GS Paper II (Polity & Governance: Role of Judiciary, ECI, and
Challenges to Internal Security/Electoral Reforms).
Illogical acts: Malda gherao to protest the SIR adjudication vitiates
Bengal elections
Analysis: Judicial Confrontation and Electoral Integrity in
West Bengal
1. The
Core Incident
The “gherao” of
judicial officers in Malda represents a critical breakdown of the rule of law.
The Supreme Court has categorized this as a “calculated attempt”
to obstruct the adjudication process, highlighting a direct threat to judicial
independence during an election cycle.
2. Root
Causes of Endemic Violence
Unlike most Indian states, West
Bengal maintains a legacy of electoral violence rooted in:
· Area Dominance: A historical carry-over from the
Left Front era where political parties vie for physical control over
territories.
· Patronage Politics: In a largely rural economy with
limited industrialization, controlling state machinery is essential for
distributing resources and maintaining local power.
· The “Franchise Model”: A shift toward centralized
charisma (TMC) vs. ideological mobilization (BJP), both leveraging local
“satraps” to maintain influence.
3. The SIR
Controversy (Special Intensive Revision)
The current friction stems from
technical and administrative lapses in the electoral roll update:
· Disenfranchisement Concerns: A significant reduction in the
electorate (from 7.6 crore to 7.04 crore) and high rejection rates (40%) have
led to allegations of targeted exclusion, particularly of the minority
community.
· Technological Failure: The ECI’s reliance on flawed
software for “logical discrepancies” necessitated judicial
intervention, which in turn overwhelmed the judicial officers now facing public
ire.
4.
Institutional Friction
· ECI vs. State Government: The referral of the probe to the
National Investigation Agency (NIA) underscores the lack of trust
between federal/central agencies and the state administration.
· Judiciary’s Role: While the Court is acting as a
safeguard for disenfranchised voters through appellate tribunals, the timeline
for resolution remains a bottleneck before polling.
Way
Forward for UPSC Perspectives
· Administrative Reform: The ECI needs a more
“electorate-friendly” and transparent approach to software-driven
filtration to prevent mass disenfranchisement.
· Judicial Protection: Ensuring the safety of judicial
officers is paramount to maintaining the sanctity of the “adjudication
process.”
· Political Accountability: Leaders must transition from
inflammatory rhetoric to procedural compliance to prevent the
“vitiation” of the democratic process.
Key Terminology for Mains: Area Dominance, Franchise
Model of Politics, Disenfranchisement, Vitiation of Election Process, Patronage
System.
_________________________________________________________
GS Paper III (Environment &
Ecology: Conservation, Environmental Pollution & Degradation; Internal
Security: Organized Crime).
Arrest the grief: Livelihood issues are at the heart of illegal sand
mining in central India
Analysis: Ecological Crisis and Governance Challenges in the
National Chambal Sanctuary
1.
Ecological Significance
The National Chambal Gharial
Sanctuary is a unique lotic (flowing water) ecosystem spanning
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh. It is a critical habitat for
three flagship species:
· Gharial (Critically Endangered)
· Red-crowned roofed turtle (Critically Endangered)
· Ganges River Dolphin (Endangered)
These species rely on sandbars
and sandbanks for nesting and basking, making sand the literal foundation
of the ecosystem.
2. The
Challenge: Organized “Sand Mafia”
The region is plagued by a
“modern dacoity” driven by the construction boom in North India. Key
features of this crisis include:
· Jurisdictional Gaps: The tri-state border allows
syndicates to exploit administrative silos and “pass the buck” on
enforcement.
· Technological Warfare: Miners use GPS and mobile apps
to track patrol vehicles and are often better armed (semi-automatic weapons)
than forest guards.
· State Paralysis: Despite bans by the Supreme
Court and National Green Tribunal (NGT), illegal mining persists due to
administrative inaction or complicity.
3.
Socio-Economic Dimensions
The violence is not merely a
law-and-order issue but an economic one:
· Lack of Livelihood: The difficult terrain of the Chambal
Ravines makes traditional agriculture unviable, pushing local youth toward
the mining mafia for survival.
· Social Cover: The mafia recruits local
“foot soldiers,” creating public resentment against forest officials
who try to enforce environmental laws.
4. Legal
and Regulatory Conflict
· Legalization Attempts: MP and Rajasthan attempted to
legalize mining within the sanctuary to regulate it, but were blocked by the
NGT and Supreme Court on conservation grounds.
· Judicial Hardline: The Supreme Court has suggested
using the National Security Act (NSA) and Goonda Act against
miners, reflecting extreme frustration with state failure.
· Governance Philosophy: The text argues for “disciplining
the regulator” rather than the Court becoming the regulator itself. It
suggests that sweeping crackdowns without providing alternative livelihoods
will only entrench the mafia.
Way
Forward for UPSC Perspectives
· Integrated Management: Move toward a unified tri-state
management authority for the Chambal Sanctuary to bridge jurisdictional gaps.
· Eco-Development: Invest in sustainable
livelihoods (e.g., eco-tourism, agro-forestry) to reduce local dependency on
illegal mining.
· Strengthening Enforcement: Modernizing forest departments
with better equipment and technology to match the capabilities of organized
syndicates.
· Balanced Governance: Combining strict legal
enforcement (National Security Act) with compassionate socio-economic
rehabilitation.
Key Terminology for Mains: Lotic Ecosystem, Flagship
Species, Sandbars, Jurisdictional Overlap, Eco-Development, Green Governance.
GS
Paper II (Social Justice: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Governance:
Mechanisms, laws, institutions and Bodies constituted for the protection and
betterment of these vulnerable sections)
Adisturbing step for rights, dignity and mental health
Analysis: The
Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026
1. The
Core Shift: From Self-Identification to Gatekeeping
The 2026 Amendment marks a
fundamental departure from the “Self-Identification” model to a
“Medical-Bureaucratic” model.
· The NALSA Paradigm (2014): The Supreme Court recognized
gender identity as an internal, self-identified experience protected under Articles
14, 15, 19, and 21.
· The 2026 Shift: It mandates that individuals
appear before a Medical Board to “prove” their gender
identity. The Board’s recommendation is then sent to a District Magistrate for
certification.
2. Key
Legal and Ethical Concerns
· Violation of Bodily Autonomy: There is no biological
“biomarker” for gender identity. Forcing adults to undergo
assessments (which may devolve into invasive physical exams) violates the right
to privacy and dignity.
· Criminalization of Support: The Bill introduces a penalty of
up to 15 years imprisonment for “undue influence.” This risks
criminalizing doctors, therapists, and NGOs who provide gender-affirming care
or support.
· Erasure of Diversity: The amendment conflates distinct
identities (Transgender, Intersex, Hijra), ignoring the unique socio-cultural
and biological nuances of each group.
3.
Administrative and Healthcare Challenges
· Infrastructural Gaps: Most districts lack specialized
medical boards. Overburdened healthcare systems may result in arbitrary and
abusive vetting processes.
· Healthcare Crisis: The “undue influence”
clause creates a “chilling effect,” where practitioners may refuse
care to avoid legal repercussions, potentially triggering a public mental
health emergency.
· Access Barriers: Instead of facilitating welfare,
the new layers of “verification” create hurdles that may deter a
community already facing high rates of social rejection (99%) and violence.
4.
Comparative Evolution of Rights
|
Feature |
NALSA
Judgment (2014) |
2019
Act |
2026
Amendment (Proposed) |
|
Identification |
Absolute
Self-Identification |
Self-Identification
(for basic cert.) |
Medical
Board Assessment |
|
Authority |
Individual |
District
Magistrate |
Medical
Board + DM |
|
Focus |
Constitutional
Morality |
Welfare
& Non-discrimination |
Verification
& Policing |
|
Legal Risk |
High
protection of rights |
Minimal
criminal clauses |
15-year
jail for “undue influence” |
UPSC
Perspective: Critical Evaluation
· Constitutional Morality vs.
Administrative Policing:
The Bill highlights the tension between the state’s desire to prevent
“misuse” (estimated at only 0.01%) and the constitutional mandate to
protect individual liberty.
· International Standards: The amendment moves away from
global best practices in healthcare and human rights that prioritize
depathologization (treating gender identity as a lived experience rather than a
medical condition).
· Way Forward: The analysis suggests that
administrative audits and stronger verification protocols for schemes
should be used to check misuse, rather than a blanket medicalization of identity
itself.
Key Terminology for Mains: Self-Identification, Medical
Gatekeeping, Constitutional Morality, Bodily Autonomy, Gender-Affirming Care,
Undue Influence.
___________________________________________________________________________
GS Paper III (Environment
& Ecology: Climate Change and its impacts) & GS Paper II
(Governance/Health: Public Health, Issues relating to the development and management
of Social Sector/Services).
Climate change as a public health emergency
Analysis:
Climate Change as a Public Health Emergency in India
1. The
Shift: Environmental Crisis to Medical Emergency
The discourse on climate change
is traditionally centered on sea-level rise and economic loss. However, this
content argues for reclassifying it as a “broad-spectrum medical
crisis” because it intensifies existing diseases and introduces new
pathological threats.
2. Vector-Borne
and Waterborne Disease Dynamics
Climate change is altering the
“spatial and temporal” windows of diseases in India:
· Vector-Borne (Dengue/Malaria): Warmer temperatures allow
mosquitoes to thrive in previously inhospitable high-altitude regions like Himachal
Pradesh. In Delhi-NCR, the peak transmission window has shifted from
September to November.
· Waterborne (Cholera/Typhoid): Urban waterlogging (e.g.,
Mumbai) contaminates sanitation infrastructure, while drought-prone regions
suffer from diarrheal diseases due to reliance on unsafe water.
3. The
Physiology of Heat and Pollution
The content highlights a
dangerous feedback loop between heat and air quality:
· Particulate Matter (PM2.5): These microscopic pollutants
penetrate the lungs and bloodstream, damaging the heart, lungs, and kidneys.
· Night-time Heat: Rising night temperatures in
urban heat islands (Delhi, Mumbai) prevent the human body from its
“recovery window,” leading to cumulative heat stress.
· Cardiovascular Strain: Heat stress forces the heart to
overwork, increasing the risk of hypertension and strokes, particularly among
outdoor manual laborers.
4. Impact
on Food Security and Nutrition
Climate change acts as a
“multiplier” for malnutrition:
· Agricultural Disruption: Unseasonal rains and heat waves
reduce crop yields and the nutritional density of food.
· Livestock Stress: Heat stress in cattle leads to
reduced milk production, directly impacting infant nutrition and immunity.
5.
Vulnerable Demographics
The medical crisis is not
equitable; it disproportionately affects:
1.
Manual
Laborers: High
exposure to heat and PM2.5 without shelter.
2.
Infants
& Pregnant Women: Linked to
preterm births and low birth weight.
3.
Elderly: Weakened immunity and
susceptibility to cardiovascular strain.
UPSC
Perspective: Key Takeaways
· Policy Intervention: National health policies must
integrate Climate Adaptation into public health planning.
· Urban Governance: Strengthening sanitation to
prevent “recurrent waterlogging” is a medical necessity, not just an
engineering task.
· Administrative Readiness: Health systems in non-endemic
zones (e.g., hill states) need urgent “sensitization” to handle
tropical diseases like Malaria.
Key Terminology for Mains: Lotic Ecosystems, Vector
Shift, Recovery Window, Urban Heat Island, Micronutrient Deficiency, Feedback
Loop.
__________________________________________________________________________________
GS Paper II (Issues
Relating to Development and Management of Social Sector/Health) & GS Paper
III (Environment, Biodiversity, and Disaster Management).
Reinforcing the case for a One Health approach
Analysis:
The Evolution and Implementation of the ‘One Health’ Approach
1.
Conceptual Foundation: What is ‘One Health’?
Originally
popularized by the 1995 film Outbreak
and formally recognized during the SARS and H5N1 outbreaks (2003-2004), One Health is an integrated,
unifying approach.
·
Core
Principle: It
recognizes that the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems are inextricably
linked.
·
Drivers of
Disease: Zoonotic
diseases (diseases jumping from animals to humans) are fueled by anthropogenic
activities: deforestation,
wildlife trade, intensive agriculture, and climate change.
2. Global
Governance and Frameworks
The COVID-19
pandemic served as a “fulcrum,” shifting One Health from a theoretical
concept to a policy necessity.
·
The
Quadripartite Collaboration: Led by the WHO,
FAO, UNEP, and WOAH (World Organisation for Animal Health).
·
One Health
Joint Plan of Action (2022): A roadmap to integrate systemic health defenses globally.
·
WHO Pandemic
Agreement (May 20, 2025):
A legally binding treaty focusing on Equity and the Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing (PABS) system to
ensure rapid data sharing and fair access to vaccines.
·
Manhattan
Principles (2004): Early
foundational rules linking human/animal health to global food security and
economies.
3. The
Indian Context: National & State Initiatives
India has
transitioned from reactive crisis management to proactive institutional
building:
·
National One
Health Mission: A
collaborative initiative to integrate surveillance and control of zoonotic
diseases and enhance pandemic preparedness.
·
Climate-Health
Synergy: Recognition
that extreme climate events act as stressors for disease outbreaks.
Notable State-Led Models for Replication:
|
State |
Initiative |
Objective |
|
Odisha |
Climate
Budget |
Tracking
expenditures for climate-resilient development. |
|
Kerala |
Meenangadi
Project |
A
participatory, community-led carbon-neutral plan. |
|
Tamil Nadu |
Green
Climate Co. |
Institutionalizing
climate action and urban cooling (Cool Roof Project). |
4. Key
Challenges to Implementation
Despite
political consensus, the transition has been “glacial” due to:
·
Inter-departmental
Silos: Conflict
between different government arms and nations prevents synchronous action.
·
AMR and
Pollution: New threats
like Antimicrobial
Resistance (AMR) and environmental toxins require multi-disciplinary
expertise that current systems lack.
·
Economic vs.
Ecological Interests: Balancing
the “Construction/Industrial Boom” with ecosystem preservation.
UPSC
Perspective: Way Forward
·
Scientific
Collaboration: As per the
2026 World Health Day message, policy must be crafted using evidence-based
scientific collaboration rather than political rhetoric.
·
Institutional
Rethinking: Global and
national frameworks must be realigned to move beyond “human-only”
health centers toward integrated “Bio-surveillance” units.
·
Economic
Sense: Adopting
One Health is not just a moral choice but makes public health, economic, and common sense by
preventing the trillion-dollar losses associated with global pandemics.
Key Terminology for Mains: Zoonotic Spillover, Anthropogenic Drivers, One Health
Quadripartite, Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing (PABS), Bio-surveillance,
Climate-Resilient Development.
__________________________________________________________________________________
GS Paper II (Governance:
Issues relating to the development and management of Social Sector/Services
relating to Health and Education).
Standing for medical science, together with
AIIMS
Analysis:
Decentralization and Democratization of Tertiary Healthcare in India
1.
Structural Shift: From Concentration to Distribution
The core
theme is the transition of Indian healthcare from a “New Delhi-centric” model to a distributed
national system. This shift aims to correct regional imbalances in tertiary
care through two primary pillars:
·
Infrastructure
Expansion: The surge
in Medical Colleges and the operationalization of 22 AIIMS across various
regions.
·
Human Capital: A massive increase in medical
seats—MBBS seats rising from ~50,000 to 1.20 lakh and PG seats from ~30,000 to 80,000 since 2014.
2. Key
Policy Instruments
·
Pradhan
Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana (PMSSY): The primary tool for correcting regional imbalances by
establishing Institutes of National Importance (INIs).
·
The
“Trinity Mission”: Each new AIIMS is mandated to follow the three-fold goal of Clinical Care, Medical
Education, and Research.
·
Ayushman
Bharat (PM-JAY & ABDM):
While PMSSY builds the “bricks,” PM-JAY ensures affordability
(covering 55 crore citizens), and the Digital Health Mission (ABDM) streamlines
patient data through ABHA accounts.
3. The
“Mother AIIMS” Mentorship Model
To maintain
the “AIIMS Brand” of excellence, a unique hand-holding model is employed:
·
Mentorship: AIIMS New Delhi supports newer
institutions in recruitment, teaching, and establishing work culture.
·
Pan-AIIMS
Research Consortium (2026):
A milestone in collaborative governance, formalizing joint clinical trials and
data sharing to tackle India-specific challenges like cancer, metabolic
disorders, and AI
integration in medicine.
4.
Socio-Economic Impact
·
Reduction in
OOPE: Localized
availability of high-end services significantly reduces Out-of-Pocket Expenditure
(OOPE), preventing families from falling into “catastrophic
poverty” due to medical costs.
·
Democratization
of Care: Quality of
care is now increasingly determined by clinical need rather than geographical location or
financial status.
5.
Financial Commitment
The Union
Budget 2026-27 reinforces this strategy with:
·
₹11,000
crore allocated
for PMSSY.
·
₹5,500 crore dedicated to AIIMS New Delhi to
continue its legacy as the benchmark for the trinity mission.
UPSC
Perspective: Critical Takeaways
·
Equitable
Access: The
strategy aligns with the National
Health Policy 2017 goals of universal health coverage and reducing regional
disparities.
·
Collaborative
Federalism: The
expansion of AIIMS is a testament to the Center’s role in bolstering
state-level healthcare infrastructure.
·
Digital
Integration: The use of
“Scan and Share” and ABHA registrations highlights the successful
marriage of technology and
public health to reduce patient wait times.
Key Terminology for Mains: Regional Imbalance, Tertiary Healthcare, Institutes of
National Importance (INI), Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE), Trinity Mission,
Pan-AIIMS Research Consortium.
__________________________________________________________________________________
GS Paper II (Social
Justice: Issues relating to the development and management of Social
Sector/Services relating to Health) & GS Paper I (Social Issues:
Urbanization, their problems and their remedies).
What TB reveals about India’s urban health
system
Analysis:
Tuberculosis as a Proxy for Urban Governance and Health Systems
1. The
Conceptual Shift: TB as a “Diagnostic Tool”
The content
argues that Tuberculosis (TB) is not just a clinical infection but a socially produced disease. It
acts as a “proxy indicator” or a diagnostic tool for the health of a
nation’s social and administrative systems.
·
The
Intersection: TB
flourishes where impoverishment,
precarious livelihoods, and fragile health systems meet.
·
Urban
Paradox: While
cities are assumed to have better infrastructure, they “concentrate
risk” through overcrowding, poor ventilation, and long working hours.
2. India’s
TB Burden and Vulnerability Convergences
India
accounts for nearly 25%
(one-fourth) of the global TB burden. The transition from latent infection to active disease occurs when
multiple vulnerabilities converge:
·
Malnutrition: Weakens the immune system’s
ability to contain the bacteria.
·
Environmental
Stressors: Overcrowded
housing (slums) and poorly ventilated industrial zones.
·
Co-morbidities: Untreated conditions that
further compromise health.
3. The
“Missed Opportunities” in Public Health
The
trajectory of TB in India is marked by systemic failures at various intervention
points:
·
Diagnosis
Delays: Fragmented
care-seeking journeys where patients move between multiple private and public
providers.
·
Treatment
Interruptions: Leads to
the rise of Multi-Drug
Resistant TB (MDR-TB), signifying failures in surveillance and pharmaceutical
regulation.
·
Data Silos: Incomplete integration between
the private sector
(where a large proportion seek care) and the National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP).
4. The
Challenge of Urban Migration
Migration
adds a layer of “administrative
invisibility”:
·
Lack of
Portability: Health
services are often tied to stable residence and documentation (address proof),
excluding mobile migrant populations.
·
Geography of
Exclusion: Informal
settlements and peri-urban construction clusters are frequently underserved by
primary healthcare and reliable transport.
5.
Proposed Policy Interventions
To achieve
“Health for All,” the content suggests moving beyond stable,
documented populations:
·
Portable
Healthcare: Ensuring
treatment continuity for migrants regardless of their physical location.
·
Integrated
Urban Planning: Disease
control must be integrated with neighborhood-level services and urban planning
(ventilation, housing).
·
Social
Protection:
Strengthening nutrition support and financial buffers to prevent catastrophic
health expenditures.
UPSC
Perspective: Key Takeaways
·
Right to
Health: Access to
care must be decoupled from administrative categories like “address
proof” to uphold constitutional morality.
·
Urban
Governance: TB
elimination is not just a medical goal but an urban planning goal. Improving
“living conditions” is as vital as providing “medicine.”
·
Systemic
Strengthening: Focus must
shift toward Primary
Healthcare (PHC) in urban pockets and bridging the public-private data gap.
Key Terminology for Mains: Social Determinants of Health, Latent vs. Active TB,
MDR-TB, Urban Risk Concentration, Care-seeking Journey, Portable Healthcare.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Text & Context
GS Paper II (Governance: Issues relating to Education, Human Resources)
& GS Paper III (Science & Technology: Developments and their
applications in everyday life; Artificial Intelligence)
Are students ready for CBSE’s AI push?
Analysis: CBSE’s New
Computational Thinking and AI Curriculum
1.
Curriculum Structure: A Staged Approach
The
curriculum, launched in April 2026, adopts a “Foundational-to-Applied”
trajectory:
·
Classes 3 to
5 (Focus on CT): No direct
AI content. Instead, it focuses on Computational Thinking (CT)—pattern recognition,
decomposition, and algorithmic reasoning—embedded within Mathematics and
“The World Around Us” (TWAU).
·
Classes 6 to
8 (Introduction to AI):
Transition to foundational AI literacy, the AI project lifecycle, and ethics (data fairness).
·
Inclusivity: The design includes
“unplugged learning” to ensure schools without high-tech
infrastructure are not excluded.
2.
Integration Strategy: “Subject-Neutral” Learning
Unlike
traditional subjects, CT is not a standalone silo.
·
Embedded
Learning: It is
integrated into existing textbooks through worksheets and activity books.
·
Medium of
Delivery: It relies
heavily on LSRW (Listening,
Speaking, Reading, Writing). Every puzzle or logical task is mediated
through text, making language the “cognitive infrastructure” for
technology education.
3. The
Critical Challenge: The Literacy-Logic Gap
The analysis
identifies a significant “pipeline break” due to the prevailing
learning crisis in India:
·
The Reading
Barrier: Since CT is
taught through language, a child who cannot read at grade level (a crisis
highlighted by ASER 2024
and PARAKH 2024) will
view logic exercises as reading obstacles.
·
The
ASER/PARAKH Warning: Data shows
that a large percentage of Class 5 students cannot read Class 2-level text.
PARAKH specifically notes that even urban private school students (CBSE’s core
demographic) are underperforming in foundational language and math compared to
some rural counterparts.
4.
Assessment and Implementation Risks
·
Evaluation Shift: From Class 6, assessments move
toward project presentations and reflective journals. This requires high levels
of articulation.
·
The Failure
Point: If the
foundational literacy (Classes 3-5) is weak, the student will arrive at Class 6
(the AI entry point) without the necessary cognitive tools, leading to systemic
failure that only shows up in later data.
UPSC
Perspective: Key Takeaways
·
Foundational
Literacy and Numeracy (FLN): This curriculum reinforces the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 goal that AI and
coding skills are secondary to—and dependent on—basic literacy.
·
Digital
Divide vs. Cognitive Divide: While “unplugged” models solve the infrastructure gap
(Digital Divide), the “Cognitive Divide” (the inability to process
complex text) remains the larger threat to India’s AI-ready workforce.
·
Holistic
Reform: For AI
education to succeed, the state must first address the “reading
failure” at the primary level.
Key Terminology for Mains: Computational Thinking (CT), AI Project Lifecycle, LSRW
Skills, Unplugged Learning, ASER/PARAKH Surveys, Cognitive Infrastructure,
Foundational Literacy.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Text & Context
GS Paper II (Governance: Statutory, regulatory and
various quasi-judicial bodies; Important aspects of governance, transparency
and accountability)
Understanding India’s internet censorship regime
Analysis:
Inconsistency and Opacity in India’s Website Blocking Regime
1. Legal
Framework for Digital Censorship
The
authority to restrict online content in India is derived from specific
provisions of the Information
Technology (IT) Act, 2000:
·
Section 69A: Grants the Central Government
power to issue directions for blocking public access to information in the
interest of national sovereignty, integrity, defense, and public order.
·
Section 79: Provides “safe harbor”
to intermediaries (ISPs), which is conditional upon their compliance with
government blocking orders.
·
Confidentiality: ISPs are legally and
contractually bound to maintain secrecy regarding the specific blocking orders
they receive, leading to a “confidential” censorship environment.
2.
Technical Mechanisms: DNS Poisoning
When an ISP
is ordered to block a site, it often uses the Domain Name System (DNS) layer—the
“phonebook” of the internet.
·
Mechanism: ISPs implement DNS Poisoning (or DNS
Spoofing), where their servers are configured to provide a false IP address for
a blocked domain.
·
Rationale: This method is preferred by
Indian ISPs because it is cost-effective
and does not require sophisticated “Deep Packet Inspection” (DPI).
·
Consequence: Users are redirected to a blank
page or a generic warning, often without knowing if the site is down or
intentionally blocked.
3. The
“Inconsistency” Crisis
Research
from 2025-2026 reveals a fragmented digital landscape where “what you see
depends on who you pay.”
·
Low
Consensus: Out of over
43,000 blocked domains, less
than 4% were blocked by all major ISPs.
·
Variable
Enforcement: While
high-sensitivity content (terrorism, Chinese platforms like Weibo) shows high
consensus, categories like piracy, gambling, and pornography are blocked
haphazardly.
·
Arbitrary
Blocking: Regional
ISPs often engage in over-blocking (e.g., MTNL blocking Telegram while it
remains accessible on others), suggesting a lack of standardized technical guidelines.
4. Key
Governance Issues
·
Lack of
Transparency: The current
regime is characterized by “needless opacity.” Unlike
court-adjudicated copyright cases, executive blocking orders are not published,
preventing public or legal scrutiny.
·
Absence of
Standards: There is no
uniform “Protocol for Blocking,” leading to technical discrepancies
between national players (Jio, Airtel) and regional providers.
·
Due Process
Concerns: The lack of
a “disclosure-from-source” model (except for sensitive national
security matters) undermines the principles of natural justice and the
“Right to Know.”
UPSC
Perspective: Way Forward
·
Standardized
Guidelines: The
Ministry of Electronics and IT (MeitY) should issue a Unified Blocking Protocol
to ensure technical uniformity across all licensed ISPs.
·
Transparency
Reform: Adopting a
“Transparency Report” model where the government periodically lists
blocked domains (excluding CSAM and high-level security threats) to ensure
accountability.
·
Judicial
Oversight:
Strengthening the “Review Committee” mechanism under the IT (Blocking Rules), 2009
to audit the necessity and proportionality of long-term blocks.
Key Terminology for Mains: Section 69A, DNS Poisoning, Safe Harbor, Intermediary
Liability, Deep Packet Inspection (DPI), Transparency Deficit, Administrative
Overreach.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Text & Context
GS Paper I (Indian Culture, Post-Independence
Consolidation, and Regionalism) & GS Paper II (Federalism and Centre-State
Relations)
From myths to language: examining the renaming
of Kerala
Analysis:
The Historicity and Identity Politics of “Keralam” vs
“Kerala”
1.
Linguistic and Mythological Roots
The debate
over renaming Kerala to Keralam
centers on linguistic “purity” versus historical usage.
·
Etymology: Both terms are traditionally
linked to “Keram”
(coconut tree), defining the region as the “land of coconut trees.”
·
Legendary
Origins: The Keralolpatti (The Origin of
Kerala) credits Sage
Parasurama with reclaiming the land from the sea. Notably, these ancient
and medieval texts use “Kerala” and “Keralam”
interchangeably, suggesting the distinction is a modern preoccupation.
·
Ancient
Evidence: The term Keralaputra appears as
early as the Ashokan Edicts
(3rd Century BCE), lending deep antiquity to the “Kerala” form.
2.
Evolution of Territorial Identity
Prior to
1956, the region was not a single political unit but a collection of entities:
·
Princely
States: Travancore
and Cochin were the dominant native states.
·
The Tamil
Factor: Southern
Travancore had a significant Tamil-speaking population. Early Malayali
nationalism in the 19th century was less about territory and more about linguistic self-assertion
to protect administrative jobs from “outsider” Tamil Brahmins.
·
United
Kerala (Aikya Kerala) Movement: In the early 20th century, anti-British and communist influences
forged a “cross-territorial affinity,” leading to the demand for a
state based on the Malayalam language rather than ancient borders.
3. The
Shift: Language over Myth
The modern
state-making process in the 1940s and 50s prioritized linguistic homogeneity over mythological boundaries:
·
Kanyakumari: While part of the
“Parasurama myth,” it was excluded from the modern state because it
was Tamil-dominant.
·
Nomenclature: During the Aikya Kerala movement, the
term “Kerala” was used predominantly in publications and political
discourse without being viewed as a “foreign” or
“Anglophone” imposition.
4. Key
Governance & Cultural Debates
·
Anglophone
vs. Dravidian: The current
proposal suggests “Keralam” is a more authentic Dravidian term, while
“Kerala” is seen by some as an English adaptation. However, the text
argues that English has been an integral administrative and educational
language in the state for over a century.
·
Historical
Forgetting: The push
for “Keralam” reflects a “new regional identity” that seeks
to distance itself from colonial-era naming, even if historical texts (like Keralolpatti) and edicts
(Ashokan) show no such rigid preference.
UPSC
Perspective: Way Forward
·
Article 3 of
the Constitution: The process
of renaming a state involves a proposal by the State Assembly followed by
Parliamentary approval and a Presidential order to amend the First Schedule.
·
Cultural
Resurgence: This move
is symptomatic of broader trends in India where states seek to align their
official English names with their phonetic, vernacular identities (e.g., Orissa
to Odisha).
·
Balancing
Tradition and Modernity:
For aspirants, it is crucial to note that while “Keralam” strengthens
regional linguistic pride, the term “Kerala” holds equal legitimacy
in the “temporal and spatial imagination” of the people as evidenced
by 2,000 years of records.
Key Terminology for Mains: Aikya Kerala Movement, Keralaputra, Keralolpatti,
Linguistic State Reorganisation (1956), Article 3, Territorial vs. Linguistic
Identity.
