeast by Kazakhstan, on the west by Azerbaijan, on the southeast by Turkmenistan, and on the south by Iran. It is classified as both a sea and a lake, and it is the largest enclosed inland body of water in the world.

    1. Azerbaijan
    2. Iran
    3. Kazakhstan
    4. Russia
    5. Turkmenistan

     

    RED SEA

    The Red Sea (also the Erythraean Sea) is a seawater inlet of the Indian Ocean, lying between Africa and Asia. The connection to the ocean is in the south through the Bab el Mandeb strait and the Gulf of Aden. To the north lie the Sinai Peninsula, the Gulf of Aqaba, and the Gulf of Suez (leading to the Suez Canal). The sea is underlain by the Red Sea Rift which is part of the Great Rift Valley.

    The salinity of the Red Sea is greater than the world average, approximately 4 percent. This is due to several factors:

    • Lack of significant rivers or streams draining into the sea.
    • Limited connection with the Indian Ocean, which has lower water salinity.
    • High rate of evaporation and very little precipitation.

    The six countries bordering the Red Sea proper are:

     

    Eastern shore:

    • Saudi Arabia
    • Yemen
    • Western shore:
      • Egypt
      • Sudan
      • Eritrea
      • Djibouti

    ARAL SEA

    The Aral Sea was an endorheic lake lying between Kazakhstan (Aktobe and Kyzylorda Regions) in the north and Uzbekistan (Karakalpakstan autonomous region) in the south. The name roughly translates as “Sea of Islands”, referring to over 1,100 islands that once dotted its waters; in the Turkic languages aral means “island, archipelago”.

     

    South China Sea

    The South China Sea is a marginal sea that is part of the Pacific Ocean, encompassing an area from the Karimata and Malacca Straits to the Strait of Taiwan of around 3,500,000 square kilometres (1,400,000 sq mi). The area’s importance largely results from one-third of the world’s shipping sailing through its waters and that it is believed to hold huge oil and gas reserves beneath its seabed.

    It is located

    • south of China;
    • east of Vietnam and Cambodia;
    • northwest of the Philippines;
    • east of the Malay peninsula and Sumatra, up to the Strait of Malacca in the western, and
    • north of the Bangka–Belitung Islands and Borneo

    Ross sea

    The Ross Sea is a deep bay of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica, between Victoria Land and Marie Byrd Land. It derives its name from the British explorer James Ross who visited this area in 1841. To the west of the sea lies Ross Island and to the east Roosevelt Island, while the southernmost part is covered by the Ross Ice Shelf, and is about 200 miles (320 km) from the South Pole.

    Weddel sea

    The Weddell Sea is part of the Southern Ocean and contains the Weddell Gyre. Its land boundaries are defined by the bay formed from the coasts of Coats Land and the Antarctic Peninsula. The easternmost point is Cape Norvegia at Princess Martha Coast, Queen Maud Land. To the east of Cape Norvegia is the King Haakon VII Sea. Much of the southern part of the sea is covered by a permanent, massive ice shelf field, the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf .
    The sea is named after the Scottish sailor James Weddell, who entered the sea in 1823 and originally named it after King George IV; it was renamed in Weddell’s honour in 1900.

  • Interview transcript – Vijayendra R

    Board: Ms Smita Nagaraj

    Chairman

    – It’s already two years in Service don’t you think going to IAS you will have career disadvantage ?
    – Where you posted currently ? Don’t you think compared to department , private people have better competence in AAR ? (job related )
    – What did you do in social welfare activities ?

    M1

    – How many genes avg human have ?
    – Which is smallest and largest gene ?
    – How do genes vary ? ( he was particular about SLP ) I knew a bit , it was more technical so did not venture into it .
    – Who is No 1 tennis player now ? What’s so great about federer even now ? Why is tennis not that popular in India ? What challenges it face ? Do you think politics in apex tennis association is affecting its development ?

    M2

    – What is AFSPA? Do you thing it’s violation of human rights? Do you think it’s needed in j&k ?
    – Police reforms? Do you think police has colonial mindset ? Why no reform taken?

    – police reforms ? Do you think police is more of political service than public service ?

    M3

    – Why is today special ? ( It was national science day )
    – What is your view on Karnataka flag issue ?

    M4

    – What is APA ? ( job related )
    – Why do we have APA n AAR is it not overlapping ?
    – What is your view on women’s cricket ? Who is the women cricketer who made a difference in semifinal in women’s world cricket ?

    Chairman

    – In Bangalore so many issues Gauri lankesh , Tipu sultan , and so on ? Why is it ,what is your view ? Then tipu sultan ? What you view ? Do we need to have critical thinking in school two to three views ? We just follow what is taught ?
    – Do you think we need critical thinking in department as well ?

    You interview is over.

  • [Video Analysis + Top 10 Ranks] 03 April 2019 | Prelims Daily with Rakesh Sir

    Dear students,

    Here’s a link to the Prelims Daily Quiz Analysis Video. Watch this after you have attempted that day’s Prelims Daily questions [on this link]

    https://youtu.be/yO4PIIaGApI

    The full playlist is available here [click2watch]

    [WpProQuiz_toplist 24]


    We need your comments, likes, and shares on these videos. The aim of this series is to help you revise news via questions. PLEASE spread the videos.

    What’s wrong with the student’s study habits?

    Only 5% of our students who read news attempt PD. This beats the purpose of reading the news. Even those 5% who attempt PD are unable to get the most out of the initiative. They are either guessing or doing the tests just as a routing activity without engaging in it.

    What’s CD doing to maximize your efforts?

    Now, we have moved one step further with the launch of analysis videos of Prelims Daily (PD). These videos will reveal the critical nitty-gritty surrounding every PD question. It is an unfortunate reality that no single question can be framed to cover all the possible angles.

    The analysis videos will plug this hitherto inevitable gap, thereby making your preparation more methodical, holistic and foolproof. Nothing can be more valuable than experience, and that is precisely what the PD initiative and the analysis videos offer. These will be valuable for both newcomers and senior players in the field.

    PS: We want to be 100% certain that the time and energy spent on making these videos is helping you in your UPSC Prelims preparation. So, pls click on the videos, like, share and comment and let us know your thoughts

  • Announcing Super Intensive Prelims (Mini) with Advanced Lectures on Budget

    Detailed Timetable can be obtained from here

    Starts on 10th April. The program has 4 components. Scroll down to read.

    Dear Students,

    Last minute revision is the key to cracking the exam. If you don’t spend ample time revising topics, you will find it hard to recall what you have studied.

    We are excited to announce our Crash Course program for Prelims – Super Intensive Prelims (SIP) (Mini).

    The program is designed for extensive coverage and the right amount of depth as per the requirement of the prelims exam to help you with maximum retention and ensure a better performance in Prelims.

    Here’s what we are offering.

    The program is divided into 4 components

    1. Current Affairs – ( From May 2018 – April 2019) 40 hours

    2. Budget (2019) – 5 hours

    3. 11 Current affairs monthly prelims test (From June 2018 – April 2019)

    4. Samanvaya (Mentorship)

    Key features of the Program

    1. Current Affairs (Videos and lectures)

    We will cover it in 2 phases

    1st phase – Till December 2018

    2nd phase – After December 2018

    The focus of the lecture will be on the following areas

    Prelims Specific Trivia

    What, When, Where, Why, How.

    Similar question asked in the last 4-5 years

    Subjects covered will be –

    1.Polity

    2.Governance

    3.Economics

    4.International Relations – Terms in news, Places in news, Trade Routes, Choke Points, Conflict Zones, Ethnic groups in news

    5.Environment – Environmental terms in news, maps for all reserves, marine protected areas, wetlands.

    6.Sc & Tech

    7.International Organizations(covered in ppt format) https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZTYLkxalE7IdQVcMXDWOUnoCMC9zVN1Y)

    8.Schemes (covered in ppt format)

     

    2. Budget

    – Video lecture by Himanshu Sir who works at Prime Minister’s economic advisory council.

    – Short and crisp Summary of Budget 2019.

    3. Current affairs Monthly prelims test

    -Current affairs monthly prelims test (From June 2018 – April 2019) (Note: Only SIP(mini) Plus subscribers will get this).

    4. Samanvaya (Mentorship)

    CD has earned a reputation for giving personalized attention to students and helping them actualize their true potential. While other institutes are bombarding you with more and more questions, we are more concerned about teaching you the right things and helping you retain more and retain better.

    -Private Telegram Group: All your queries solved within 24 hours

    -1 on 1 calls Sessions basis merit of participation within the group


    Faculty 

    V.P. Singh, IRPS 2009

    Himanshu Arora, Economist, Prime Minister Economic Advisory Council

    Sajal Singh, MS & MA Economics, Core faculty, Civilsdaily

    Rakesh Dalal, MBA, MA, Core faculty, Civilsdaily


     Detailed Timetable can be obtained from here
    On popular demand, a variant on discount is as follows –
    Old Student Discount Applicable
    Prime TS and SM students get 20% discount – *Please ensure you are enrolled in those courses first*
  • [Prelims Spotlight]Historical and Archaeological Findings in News

    Historical and Archaeological Findings in News

    1.Excavations in Kutch shed light on early Harappan custom

    • Archaeological excavations undertaken by a group of researchers have shed light on the custom and burial rituals that were prevalent during the early Harappan phase.
    • The team which camped in Khatiya village of Kutch unearthed several skeletal remains from a cemetery-like burial site where 26 graves out of the nearly 300-odd ones were excavated.

    2.Chalukyan sculpture of Siva found in Andhra Pradesh

    • A rare sculpture of Lord Siva and Goddess Parvati dating back to the 7th century was discovered at a Chalukyan temple in Satyavolu village of Prakasam district, Andhra Pradesh.
    • The red sandstone sculpture portrays Lord Siva as the therapeutic physician (Rudra Bhaishajana) — as described in Rigveda — in which he holds a bowl in his left hand, which contains medicine from herbs to revive the ailing horse lying at his feet.
    • Siva was fairly represented in sculptural art of ancient India in many forms right from the Indus Valley civilization to the late medieval period.

    Chalukyan Architecture (5th – 8th CE)

      1. The temples under the Chalukyas are a good example of the Vesara style of architecture.
      2. This is also called the Deccan style or Karnataka Dravida or Chalukyan style. It is a combination of Dravida and Nagara styles.
      3. The building material they used was reddish-golden Sandstone found locally.
      4. The temples had beautiful mural paintings also.
      5. The temples are located on the banks of River Tungabhadra and Malprabaha in Karnataka and Alampur in Andhra Pradesh.
      6. Aihole temples: Ladh Khan temple (Surya Temple), Durga temple, Huchimalligudi temple, Jain temple at Meguti by Ravikirti..
      7. Badami temples: Virupaksha temple and Sangameshwara Temple are in Dravida style. Papanatha temple is in Nagara style.
      8. Pattadakkal: is a UNESCO World Heritage site. There are ten temples here – 4 in Nagar style and 6 in Dravida style.

    3.Archaeologists find pre-Columbian mass child sacrifice site in Peru

    • A group of archaeologists has discovered the remains of more than 50 children who were ritually sacrificed by the pre-Columbian Chimu culture on the northern coast of what is now Peru
    • The new sacrifice site was discovered in the Pamapa La Cruz area in Huanchaco, a coastal district of Trujillo, Peru’s third-largest city

    Other similar places

    • In Huanchaquito, the remains of over 140 children and 200 llamas slain some 550 years ago were discovered
    • It reinforces the idea that Huanchaco was a place where massive sacrifices of children were made during the Chimu culture

    Pre-Columbian Chimu culture

    • The Chimú culture was centred on Chimor with the capital city of Chan Chan, a large adobe city in the Moche Valley of present-day Trujillo, Peru
    • The culture arose about 900 AD, succeeding the Moche culture
    • The Chimú people are best known for their distinctive monochromatic pottery and fine metal working of copper, gold, silver, bronze, and tumbaga (copper and gold)
    • The pottery is often in the shape of a creature or has a human figure sitting or standing on a cuboid bottle

    4.India gets its 37th UNESCO World Heritage Site

    • India’s nomination of the “Victorian and Art Deco Ensembles of Mumbai” has been inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage list.
    • The decision was taken at the 42nd session of the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO at Manama in Bahrain today.
    • This achievement is especially remarkable in the view of the successive inscription of another Indian city after Ahmedabad last year

    About the Ensembles

    • Together, this architectural ensemble represents the most remarkable collection of Victorian and Art Deco buildings in the world which forms the unique character of this urban setting, unparalleled in the world.
    • The Ensemble consists of 94 buildings primarily of 19th century Victorian Gothic revival and early 20th century Art Deco style of architecture with the Oval Maidan in the centre.
    • The 19th century Victorian buildings form part of the larger Fort precinct situated to the east of the Oval Maidan.
    • These public buildings include the Old Secretariat (1857-74), University Library and Convention Hall (1874-78), the Bombay High Court (1878), the Public Works Department Office (1872), Watson’s Hotel (1869), David Sasoon Library (1870), the Elphinstone College(1888), etc.
    • The Art Deco styled buildings to the west of the Oval Maidan were raised in early 20th century on the newly reclaimed lands at Marine Drive and symbolised the shift in expression to represent contemporary aspirations.

    UNESCO World Heritage Properties in India

    • In the past 5 years alone, India has managed to get inscribed seven of its properties/sites on the World Heritage List of UNESCO.
    • India now has overall 37 World Heritage Inscriptions with 29 Cultural, 07 Natural and 01 Mixed sites.
    • While India stands second largest in number after China in terms of number of World Heritage properties in ASPAC (Asia and Pacific) region, it is overall sixth in the world.

    5.Thanjavur Paintings

    Thanjavur Paintings

    • It is a classical South Indian painting style, which was inaugurated from the town of Thanjavur and spread across the adjoining and geographically contiguous old Tamil country.
    • The art form draws its immediate resources and inspiration from way back about 1600 AD, a period when the Nayakas of Thanjavur under the suzerainty of the Vijayanagara Rayas.
    • It is distinguished by its famous gold coating.
    • However, it can safely be surmised that Thanjavur painting, as we know it now, originated in the Maratha court of Thanjavur (1676 – 1855).
    • It has been recognized as a Geographical indication by the Government of India in 2007-08.

    6.Ancient rocks in India give clues to early life

    Cambrian Explosion

    • It refers to the sudden appearance in the fossil record of complex animals with mineralized skeletal remains 541 million years ago.
    • Researchers have found the oldest clue to the mystery of animal life in ancient rocks and oils dating back at least 100 million years before the famous Cambrian explosion of animal fossils.
    • Researchers at the University of California tracked molecular signs of animal life, called biomarkers, as far back as 660-635 million years ago during the Neoproterozoic era.
    • In ancient rocks and oils from India, Oman, Siberia, they found a steroid compound produced only by sponges, which are among the earliest forms of animal life.

    Demosponge

    • A sponge is a member of the phylum Porifera.
    • It is a simple marine animal with many cells, but no mouth, muscles, heart or brain.
    • Demosponges is a class that contains most of the sponges.
    • The sponges in this class make their skeleton from Spongin, a special protein.

    7.Buddhist site museum at Lalitgiri Odisha

    • One of the earliest Buddhist settlements in Odisha, Lalitgiri (Located in Cuttack district), where excavations have yielded ancient seals and inscriptions, has been converted into a museum.

    Lalitgiri Museum

    • Located in Cuttack district, it will be the third site museum of the Bhubaneswar circle of the ASI after Ratnagiri and Udaygiri.
    • The three sites together form the Diamond Triangle of Buddhism in Odisha.
    • The museum complex is spread over 4,750 sq. m. The building and auditorium are built over 1,310 sq. m. The complex has been constructed at a cost of ₹10 crore.

    Historical importance of Lalitgiri

    • Excavations at Lalitgiri have yielded the remains of four monasteries, showing cultural continuity from the post-Mauryan period till the 13th century CE.
    • Tantric Buddhism was practiced at this site.
    • The centre of attraction is a relic casket containing corporal remains found inside the Mahastupta.
    • Huge sculptures of Buddha, architectural fragments of Viharas and Chaityas are arranged period-wise.
    • The central gallery is designed after a Buddha Mandala with a colossal Buddha image at the centre and six Bodhisattva images surrounding it.

    8.Reconstitution of Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR)

    • The Government has reconstituted the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR), New Delhi for a period of three years till 2022.

    Indian Council of Historical Research

    • The ICHR is an autonomous body of the HRD Ministry, which had been established by an Administrative Order of the then Ministry of Education.
    • The body has provided financial assistance to the historians and direction to the research scholars in their multifarious topics of historical research through established historians and scholars of the country.
    • ICHR disburses funds for carrying out research to Indian as well as foreign scholars on their applications for fellowships, grants, and symposia.

    9.The Indian Museum of the Earth (TIME)

    • India has set in motion an ambitious plan to create Indianised version of the world-famous Smithsonian Museum, showcasing Indian subcontinent’s evolutionary history.

    The Indian Museum of the Earth (TIME)

    • This museum will be modelled on the American Museum of Natural History, or the Smithsonian museum in the U.S.
    • The museum, which will be set up as a public-private partnership, would be located somewhere in NCR.
    • Unlike static museums that are commonplace, the proposed Earth museum would be a dynamic place to encourage fossil research, student activity, public outreach besides driving policy decisions.
    • The museum would be having a repository where individual collectors and researchers can submit their life long collection for safekeeping and allowing future generation researchers to study those samples.

     

  • Interview transcript – Promoth P

    Board: Smita ma’am

    Chairman

    – What are the problems a civil servant faces while in office?
    – What kinds of resource crunch? (Follow up )
    – Give an example where officers have worked out these problems?
    – Why do national law university students prefer working in corporate sector?
    – Have national law universities failed in their mandate?
    – Lawyers bill a lot so why not practice law?

    M1

    – Female models being used in auto expo. Views
    – Should we bring in a law to ban such practices
    – Define son of the soil doctrine
    – Which indian state never had such a doctrine

    M2

    – Will the us japan help india if China attacks us today
    – Should CJI accept posts after retirement
    – Transparency and public office holders

    M4

    – Measures taken by government to curb black money in real estate
    – Amendments to benami act
    – Why was IT act not amended to achieve the same ends as benami act
    – Is retrospective tax good
    – What was the nature of the 1024 obsolete laws repealed, name any 3.

    M5

    – What is medical tourism
    – Why is it called tourism
    – What is surrogacy
    – Should it be allowed
    – What is the legal status of single parent family
    – Legality of police encounters
    – What will you do if you were sp and what will you do to reduce police encounters.

  • Gear up for This week’s Samachar Manthan lecture on 7th April Sunday

    Why Samachar Manthan?

    We understand that the UPSC exam is a generalist exam. It’s more important to cover more issues than to cover one issue in more depth. Hence, through Samachar Manthan, we are trying to maintain a fine balance of covering many important news items and having a detailed discussion on selected topics which require the same. On a daily basis, the news gets repeated multiple times. Scattered knowledge is not adequately useful when you have to write a 200 words answer within 6-7 minutes. To handle this, Samachar Manthan covers such issues in a comprehensive and consolidated manner which is the smart strategy.

    Benefits of Samachar Manthan

    • Packed 3 – 3.5 hours Weekly videos will focus on news and its importance from both prelims and mains perspective.
    • This program will also help you understand how to utilize current affairs in all your prelims and mains papers.
    • This ideology makes this course the best utilization of your time.
    • Detailed coverage would mean analysis from all the angles like background or history, features, significance, challenges and way forward. Also, multiple sources like epw, diplomat magazine etc will be referred to in the video lectures.
    • Such an approach will help in writing multidimensional answers.
    • Also which part of the topic is important from mains and prelims perspective will also be discussed.
    • Audio Visual Learning is more impactful than simply glancing through the material. So that you are able to retain information for long also interlink with any new information you get.
    • 4 stage structure of Video->Notes->testing->review to perfect your preparation
    • The sequence of video->Notes->testing->review is the best way to ensure maximum retention and a rock solid preparation. Each component of the program has been meticulously crafted.

    For example this week, we will be covering the following issues;

    Economics

    Ind AS (Indian Accounting Standard)

    [op-ed snap] A sour taste

    Global Energy Transition Index

    Regulatory Sandbox for Fintech firms

    Time to have an institutional mechanism like Fiscal Council to enforce rules: NK Singh

    GI Certification for five varieties of Indian coffee

    Enviro & Biodiversity

    Urban areas cooler than non-urban regions during heat waves

    Rising sea levels to affect water table along Chennai’s shoreline

    Galapagos Islands

    How rocks in Meghalaya cave connect Northeast monsoon to El Niño

    India’s carbon dioxide emissions up 5%: IEA Report

    Arctic warming may lead to prolonged droughts: Study

    Island Protection Zone (IPZ), 2019

    Hump-backed Mahseer

    [op-ed snap] A stop sign

    Governance

    Young Scientist Programme (YUVIKA)

    Govt. notifies new rules for drugs, clinical trials

     

    [op-ed snap]A bridge to nowhere

    Global Multidimensional Poverty Report 2018

    [op-ed snap] Slow on sanitation

    Centre should address States’ concern on GST transfers

    [op-ed snap] The shape of an urban employment guarantee

    NYAY scheme

    International Relations

    [op-ed snap]Parallel tracks on trade ties

    World Food Programme

    Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS)

    GAZA issue

    Polity

    Fiscal council

    Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) Survey

    [op-ed snap]The point of having democracy

    Article 370 issues

    Art Culture

    Sharda Peeth Corridor

    How researchers used science to show Bengal famine was man-made

    Science Tech

    Young Scientist Programme (YUVIKA)

    GRAPES-3 Experiment

    PSLV-C45/ Emisat Mission

    Mission Shakti (Anti-Satellite Missile Test)

    Humans can detect the earth’s magnetic fields

    Security Issues

    The government sets up group to monitor terror sympathizers

    CH47 Chinook heavy-lift Choppers

    And these issues will be covered in detail

    • Fiscal council
    • Gaza issue
    • Urban heat island issue
    • IEA report
    • Global multidimensional poverty report 2018
    • Fiscal federalism
    • ADR survey
    • Article 370
    • Mission Shakti
    • GRAPES 3 experiment

    So to be thorough in your preparation and to have an integrated approach toward prelims and mains, join Samachar Manthan here.

  • [Video Analysis + Top 10 Ranks] 02 April 2019 | Prelims Daily with Rakesh Sir

    Dear students,

    Here’s a link to the Prelims Daily Quiz Analysis Video. Watch this after you have attempted that day’s Prelims Daily questions [on this link]

    https://youtu.be/-68nkB1xeDk

    The full playlist is available here [click2watch]

    [WpProQuiz_toplist 23]


    We need your comments, likes, and shares on these videos. The aim of this series is to help you revise news via questions. PLEASE spread the videos.

    What’s wrong with the student’s study habits?

    Only 5% of our students who read news attempt PD. This beats the purpose of reading the news. Even those 5% who attempt PD are unable to get the most out of the initiative. They are either guessing or doing the tests just as a routing activity without engaging in it.

    What’s CD doing to maximize your efforts?

    Now, we have moved one step further with the launch of analysis videos of Prelims Daily (PD). These videos will reveal the critical nitty-gritty surrounding every PD question. It is an unfortunate reality that no single question can be framed to cover all the possible angles.

    The analysis videos will plug this hitherto inevitable gap, thereby making your preparation more methodical, holistic and foolproof. Nothing can be more valuable than experience, and that is precisely what the PD initiative and the analysis videos offer. These will be valuable for both newcomers and senior players in the field.

    PS: We want to be 100% certain that the time and energy spent on making these videos is helping you in your UPSC Prelims preparation. So, pls click on the videos, like, share and comment and let us know your thoughts

  • [Burning Issue] Niti Ayog – A critical Analysis

    NITI Aayog –CRITICAL ANALYSIS

    Introduction:

    • The Government had replaced Planning Commission with institution NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India).  The reason had mentioned that specific to the planning process, there is a need to separate as well as energize the distinct ‘process’ of governance from the ‘strategy’ of governance.
    • An important evolutionary change from the past will be replacing a centre-to-state one-way flow of policy by a genuine and continuing partnership with the states.  
    • The institution must have the necessary resources, knowledge, skills and, ability to act with speed to provide the strategic policy vision for the government as well as deal with contingent issues.

    Background

    Objectives and Opportunities

    NITI Aayog will aim to accomplish the following objectives and opportunities:

    • An administration paradigm in which the Government is an “enabler” rather than a “provider of first and last resort.”
    • Progress from “food security” to focus on a mix of agricultural production, as well as actual returns that farmers get from their produce.
    • Ensure that India is an active player in the debates and deliberations on the global commons.
    • Ensure that the economically vibrant middle-class remains engaged, and its potential is fully realized.
    • Leverage India’s pool of entrepreneurial, scientific and intellectual human capital.
    • Incorporate the significant geo-economic and geo-political strength of the Non-Resident Indian Community.
    • Use urbanization as an opportunity to create a wholesome and secure habitat through the use of modern technology.
    • Use technology to reduce opacity and potential for misadventures in governance.

    Structure and Composition of NITI Aayog

    Arguments that support NITI Aayog relevance:

    • The NITI Aayog was formed to bring fresh ideas to the government. Its first mandate is to act as a think tank.
    • It can be visualised as a funnel through which new and innovative ideas come from all possible sources — industry, academia, civil society or foreign specialists — and flow into the government system for implementation.
    • Initiatives like Ayushmaan Bharat, our approach towards artificial intelligence and water conservation measures, and the draft bill to establish the National Medical Commission to replace the Medical Council of India have all been conceptualised in NITI Aayog, and are being taken forward by the respective Ministries.
    • Acted as an Action Tank:
      • NITI Aayog acted as an action tank rather than just a think tank. By collecting fresh ideas and sharing them with the Central and State governments, it pushes frontiers and ensures that there is no inertia, which is quite natural in any organisation or institution.
    • NITI Aayog also works to cut across the silos within the government. For example, India still has the largest number of malnourished children in the world. NITI Aayog is best placed to achieve this convergence and push the agenda forward in the form of POSHAAN ABHIYAAN.
    • NITI Aayog is also bringing about a greater level of accountability in the system.
        • NITI Aayog has established a Development Monitoring and Evaluation Office which collects data on the performance of various Ministries on a real-time basis. The data are then used at the highest policymaking levels to establish accountability and improve performance.
        • This performance- and outcome-based real-time monitoring and evaluation of government work can have a significant impact on improving the efficiency of governance.
    • Using such data, it has also come up with performance-based rankings of States across various verticals to foster a spirit of competitive federalism.
    • NITI Aayog plays an important role in being the States’ representative in Delhi, and facilitate direct interactions with the line ministries, which can address issues in a relatively shorter time.

     Improving innovation:

    • The Atal Innovation Mission, which is also established under NITI Aayog, has already done commendable work in improving the innovation ecosystem in India.
    • It has established more than 1,500 Atal Tinkering Labs in schools across the country and this number is expected to go up to 5,000 by March 2019.
    • It has also set up 20 Atal Incubation Centres for encouraging young innovators and start-ups.

    Arguments against for the NITI Aayog:

    • NITI Aayog cannot transform a deeply unequal society into a modern economy that ensures the welfare of all its citizens, irrespective of their social identity.
    • It has no role in influencing public or private investment.
    • It does not seem to have an influence in policymaking with long-term consequences. For instance, demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax.
    • If it is a think-tank, it has to maintain a respectable intellectual distance from the Govt. of the day.
    • Instead, we see uncritical praise of the Govt-sponsored schemes/programmes.
    • It is not able to answer specific questions like, why 90% are working in the unorganised sector? and more over as on date, more and more informalisation is taking place in the organised sector.
    • Labour force participation rate of women is also declining, when neighbours like Bangladesh are registering an increase.
    • NITI Aayog is supposed to be a think tank. This implies that while generating new ideas, it maintains a respectable intellectual distance from the government of the day.

    Some of the Questions need to be answered:

    • How can a country like India transform itself with new ideas and strategies if it doesn’t have a paradigm of planning for development? How can it lift its poor?
    • How can we ensure that every working member of the Indian population has a decent job with at least a minimum wage and social/employment security? 
    • Why doesn’t it occur to the political leadership to ask why more than 90% of those in the workforce slog in the unorganised sector in small farms and tiny non-farm establishments with two-thirds of the total being working poor?
    • Why don’t they ask why more than half the workers in the organised sector end up as ‘insecure’ or ‘informal’ labour?
    • Why is the labour force participation rate of women so low and declining when neighbours like Bangladesh have registered an increasing trend?
    • Why do the Dalits and Adivasis continue to be at the bottom of the ladder in every conceivable social and economic indicator of well-being?
    • Why do regional, gender and other inequalities based on social identity keep increasing?

     Way Forward:

    • If NITI Aayog is to implement such a strategy within a planning framework in India, two major changes in governance structures are needed.
    • First, planning will have to become more decentralised, but within a five-year plan framework.
    • Second, the bureaucracy will need to change from generalist to specialist, and its accountability will have to be based on outcomes achieved, not inputs or funds spent.
    • NITI Aayog should spell out how these reforms will be implemented.
    • If it succeeds, NITI Aayog could emerge as an agent of change over time and contribute to the government’s agenda of improving governance and implementing innovative measures for better delivery of public services.
    • With its unique and vibrant work culture, NITI Aayog remains an integral and relevant component of the government’s plans to put in place an efficient, transparent, innovative and accountable governance system in the country.

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