UPSC Mains Answer Writing Practice – Insights SECURE: 4 February 2026
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General Studies – 1
Topic: urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
Topic: urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
Q1. The erosion of traditional social institutions has reshaped the nature of belonging in cities. Analyse the statement. Discuss emerging alternatives to conventional community structures. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question Urbanisation and migration are weakening inherited social institutions such as family, caste, and neighbourhood, raising concerns about loneliness, social fragmentation, and the sustainability of urban social cohesion. Key Demand of the question The question requires analysis of how the decline of traditional social institutions has altered the meaning of belonging in urban settings and an examination of the new forms of community that are replacing or supplementing conventional social structures. Structure of the Answer Introduction Briefly contextualise urbanisation and social change in Indian cities and introduce the idea of shifting modes of belonging beyond traditional institutions. Body Analyse the impact of erosion of family, neighbourhood, caste, and religious institutions on urban belonging. Discuss emerging alternatives such as voluntary associations, digital communities, workplace networks, and civic engagement as new forms of social bonding. Conclusion Conclude by highlighting the need to strengthen inclusive and sustainable forms of urban community to address social isolation and maintain social cohesion.
Why the question
Urbanisation and migration are weakening inherited social institutions such as family, caste, and neighbourhood, raising concerns about loneliness, social fragmentation, and the sustainability of urban social cohesion.
Key Demand of the question
The question requires analysis of how the decline of traditional social institutions has altered the meaning of belonging in urban settings and an examination of the new forms of community that are replacing or supplementing conventional social structures.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction Briefly contextualise urbanisation and social change in Indian cities and introduce the idea of shifting modes of belonging beyond traditional institutions.
• Analyse the impact of erosion of family, neighbourhood, caste, and religious institutions on urban belonging.
• Discuss emerging alternatives such as voluntary associations, digital communities, workplace networks, and civic engagement as new forms of social bonding.
Conclusion Conclude by highlighting the need to strengthen inclusive and sustainable forms of urban community to address social isolation and maintain social cohesion.
General Studies – 2
Topic: Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary
Topic: Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary
Q2. “Inconsistent interim orders pose a greater threat to constitutional legitimacy than delayed justice”. Discuss. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question Recent constitutional litigation has foregrounded the Supreme Court’s use of interim powers, raising concerns about judicial consistency, legitimacy, and the long-term impact of such orders on democratic governance and public trust. Key Demand of the question The question requires a critical evaluation of whether inconsistency in interim judicial orders poses a deeper threat to constitutional legitimacy than delays in justice, an assessment of its institutional and governance implications, and a discussion on possible corrective approaches. Structure of the Answer Introduction Briefly highlight the constitutional role of interim orders and their capacity to influence governance outcomes even before final judicial determination. Body Analyse how inconsistent interim orders affect constitutional legitimacy, judicial authority, and predictability in adjudication. Examine the implications of such inconsistency for governance, separation of powers, federal balance, and public confidence in the judiciary. Suggest normative and institutional measures to ensure principled restraint, consistency, and timely resolution of cases involving interim relief. Conclusion Conclude by underlining that constitutional legitimacy depends not only on judicial power but also on coherence, restraint, and institutional discipline in the exercise of interim jurisdiction.
Why the question
Recent constitutional litigation has foregrounded the Supreme Court’s use of interim powers, raising concerns about judicial consistency, legitimacy, and the long-term impact of such orders on democratic governance and public trust.
Key Demand of the question
The question requires a critical evaluation of whether inconsistency in interim judicial orders poses a deeper threat to constitutional legitimacy than delays in justice, an assessment of its institutional and governance implications, and a discussion on possible corrective approaches.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction Briefly highlight the constitutional role of interim orders and their capacity to influence governance outcomes even before final judicial determination.
• Analyse how inconsistent interim orders affect constitutional legitimacy, judicial authority, and predictability in adjudication.
• Examine the implications of such inconsistency for governance, separation of powers, federal balance, and public confidence in the judiciary.
• Suggest normative and institutional measures to ensure principled restraint, consistency, and timely resolution of cases involving interim relief.
Conclusion Conclude by underlining that constitutional legitimacy depends not only on judicial power but also on coherence, restraint, and institutional discipline in the exercise of interim jurisdiction.
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.
Q3. Discuss the importance of preventive and promotive approaches in mental health policy. Examine how they address inequities in access to mental healthcare in India. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: TH
Why the question Rising mental health concerns and unequal access to care have brought preventive and promotive approaches to the centre of health governance debates, making this issue critical for inclusive and rights-based public policy. Key Demand of the question The question requires discussing the significance of preventive and promotive strategies in mental health policy and examining how such approaches help reduce inequities in access to mental healthcare across social and regional groups in India. Structure of the Answer Introduction Briefly situate mental health within the broader right to health and explain the shift from treatment-centric to preventive and promotive policy approaches. Body Discuss the importance of preventive and promotive mental health strategies in reducing disease burden and normalising care. Examine how these approaches address access inequities related to geography, income, gender, and stigma. Conclusion Conclude by emphasising that strengthening preventive and promotive mental health policies is essential for equitable and sustainable healthcare delivery.
Why the question
Rising mental health concerns and unequal access to care have brought preventive and promotive approaches to the centre of health governance debates, making this issue critical for inclusive and rights-based public policy.
Key Demand of the question
The question requires discussing the significance of preventive and promotive strategies in mental health policy and examining how such approaches help reduce inequities in access to mental healthcare across social and regional groups in India.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction Briefly situate mental health within the broader right to health and explain the shift from treatment-centric to preventive and promotive policy approaches.
• Discuss the importance of preventive and promotive mental health strategies in reducing disease burden and normalising care.
• Examine how these approaches address access inequities related to geography, income, gender, and stigma.
Conclusion Conclude by emphasising that strengthening preventive and promotive mental health policies is essential for equitable and sustainable healthcare delivery.
General Studies -3
Topic: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment
Topic: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment
Q4. Public investment can buy time, but not growth sustainability. Examine the role of government capital expenditure in driving growth and the limits of state-led investment as a long-term growth engine. Also discuss the conditions necessary for a durable private investment cycle. (15 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: NIE
Why the question In the context of India’s post-pandemic growth strategy where public capital expenditure has acted as the primary growth anchor, raising concerns about fiscal limits, crowding-out risks, and the urgency of transitioning to a sustainable private-led investment cycle. Key demand of the question The question requires an evaluation of how government capital expenditure supports growth in the short to medium term, an assessment of its limitations as a permanent growth driver, and an analysis of the economic and institutional conditions needed to revive and sustain private investment. Structure of the answer Introduction Briefly contextualise India’s recent growth recovery driven by public capex, linking it to counter-cyclical fiscal policy and the challenge of ensuring long-term growth sustainability. Body Examine the role of government capital expenditure in stimulating demand, building infrastructure, and crowding in private investment. Analyse the limits of state-led investment by highlighting fiscal constraints, efficiency concerns, and crowding-out risks. Discuss the conditions necessary for a durable private investment cycle, such as macroeconomic stability, financial depth, regulatory certainty, and demand expansion. Conclusion Conclude by emphasising the need for a calibrated transition from public-led growth to a private-driven, job-rich investment cycle for sustainable economic development.
Why the question In the context of India’s post-pandemic growth strategy where public capital expenditure has acted as the primary growth anchor, raising concerns about fiscal limits, crowding-out risks, and the urgency of transitioning to a sustainable private-led investment cycle.
Key demand of the question The question requires an evaluation of how government capital expenditure supports growth in the short to medium term, an assessment of its limitations as a permanent growth driver, and an analysis of the economic and institutional conditions needed to revive and sustain private investment.
Structure of the answer
Introduction Briefly contextualise India’s recent growth recovery driven by public capex, linking it to counter-cyclical fiscal policy and the challenge of ensuring long-term growth sustainability.
• Examine the role of government capital expenditure in stimulating demand, building infrastructure, and crowding in private investment.
• Analyse the limits of state-led investment by highlighting fiscal constraints, efficiency concerns, and crowding-out risks.
• Discuss the conditions necessary for a durable private investment cycle, such as macroeconomic stability, financial depth, regulatory certainty, and demand expansion.
Conclusion Conclude by emphasising the need for a calibrated transition from public-led growth to a private-driven, job-rich investment cycle for sustainable economic development.
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment
Q5. Carrying capacity is central to sustainable development in biodiversity hotspots. Explain the concept of ecological carrying capacity. Assess its relevance for tourism planning in fragile forest landscapes. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: DTE
Why the question Assumes significance as biodiversity hotspots are witnessing rising tourism pressure alongside climate-induced ecological stress, making sustainability dependent on respecting ecological limits rather than maximising economic gains. Key demand of the question The question demands an explanation of ecological carrying capacity as a core sustainability concept and an assessment of its relevance for planning tourism in fragile forest landscapes. Structure of the answer Introduction Briefly contextualise the conflict between conservation needs and tourism expansion in ecologically fragile forest regions, linking sustainable development to ecological thresholds. Body Explain the concept of ecological carrying capacity as the maximum stress an ecosystem can absorb without long-term degradation. Assess the relevance of carrying capacity for tourism planning in fragile forest landscapes by highlighting its role in regulating visitor load, infrastructure expansion and conservation–livelihood balance. Conclusion Conclude by underlining that tourism aligned with ecological carrying capacity strengthens ecosystem resilience, safeguards biodiversity and ensures sustainable livelihoods in forest regions.
Why the question Assumes significance as biodiversity hotspots are witnessing rising tourism pressure alongside climate-induced ecological stress, making sustainability dependent on respecting ecological limits rather than maximising economic gains.
Key demand of the question The question demands an explanation of ecological carrying capacity as a core sustainability concept and an assessment of its relevance for planning tourism in fragile forest landscapes.
Structure of the answer
Introduction Briefly contextualise the conflict between conservation needs and tourism expansion in ecologically fragile forest regions, linking sustainable development to ecological thresholds.
• Explain the concept of ecological carrying capacity as the maximum stress an ecosystem can absorb without long-term degradation.
• Assess the relevance of carrying capacity for tourism planning in fragile forest landscapes by highlighting its role in regulating visitor load, infrastructure expansion and conservation–livelihood balance.
Conclusion Conclude by underlining that tourism aligned with ecological carrying capacity strengthens ecosystem resilience, safeguards biodiversity and ensures sustainable livelihoods in forest regions.
General Studies – 4
Q6. Explain the concept of probity in governance. Analyse its role in strengthening public trust in institutions. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question Probity in governance is a foundational GS-4 theme, especially relevant in the context of ethical erosion, corruption risks, and declining trust in public institutions, making it essential to assess its role in sustaining democratic legitimacy. Key Demand of the question The question demands a clear explanation of the concept of probity in governance and an analysis of how adherence to ethical conduct by public institutions helps in building and sustaining public trust. Structure of the Answer Introduction Briefly introduce probity as an ethical cornerstone of public administration rooted in integrity, transparency, accountability, and constitutional morality. Body Probity in governance: Suggest explaining the meaning, scope, and ethical content of probity, including integrity in conduct, fairness in decision-making, transparency in procedures, and accountability in public office. Role in strengthening public trust: Suggest analysing how probity enhances institutional legitimacy, reduces arbitrariness and corruption, improves citizen confidence, and reinforces the social contract between the state and citizens. Conclusion Conclude by emphasising that probity is indispensable for credible, resilient, and citizen-centric governance in a constitutional democracy.
Why the question Probity in governance is a foundational GS-4 theme, especially relevant in the context of ethical erosion, corruption risks, and declining trust in public institutions, making it essential to assess its role in sustaining democratic legitimacy.
Key Demand of the question The question demands a clear explanation of the concept of probity in governance and an analysis of how adherence to ethical conduct by public institutions helps in building and sustaining public trust.
Structure of the Answer
Introduction Briefly introduce probity as an ethical cornerstone of public administration rooted in integrity, transparency, accountability, and constitutional morality.
• Probity in governance: Suggest explaining the meaning, scope, and ethical content of probity, including integrity in conduct, fairness in decision-making, transparency in procedures, and accountability in public office.
• Role in strengthening public trust: Suggest analysing how probity enhances institutional legitimacy, reduces arbitrariness and corruption, improves citizen confidence, and reinforces the social contract between the state and citizens.
Conclusion Conclude by emphasising that probity is indispensable for credible, resilient, and citizen-centric governance in a constitutional democracy.
Q7. Information asymmetry is an ethical failure, not merely an administrative one. Evaluate its implications for democratic governance. Assess the role of RTI in addressing this challenge. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: InsightsIAS
Why the question Information control by the state has emerged as a critical ethical concern amid expanding executive discretion, digital governance, and declining public trust. Key demand of the question The question requires examining information asymmetry as an ethical issue beyond administrative inefficiency, analysing its consequences for democratic governance, and evaluating how the RTI framework addresses this ethical deficit. Structure of the answer Introduction Briefly anchor the discussion in democratic ethics, public trust, and the moral basis of the citizen–state relationship. Body Explain why information asymmetry constitutes an ethical failure in public authority. Examine how such asymmetry affects democratic values like participation, equality, and accountability. Assess the role of RTI in correcting ethical imbalances through transparency and citizen empowerment. Conclusion Emphasise ethical governance as a balance between power and transparency, with RTI as a continuing moral instrument rather than a mere legal tool.
Why the question
Information control by the state has emerged as a critical ethical concern amid expanding executive discretion, digital governance, and declining public trust.
Key demand of the question
The question requires examining information asymmetry as an ethical issue beyond administrative inefficiency, analysing its consequences for democratic governance, and evaluating how the RTI framework addresses this ethical deficit.
Structure of the answer
Introduction Briefly anchor the discussion in democratic ethics, public trust, and the moral basis of the citizen–state relationship.
• Explain why information asymmetry constitutes an ethical failure in public authority.
• Examine how such asymmetry affects democratic values like participation, equality, and accountability.
• Assess the role of RTI in correcting ethical imbalances through transparency and citizen empowerment.
Conclusion Emphasise ethical governance as a balance between power and transparency, with RTI as a continuing moral instrument rather than a mere legal tool.
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