UPSC Mains Answer Writing Practice – Insights SECURE: 15 July 2025
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General Studies – 1
Topic: Urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
Topic: Urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
Q1. In what ways do entrenched caste and class mentalities shape urban social organisation in India? Examine how these patterns influence urban planning and public infrastructure. Suggest institutional reforms to build inclusive and civic-minded cities. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Reference: IE
Why the question: Urban floods, spatial inequality, and planning failures in cities like Gurugram have renewed focus on how rural social structures like caste and class get embedded in urban settings, undermining civic infrastructure and inclusion. Key Demand of the question: The question asks for an analysis of how caste and class continue to shape urban social organisation, their impact on urban planning and infrastructure, and specific institutional reforms to create inclusive and civic-oriented cities. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly introduce how urbanisation in India often reproduces rural social hierarchies instead of overcoming them. Body: Explain how caste and class influence urban social life, housing, associations, and access to resources. Examine their effect on urban planning priorities, exclusionary infrastructure, and misuse of public land. Suggest institutional reforms in laws, civic representation, budgeting, and urban design to promote inclusive and civic-minded urbanism. Conclusion: Suggest that a future-ready Indian city must be rooted in equity, civic values, and democratic participation, not inherited social divisions.
Why the question: Urban floods, spatial inequality, and planning failures in cities like Gurugram have renewed focus on how rural social structures like caste and class get embedded in urban settings, undermining civic infrastructure and inclusion.
Key Demand of the question: The question asks for an analysis of how caste and class continue to shape urban social organisation, their impact on urban planning and infrastructure, and specific institutional reforms to create inclusive and civic-oriented cities.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Briefly introduce how urbanisation in India often reproduces rural social hierarchies instead of overcoming them.
• Explain how caste and class influence urban social life, housing, associations, and access to resources.
• Examine their effect on urban planning priorities, exclusionary infrastructure, and misuse of public land.
• Suggest institutional reforms in laws, civic representation, budgeting, and urban design to promote inclusive and civic-minded urbanism.
Conclusion: Suggest that a future-ready Indian city must be rooted in equity, civic values, and democratic participation, not inherited social divisions.
Topic: Changes in critical geographical features (including water-bodies and ice-caps) and in flora and fauna and the effects of such changes.
Topic: Changes in critical geographical features (including water-bodies and ice-caps) and in flora and fauna and the effects of such changes.
Q2. How does the concept of “desertification” obscure the value of deserts as ecosystems? What alternative frameworks can better capture the vitality of drylands? (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: TH
Why the question: The growing criticism of the term “desertification” as ecologically misleading, especially in light of India’s policies that misclassify deserts and grasslands as “wastelands,” threatening biodiversity and pastoralist livelihoods. Key Demand of the question: It requires a critical analysis of how the term “desertification” distorts the ecological and cultural significance of deserts and asks for suitable conceptual and policy alternatives to better represent dryland vitality. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Mention how deserts are ecologically resilient biomes wrongly viewed as degraded lands needing afforestation. Body: Explain how the term desertification oversimplifies natural arid landscapes, leading to flawed ecological interventions. Suggest frameworks like ecosystem-based classifications, soil carbon-focused metrics, and socio-ecological land use models that respect desert ecology. Conclusion: Advocate for desert-sensitive policy narratives that reflect ecosystem function and cultural adaptation, not just visual greenness.
Why the question: The growing criticism of the term “desertification” as ecologically misleading, especially in light of India’s policies that misclassify deserts and grasslands as “wastelands,” threatening biodiversity and pastoralist livelihoods.
Key Demand of the question: It requires a critical analysis of how the term “desertification” distorts the ecological and cultural significance of deserts and asks for suitable conceptual and policy alternatives to better represent dryland vitality.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Mention how deserts are ecologically resilient biomes wrongly viewed as degraded lands needing afforestation.
• Explain how the term desertification oversimplifies natural arid landscapes, leading to flawed ecological interventions.
• Suggest frameworks like ecosystem-based classifications, soil carbon-focused metrics, and socio-ecological land use models that respect desert ecology.
Conclusion: Advocate for desert-sensitive policy narratives that reflect ecosystem function and cultural adaptation, not just visual greenness.
General Studies – 2
Topic: Indian Constitution- historical underpinnings, evolution, features, amendments, significant provisions and basic structure.
Topic: Indian Constitution- historical underpinnings, evolution, features, amendments, significant provisions and basic structure.
Q3. “Citizens must internalise the value of freedom of speech rather than test its limits”. Comment. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: TH
Why the question: The Supreme Court said citizens must know the value of freedom of speech and expression and observe self-regulation as it mulled guidelines to regulate offensive posts on social media. Key Demand of the question: The question asks you to evaluate the need for citizens to internalise the spirit of freedom of speech and the consequences of testing its constitutional and ethical boundaries. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Define freedom of speech as a constitutional right with civic responsibility, and briefly link it to social harmony in a digital society. Body: Why citizens must internalise the value of free speech: Point on promoting fraternity, avoiding legal misuse, preserving democratic space, and maintaining digital civility. Risks of testing its limits: Point on triggering Article 19(2) restrictions, legal harassment, censorship backlash, and social polarisation. Conclusion: Suggest that self-restraint, not state restraint, is key to safeguarding free speech in a plural democracy.
Why the question: The Supreme Court said citizens must know the value of freedom of speech and expression and observe self-regulation as it mulled guidelines to regulate offensive posts on social media.
Key Demand of the question: The question asks you to evaluate the need for citizens to internalise the spirit of freedom of speech and the consequences of testing its constitutional and ethical boundaries.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Define freedom of speech as a constitutional right with civic responsibility, and briefly link it to social harmony in a digital society.
• Why citizens must internalise the value of free speech: Point on promoting fraternity, avoiding legal misuse, preserving democratic space, and maintaining digital civility.
• Risks of testing its limits: Point on triggering Article 19(2) restrictions, legal harassment, censorship backlash, and social polarisation.
Conclusion: Suggest that self-restraint, not state restraint, is key to safeguarding free speech in a plural democracy.
Topic: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests
Topic: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests
Q4. To what extent is strategic autonomy viable for India in a globalised world? Discuss India’s evolving relationship with the U.S. Examine the tensions between alignment and self-reliance. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: TH
Why the question: U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest announcement to impose a 10% tariff on BRICS nations, alongside a potential 200% levy on pharmaceutical imports, signals a dramatic shift in how the world’s largest economy seeks to wield its influence. Key Demand of the question: The question requires you to assess the practicality of strategic autonomy today, trace India’s changing bilateral dynamics with the U.S., and evaluate the frictions between global alignment and national self-reliance. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly define strategic autonomy and its evolution in India’s foreign policy, with a contextual link to today’s interdependent global order. Body: Viability of strategic autonomy: Assess its limits in tech, defence, trade, and multilateral diplomacy. Evolving India-U.S. relationship: Trace growing convergence and structured partnerships across sectors. Tensions between alignment and self-reliance: Highlight clashes in defence imports, data laws, nationalist narratives, and dependency gaps. Conclusion: Conclude with the idea that autonomy now means flexibility, not isolation, and India must pragmatically shape partnerships while investing in internal capacities.
Why the question: U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest announcement to impose a 10% tariff on BRICS nations, alongside a potential 200% levy on pharmaceutical imports, signals a dramatic shift in how the world’s largest economy seeks to wield its influence.
Key Demand of the question: The question requires you to assess the practicality of strategic autonomy today, trace India’s changing bilateral dynamics with the U.S., and evaluate the frictions between global alignment and national self-reliance.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Briefly define strategic autonomy and its evolution in India’s foreign policy, with a contextual link to today’s interdependent global order.
• Viability of strategic autonomy: Assess its limits in tech, defence, trade, and multilateral diplomacy.
• Evolving India-U.S. relationship: Trace growing convergence and structured partnerships across sectors.
• Tensions between alignment and self-reliance: Highlight clashes in defence imports, data laws, nationalist narratives, and dependency gaps.
Conclusion: Conclude with the idea that autonomy now means flexibility, not isolation, and India must pragmatically shape partnerships while investing in internal capacities.
General Studies – 3
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Q5. What are the key challenges in conserving insect pollinators in tropical ecosystems? Suggest measures to make agricultural landscapes pollinator-friendly. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: DTE
Why the question: As climate change reshapes ecosystems, a new study has found that up to 90 per cent of natural pollination links between wild vanilla species and their insect partners could be lost by 2050. Key Demand of the question: It seeks identification of key threats faced by insect pollinators in tropical regions and demands actionable strategies to restructure farmlands in ways that sustain pollinator populations. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly underline the ecological and economic significance of insect pollinators in tropical biodiversity and food systems. Body: Explain key challenges such as habitat fragmentation due to monocultures, toxic pesticide use, pollinator-pathogen outbreaks, and climate-induced phenological mismatches. Suggest key measures like promoting agro-biodiverse farming systems, incentivising integrated pest management, restoring native corridors, involving communities, and launching nationwide pollinator monitoring. Conclusion: Highlight that long-term food security in the tropics hinges on rebuilding landscapes where agriculture and pollinators coexist symbiotically.
Why the question: As climate change reshapes ecosystems, a new study has found that up to 90 per cent of natural pollination links between wild vanilla species and their insect partners could be lost by 2050.
Key Demand of the question: It seeks identification of key threats faced by insect pollinators in tropical regions and demands actionable strategies to restructure farmlands in ways that sustain pollinator populations.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Briefly underline the ecological and economic significance of insect pollinators in tropical biodiversity and food systems.
• Explain key challenges such as habitat fragmentation due to monocultures, toxic pesticide use, pollinator-pathogen outbreaks, and climate-induced phenological mismatches.
• Suggest key measures like promoting agro-biodiverse farming systems, incentivising integrated pest management, restoring native corridors, involving communities, and launching nationwide pollinator monitoring.
Conclusion: Highlight that long-term food security in the tropics hinges on rebuilding landscapes where agriculture and pollinators coexist symbiotically.
Topic: Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security.
Topic: Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security.
Q6. What are lethal autonomous weapon systems (LAWS) and how do they differ from remotely operated systems? Examine the strategic risks they pose to regional stability. Suggest measures India should adopt to mitigate their misuse. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question: Several countries are developing lethal autonomous weapon systems that function without moral reasoning and situational awareness. Current international legal frameworks can’t address the deep ethical dilemmas they pose. Work towards a global treaty on their use is hobbled by geopolitical divisions Key Demand of the question: The question demands an explanation of what LAWS are and how they differ from remotely operated systems, an examination of their specific threats to regional security, and practical steps India should adopt to mitigate those risks. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Briefly define LAWS and mention their growing relevance in military modernisation and emerging security doctrines. Body Differentiate LAWS from remotely operated systems based on human control, speed, ethical judgment, and autonomy. Examine their risks to regional stability such as misidentification, loss of command control, arms race dynamics, and accountability vacuum. Suggest India’s way forward including human-in-loop mandates, AI audit norms, international treaty advocacy, and investment in counter-autonomy tech. Conclusion Emphasise the need for India to balance technological advancement with strategic restraint and uphold human-centred warfare principles.
Why the question: Several countries are developing lethal autonomous weapon systems that function without moral reasoning and situational awareness. Current international legal frameworks can’t address the deep ethical dilemmas they pose. Work towards a global treaty on their use is hobbled by geopolitical divisions
Key Demand of the question: The question demands an explanation of what LAWS are and how they differ from remotely operated systems, an examination of their specific threats to regional security, and practical steps India should adopt to mitigate those risks.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Briefly define LAWS and mention their growing relevance in military modernisation and emerging security doctrines.
• Differentiate LAWS from remotely operated systems based on human control, speed, ethical judgment, and autonomy.
• Examine their risks to regional stability such as misidentification, loss of command control, arms race dynamics, and accountability vacuum.
• Suggest India’s way forward including human-in-loop mandates, AI audit norms, international treaty advocacy, and investment in counter-autonomy tech.
Conclusion Emphasise the need for India to balance technological advancement with strategic restraint and uphold human-centred warfare principles.
General Studies – 4
Q7. Why must rule of law be upheld not just legally, but ethically? Examine the role of values in ensuring lawful conduct by both citizens and public officials. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question: The 2025 Gujarat ATS arms license scam revealed that legal procedures, when stripped of ethical commitment, can be manipulated, highlighting the need to ethically uphold the rule of law. Key Demand of the question: The question seeks to understand why upholding the rule of law requires ethical conviction in addition to legal compliance, and how specific values enable both citizens and officials to behave lawfully. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly explain rule of law as a foundational democratic principle, and assert that its legitimacy is rooted as much in ethics as in legal authority. Body: Why rule of law must be upheld ethically, not just legally: Argue that legality without morality enables manipulation, erodes public trust, and leads to governance by form rather than by fairness. Role of values in ensuring lawful conduct: Show how values like integrity, justice, empathy, and civic duty promote lawful behaviour by embedding law within the conscience of both officials and citizens. Conclusion: State that the rule of law becomes truly sustainable only when driven by internalised values, making compliance a matter of conviction, not compulsion.
Why the question: The 2025 Gujarat ATS arms license scam revealed that legal procedures, when stripped of ethical commitment, can be manipulated, highlighting the need to ethically uphold the rule of law.
Key Demand of the question: The question seeks to understand why upholding the rule of law requires ethical conviction in addition to legal compliance, and how specific values enable both citizens and officials to behave lawfully.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Briefly explain rule of law as a foundational democratic principle, and assert that its legitimacy is rooted as much in ethics as in legal authority.
• Why rule of law must be upheld ethically, not just legally: Argue that legality without morality enables manipulation, erodes public trust, and leads to governance by form rather than by fairness.
• Role of values in ensuring lawful conduct: Show how values like integrity, justice, empathy, and civic duty promote lawful behaviour by embedding law within the conscience of both officials and citizens.
Conclusion: State that the rule of law becomes truly sustainable only when driven by internalised values, making compliance a matter of conviction, not compulsion.
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