GS
Paper III (General Studies III: Technology, Economic Development, and Disaster
Management)
Creeping risk: Industrial accidents
occur due to neglect of risks built up over time
Analysis:
Industrial Safety and Regulatory Gaps in India
1. Core
Issue: The Myth of “Sudden” Failure
The content
clarifies that boiler explosions are rarely spontaneous. They are the
culmination of long-term neglect—scaling,
overpressure, and mismanaged water levels. The “accidents” are
actually predictable outcomes of technical stressors that build up over time.
2. Critical Phases: The Danger of “Restarts”
A recurring
theme in disasters (Sakti, Visakhapatnam, Neyveli) is the instability of startup phases.
·
Transient
Imbalances: Thermal and
pressure fluctuations are highest during commissioning or post-lockdown
restarts.
·
Regulatory
Blind Spot: Current
oversight does not intensify during these high-risk “unstable operating
regimes,” treating a newly commissioned plant the same as a steady-state
one.
3. Structural & Regulatory Flaws
The current
framework suffers from misplaced priorities:
·
Fabrication
vs. Operation: Focus
remains on initial construction standards rather than continuous instrumentation
and real-time auditing.
·
Incentive
Mismatch: The system
penalizes downtime, effectively discouraging necessary maintenance shutdowns.
·
Ease of
Doing Business (EoDB) vs. Safety: Shift toward self-certification
and scheduled third-party audits has replaced the deterrent effect of surprise
government inspections.
·
Delayed
Reform: While the Boiler Accident Inquiry Rules
(2025) are a step forward, their efficacy in closing structural gaps is yet
to be proven.
4. The Human Element: Labour Vulnerability
The
expansion of industrial capacity is exposing the “cost of doing
business” paid by the workforce:
·
Contractual
Diffusion of Responsibility: Subcontracting allows principal employers to evade
accountability. The OSHW
Code 2020 is criticized for its vague stance on the criminal liability of
principal employers.
·
Information
Asymmetry: Migrant
workers often lack safety manuals in their native languages and remain unaware
of the hazardous chemicals they handle.
·
Economic
Absorption of Risk: Safety
lapses are being treated as an acceptable cost, with the brunt borne by the
most marginalized (migrant/contract) labor.
______________________________________________________________________________________
GS
Paper I (Social Issues – Empowerment of Women) and GS Paper II (Governance –
Sports Policy & Institutional Framework)
Queen
on the board: Vaishali’s success should lead to greater depth in women’s chess
Analysis: The Rise of Indian
Women in Global Chess
1. Key
Achievements & Milestones
The content
highlights a golden era for Indian women’s chess, marked by historic
“firsts”:
·
R. Vaishali: First Indian to win the Women’s Candidates Tournament
(since its inception in 1952). She will challenge Ju Wenjun for the World
Title.
·
Divya
Deshmukh: First
Indian woman to win the World
Cup (July 2024).
·
Koneru
Humpy: Clinched
her second World Rapid
Championship (December 2024).
·
Team
Success: India holds
the title of World Team
Champions (Chess Olympiad) in both men’s and women’s categories.
2. Structural Challenges & Critical Gaps
Despite
individual brilliance, the analysis identifies systemic weaknesses:
·
Lack of
Depth: Unlike the
male counterpart where talent is abundant, there is a notable shortage of
“fresh talent” among girls.
·
Systemic
Failure: Success
stories like Vaishali and Divya are categorized as individual/familial triumphs rather than products of
a robust national sports system.
·
Support
Deficit: Success has
relied heavily on parental sacrifice and selective corporate backing rather
than institutionalized scouting or training.
3. The Role of Private Intervention
The content
underscores the transformative power of private-corporate partnerships:
·
WACA Model: The WestBridge Anand Chess
Academy (WACA) is cited as a successful model that removed financial barriers
for players like Gukesh.
·
Need for
Expansion: For women’s
chess to sustain this momentum, similar corporate interest is required to
bridge the funding gap.
4. Policy Recommendations for the Federation
To move from
individual brilliance to systemic excellence, the following is required:
·
Targeted
Grassroots Focus: Specific
programs aimed at retaining and nurturing young girls in chess.
·
Elite
Mentorship: Providing
access to training by Grandmasters.
·
Competitive
Exposure: Organizing
more domestic and international tournaments specifically for women to build a
wider talent pool.
Conclusion
for UPSC Aspirants
This topic
links to Women Empowerment
and Human Resource Development.
While India is becoming a “Chess Powerhouse,” the transition from accidental excellence to designed success for women depends
on dismantling systemic barriers and replicating the “Anand-WACA”
model across the gender spectrum.
GS
Paper II (Polity and Governance – Issues relating to the Judiciary and Justice
Delivery).
The institutionalised sluggishness of the legal system
Analysis: Reimagining the Indian
Judicial System
1. The
Crisis of Pendency: “The Process is the Punishment”
The content
identifies judicial delay not as a bottleneck, but as a human rights crisis.
·
The Scale: With over 5 crore cases pending, the
system has become a “black hole” for time and money.
·
Endurance
Test: Frequent
adjournments and procedural hurdles transform legal pursuit into an endurance
test, stripping individuals of dignity long before a verdict.
·
Economic
Impact: Prolonged
litigation (e.g., 20-year land disputes) renders victories hollow, as legal
costs often exceed the value of the asset in question.
2. Civil Liberties and Systemic Rigidity
A critical
focus is placed on the plight of those under stringent laws like UAPA:
·
Incarceration
as the Rule: The
“prima facie” evidence standard makes bail nearly impossible, leading
to years of imprisonment without trial.
·
The Fix: A mandatory timeline (e.g., 1–2 years) must be
established for the state to either commence a trial or grant bail to uphold
the constitutional promise of liberty.
3. Modernization: Beyond the Colonial Legacy
The analysis
advocates for a radical shift from “mountains of physical files” to a
21st-century digital judiciary:
·
AI
Integration: Utilizing
Artificial Intelligence for administrative filing, flagging delays, and legal
research to free up judicial “cognitive energy.”
·
Data-Driven
Management: Moving away
from the personal presence requirement through virtual hearings and regional
benches to reduce the geographic and financial burden on litigants.
4. Inclusivity and Accessibility: The “Old Boys’
Club”
The legitimacy
of the judiciary is tied to its representativeness:
·
Diversity as
Quality: Breaking
the glass ceiling for women and marginalized communities is not “identity
politics” but a necessity for empathetic and nuanced rulings.
·
Legal Aid
Reform:
Transforming legal aid into a high-caliber institution so that justice is no
longer a “luxury good” accessible only to the wealthy.
·
Geographic
Decentralization:
Establishing Regional
Benches of the Supreme Court to make the highest level of justice a local
reality.
5. Accountability and Constitutional Morality
·
The
Independent Referee: The
judiciary must remain a fearless referee against power while being accountable
to the public.
·
Transparency: Tools like live-streaming and clear
criteria for judicial appointments (addressing concerns of nepotism) are
essential to rebuilding the social contract.
______________________________________________________________________________________
GS Paper II (Governance, Social Justice, and
International Relations) and GS Paper III (Economic Development – Inclusive
Growth)
India’s rural models are shaping development
diplomacy
Analysis: NRLM and the Global
Export of India’s Rural Model
1.
Evolution of NRLM: From Domestic Scheme to Global Benchmark
Launched in
2011, the National Rural
Livelihood Mission (NRLM) has evolved into a “flagship”
instrument for multidimensional poverty alleviation.
·
Scale of
Achievement (2025): Reached 100 million households
across 742 districts with over 9 million Self-Help Groups (SHGs).
·
Financial Inclusion: Facilitated bank linkages worth ₹12 lakh crore, with 60% of
local governments now served by women banking correspondents.
·
Women’s
Economic Empowerment: Over 20
million “Lakhpati Didis” (women earning >₹1,00,000 annually) and a
significant boost to the Female
Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR).
2. The Success Pillars: The “Institutional
Architecture”
The NRLM’s
success isn’t just about credit; it is about the ecosystem it created:
·
Federated
Structure: Creating
community institutions at the Village, Cluster, and Block levels.
·
Community
Cadres: Last-mile
service delivery via trained local women (pashu sakhis, krishi sakhis, etc.).
·
Social
Capital: Leveraging
collective savings and peer-learning to instill financial discipline and
accountability.
3. South-South Cooperation: The “SHG Export”
NRLM has
become a key tool in India’s Development
Diplomacy, particularly in the Global South.
·
Portability: African nations (Ethiopia,
Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya, Rwanda) are adopting the SHG-based framework because it
is locally rooted and
contextually relevant to large informal economies.
·
Cost-Effectiveness: Unlike capital-heavy Western
models, the NRLM relies on community-driven
processes, making it ideal for resource-constrained governments.
·
Shift in
Paradigm: Moving from
“Western knowledge templates” to Peer-to-Peer learning among Global South nations.
4. Strategic Implications for India’s Foreign Policy
India is
transitioning from an exporter of resources/concessional finance to an exporter of social-sector institutions.
·
Soft Power: Exporting governance models
creates long-term linkages between bureaucracies and community organizations.
·
Entry
Points: The NRLM
acts as a “foot-in-the-door” for broader collaboration in Digital Public Infrastructure
(DPI), agriculture, and financial architecture.
5.
Recommendations for Policy Strengthening
·
Knowledge
Exchange Platform:
Institutionalizing a dedicated “Rural Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange”
to link Indian state missions with foreign governments.
·
Adaptation
over Replication: Using
immersion visits and joint pilot projects to adapt the SHG model to specific
local African political economies.
·
Budgetary
Commitment: Continuing
the trend of increased allocation (as seen in the ₹19,200 crore allocation in Budget 2026-27) to
maintain domestic momentum.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Text&Context
GS Paper II (Indian Constitution—Significant
Provisions, Judiciary, and Social Justice)
On the Sabarimala temple entry case
Analysis: Religious Autonomy vs. Constitutional
Equality
1. The
Sabarimala Review: Scope and Significance
A nine-judge
Constitution Bench is currently re-examining the 2018 Sabarimala verdict (Indian Young Lawyers’ Association vs. State of Kerala).
The review aims to resolve the tension between individual religious freedom (Article 25) and denominational autonomy (Article
26).
2. Evolution of the “Essential Religious Practice”
(ERP) Doctrine
The ERP
doctrine is the judicial tool used to determine which religious practices are
immune to state intervention.
·
The Shift: In early cases like Shirur Mutt (1954), the
Court protected rituals and ceremonies as “essentially religious.”
Recent rulings have narrowed this, protecting only practices so
“essential” that their absence would alter the religion’s core
identity.
·
The
Critique: The Union
government argues that the judiciary is ill-equipped to act as
“theologians” and that the ERP doctrine should not be used to bypass
traditional faith-based restrictions.
3. Key Constitutional Debates
The current
hearing addresses several high-stakes legal questions:
·
Constitutional
Morality: The Union
contends this is a “subjective” concept and should not be a
standalone ground for judicial review to overturn long-standing customs.
·
Article 17
(Untouchability): A major
point of contention is whether the exclusion of women based on biological
factors (menstruation) can be equated to “untouchability,” which was
historically a caste-based provision.
·
Judiciary as
Social Reformer: The Union
argues that social reform should emanate from the Legislature or society, rather than the Bench.
4. Defining “Religious Denomination” (Article 26)
The status
of a “denomination” is highly sought after because Article 26 is not explicitly subject to other
Fundamental Rights (unlike Article 25).
·
The 3-Part
Test (Shirur Mutt): To be a denomination, a group
needs a common faith, a common organization, and a distinct name.
·
The
Conflict: The 2018
verdict denied this status to Sabarimala devotees, arguing they are part of the
broader Hindu fold. However, the phrase “any section thereof” in Article 26
suggests that sub-groups within a religion should also enjoy autonomous rights.
5. The State’s Power to Reform
The analysis
highlights the delicate boundary between Articles 25(1) and 25(2):
·
Article
25(1): Protects
the core right to practice religion.
·
Article
25(2): Empowers
the State to regulate “secular activities” (finance, administration)
and enact “social welfare and reform.”
·
Original
Intent:
Historically, Article 25(2)(b) was aimed at dismantling caste-based exclusion. The
Court is now debating if this power extends to gender-based reform, or if such
claims should rely purely on Articles 14 (Equality) and 15 (Non-discrimination).
______________________________________________________________________________________
