UPSC Mains Answer Writing Practice – Insights SECURE: 28 May 2025
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General Studies – 1
Topic: Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times.
Topic: Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times.
Q1. “Oral traditions are not just carriers of history, but instruments of cultural resistance”. Discuss. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question Recent focus on reviving indigenous and folk oral narratives, especially post-NEP 2020 and digital archiving efforts like PARI, has re-emphasised their historical and political significance. Key Demand of the question The question requires an exploration of how oral traditions function both as tools for preserving history and as mediums for resisting dominant or exclusionary cultural narratives. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Briefly define oral traditions and their cultural significance beyond written history. Body Show how oral traditions preserve historical memory (pre-literate cultures, subaltern narratives, continuity). Explain their role in resisting cultural dominance (colonialism, caste oppression, linguistic marginalisation, tribal assertion). Conclusion Suggest that oral traditions are dynamic cultural assets and must be safeguarded as part of inclusive heritage policy.
Why the question Recent focus on reviving indigenous and folk oral narratives, especially post-NEP 2020 and digital archiving efforts like PARI, has re-emphasised their historical and political significance.
Key Demand of the question The question requires an exploration of how oral traditions function both as tools for preserving history and as mediums for resisting dominant or exclusionary cultural narratives.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Briefly define oral traditions and their cultural significance beyond written history.
• Show how oral traditions preserve historical memory (pre-literate cultures, subaltern narratives, continuity).
• Explain their role in resisting cultural dominance (colonialism, caste oppression, linguistic marginalisation, tribal assertion).
Conclusion Suggest that oral traditions are dynamic cultural assets and must be safeguarded as part of inclusive heritage policy.
Topic: Urbanization, their problems and their remedies
Topic: Urbanization, their problems and their remedies
Q2. India’s current urban growth trajectory is neither spatially balanced nor socially inclusive. Analyse this in light of the Urban Challenge Fund and suggest a roadmap for equitable urbanisation. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question Experience with JNNURM and Smart Cities Mission shows that focusing on large cities does not automatically lead to a ripple effect. The disparities in regional development continue to persist Key demand of the question The question requires analysing the spatial and social imbalance in India’s urbanisation pattern and evaluating how the Urban Challenge Fund can correct these inequities by proposing a roadmap for inclusive and regionally balanced urban growth. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Mention the urbanisation trend toward metros and the neglect of small towns and vulnerable groups. Body Explain how urban growth has become spatially unequal and socially exclusionary. Analyse the potential and limits of the Urban Challenge Fund in addressing these gaps. Suggest a roadmap for inclusive urbanisation involving institutional reforms, ULB empowerment, and spatial rebalancing. Conclusion Emphasise the opportunity to reset India’s urbanisation towards equity, regional integration, and sustainability through conscious planning.
Why the question Experience with JNNURM and Smart Cities Mission shows that focusing on large cities does not automatically lead to a ripple effect. The disparities in regional development continue to persist
Key demand of the question The question requires analysing the spatial and social imbalance in India’s urbanisation pattern and evaluating how the Urban Challenge Fund can correct these inequities by proposing a roadmap for inclusive and regionally balanced urban growth.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Mention the urbanisation trend toward metros and the neglect of small towns and vulnerable groups.
• Explain how urban growth has become spatially unequal and socially exclusionary.
• Analyse the potential and limits of the Urban Challenge Fund in addressing these gaps.
• Suggest a roadmap for inclusive urbanisation involving institutional reforms, ULB empowerment, and spatial rebalancing.
Conclusion Emphasise the opportunity to reset India’s urbanisation towards equity, regional integration, and sustainability through conscious planning.
General Studies – 2
Topic: Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein.
Topic: Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein.
Q3. India’s development journey cannot be linear when regional disparities remain multidimensional. Discuss how NITI Aayog addresses these disparities through its initiatives. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question NITI Aayog drives the goal of Viksit Bharat forward by actively supporting states through various initiatives and mechanisms, premised on the belief that strong States make a strong nation Key demand of the question The question demands an understanding of how India’s development cannot be uniform due to varied socio-economic contexts, and how NITI Aayog’s initiatives address this challenge. It also requires suggesting a way forward to deepen regional equity. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Introduce with the idea that India’s developmental needs vary greatly across regions, making linear models inadequate. Body Explain the nature of regional disparities in terms of economy, infrastructure, governance, and social equity. Discuss key initiatives of NITI Aayog aimed at bridging these disparities across states and districts. Suggest targeted reforms and planning approaches to further reduce regional development gaps. Conclusion Emphasise the need for contextualised planning and decentralised governance to realise truly inclusive development.
Why the question NITI Aayog drives the goal of Viksit Bharat forward by actively supporting states through various initiatives and mechanisms, premised on the belief that strong States make a strong nation
Key demand of the question The question demands an understanding of how India’s development cannot be uniform due to varied socio-economic contexts, and how NITI Aayog’s initiatives address this challenge. It also requires suggesting a way forward to deepen regional equity.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Introduce with the idea that India’s developmental needs vary greatly across regions, making linear models inadequate.
• Explain the nature of regional disparities in terms of economy, infrastructure, governance, and social equity.
• Discuss key initiatives of NITI Aayog aimed at bridging these disparities across states and districts.
• Suggest targeted reforms and planning approaches to further reduce regional development gaps.
Conclusion Emphasise the need for contextualised planning and decentralised governance to realise truly inclusive development.
Topic: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health.
Topic: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health.
Q4. “Strengthening primary healthcare is the first line of defence against future pandemics”. Comment. Why is India still underperforming in this area? (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: TH
Why the question The resurgence of COVID-19 subvariants and India’s reaffirmation at World Health Assembly 78 have reignited focus on strengthening grassroots health infrastructure for pandemic preparedness. Key Demand of the question The question asks for a comment on why primary healthcare is critical in preventing and managing pandemics and seeks reasons for India’s continued underperformance in this area despite multiple reforms. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Highlight how pandemics like COVID-19 exposed systemic gaps and reaffirmed the foundational role of primary healthcare. Body Explain how strong PHCs enable early detection, community-level containment, and service continuity during pandemics Discuss key reasons for India’s underperformance: low public spending, HR and infrastructure gaps, weak urban coverage, and data silos Conclusion Suggest that India needs a PHC-led model with legal backing, fiscal devolution, and integrated tech systems for future pandemic resilience.
Why the question The resurgence of COVID-19 subvariants and India’s reaffirmation at World Health Assembly 78 have reignited focus on strengthening grassroots health infrastructure for pandemic preparedness.
Key Demand of the question The question asks for a comment on why primary healthcare is critical in preventing and managing pandemics and seeks reasons for India’s continued underperformance in this area despite multiple reforms.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Highlight how pandemics like COVID-19 exposed systemic gaps and reaffirmed the foundational role of primary healthcare.
• Explain how strong PHCs enable early detection, community-level containment, and service continuity during pandemics
• Discuss key reasons for India’s underperformance: low public spending, HR and infrastructure gaps, weak urban coverage, and data silos
Conclusion Suggest that India needs a PHC-led model with legal backing, fiscal devolution, and integrated tech systems for future pandemic resilience.
General Studies – 3
Topic: Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices;
Topic: Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices;
Q5. “The promise of doubling farmers’ income was ambitious but insufficiently grounded in regional realities”. Critically analyse. What institutional and structural reforms are necessary to realise this goal? (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question Most of the states in India failed to achieve the goal to double farmers’ incomes (DFI) by the 2022-23 period. Key demand of the question It requires a critical analysis of the limitations of the income-doubling strategy in addressing regional diversity, and a well-structured evaluation of both institutional and structural reforms needed to realise sustainable farmer income growth. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Mention the shift in policy focus from production to income and set the context of ambitious targets vs. regional diversity. Body Highlight key achievements of the doubling farmers’ income initiative such as shift in policy vision, focus on allied sectors, infrastructure push, etc. Analyse why the income-doubling policy did not work uniformly across regions due to agro-climatic, institutional, economic, and social diversity. Suggest institutional reforms like decentralised planning, data systems, convergence, state commissions, and fiscal flexibility. Suggest structural reforms like land leasing, value chains, FPOs, social equity focus, and climate-resilient diversification. Conclusion Emphasise the need for region-specific, equity-driven agrarian transformation to truly uplift farmers’ income in a diverse India.
Why the question Most of the states in India failed to achieve the goal to double farmers’ incomes (DFI) by the 2022-23 period.
Key demand of the question It requires a critical analysis of the limitations of the income-doubling strategy in addressing regional diversity, and a well-structured evaluation of both institutional and structural reforms needed to realise sustainable farmer income growth.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Mention the shift in policy focus from production to income and set the context of ambitious targets vs. regional diversity.
• Highlight key achievements of the doubling farmers’ income initiative such as shift in policy vision, focus on allied sectors, infrastructure push, etc.
• Analyse why the income-doubling policy did not work uniformly across regions due to agro-climatic, institutional, economic, and social diversity.
• Suggest institutional reforms like decentralised planning, data systems, convergence, state commissions, and fiscal flexibility.
• Suggest structural reforms like land leasing, value chains, FPOs, social equity focus, and climate-resilient diversification.
Conclusion Emphasise the need for region-specific, equity-driven agrarian transformation to truly uplift farmers’ income in a diverse India.
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Q6. “Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) must mainstream forest management for long-term climate finance”. Examine the rationale. What are the associated challenges for developing nations? (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: DTE
Why the question Forests take centre stage at UN as countries gather to discuss climate mitigation. Key Demand of the question The question requires examining the logic behind integrating forest management into NDCs for sustainable climate finance and identifying the practical, financial, and institutional challenges faced by developing countries in this regard. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Forests are emerging as key mitigation tools globally, yet lack sustained funding. Including them in NDCs enhances long-term planning, visibility, and credibility for climate finance. Body Explain how NDC integration makes forest strategies a formal, long-term part of a country’s climate roadmap and attracts private and international finance Identify the hurdles developing countries face, such as capacity deficits in MRV, fragmented forest governance, legal ambiguities over carbon rights, and limited fiscal space Conclusion A fair, transparent, and needs-based forest finance mechanism must be paired with institutional capacity-building to help developing countries anchor forests in their climate commitments effectively.
Why the question Forests take centre stage at UN as countries gather to discuss climate mitigation.
Key Demand of the question The question requires examining the logic behind integrating forest management into NDCs for sustainable climate finance and identifying the practical, financial, and institutional challenges faced by developing countries in this regard.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction Forests are emerging as key mitigation tools globally, yet lack sustained funding. Including them in NDCs enhances long-term planning, visibility, and credibility for climate finance.
• Explain how NDC integration makes forest strategies a formal, long-term part of a country’s climate roadmap and attracts private and international finance
• Identify the hurdles developing countries face, such as capacity deficits in MRV, fragmented forest governance, legal ambiguities over carbon rights, and limited fiscal space
Conclusion A fair, transparent, and needs-based forest finance mechanism must be paired with institutional capacity-building to help developing countries anchor forests in their climate commitments effectively.
General Studies – 4
Q7. Proximity to political power must not translate into administrative overreach. Justify with reasons. What ethical red flags emerge from bureaucratic allegiance to political interests? (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question: Chhattisgarh EOW files charge-sheet against ex-CM deputy secretary, former collector in DMF scam. Key Demand of the question: The question requires justification on why political proximity should not result in administrative overreach and identification of ethical red flags arising when bureaucrats align with political interests. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly explain the principle of political neutrality in ethics and why its violation threatens public trust and governance standards. Body: Justify why administrative overreach due to political proximity is unethical (rule of law, neutrality, public interest, etc.) Highlight ethical red flags from such alignment (conflict of interest, suppression of dissent, misuse of power, etc.) Conclusion: Suggest a way forward like institutional checks, ethics training, or civil services reforms to maintain ethical autonomy.
Why the question: Chhattisgarh EOW files charge-sheet against ex-CM deputy secretary, former collector in DMF scam.
Key Demand of the question: The question requires justification on why political proximity should not result in administrative overreach and identification of ethical red flags arising when bureaucrats align with political interests.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction: Briefly explain the principle of political neutrality in ethics and why its violation threatens public trust and governance standards.
• Justify why administrative overreach due to political proximity is unethical (rule of law, neutrality, public interest, etc.)
• Highlight ethical red flags from such alignment (conflict of interest, suppression of dissent, misuse of power, etc.)
Conclusion: Suggest a way forward like institutional checks, ethics training, or civil services reforms to maintain ethical autonomy.
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