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UPSC Mains Answer Writing Practice – Insights SECURE: 7 August 2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

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General Studies – 1

Topic: Palas

Topic: Palas

Q1. The Pala period marked the zenith of Buddhist art in eastern India. Evaluate. How did this artistic tradition shape Buddhist culture in Southeast Asia? (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Difficult

Reference: InsightsIAS

Why the question Buddhist heritage globally, including restoration projects and cultural outreach in Southeast Asia. Key Demand of the question The answer must critically assess the artistic achievements during the Pala period in eastern India and explain the channels and extent of its artistic and cultural influence on Southeast Asian Buddhist traditions. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Briefly introduce the Palas as major patrons of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism and situate their contribution within the broader cultural context of early medieval India. Body Zenith of Buddhist art under the Palas – Highlight the development of a distinct style of sculpture, architecture (e.g. Somapura Mahavihara), manuscript art, and bronze casting supported by royal patronage and monastic institutions like Nalanda and Vikramsila. Influence on Southeast Asia – Explain how this artistic legacy was transmitted via monastic networks, pilgrimages, and maritime trade, and how it shaped iconography, temple architecture, and Buddhist practices in regions like Java, Pagan (Myanmar), Thailand, and Tibet. Conclusion Conclude by linking the Pala artistic tradition to India’s enduring cultural footprint in Asia and its relevance in contemporary Buddhist diplomacy.

Why the question Buddhist heritage globally, including restoration projects and cultural outreach in Southeast Asia.

Key Demand of the question The answer must critically assess the artistic achievements during the Pala period in eastern India and explain the channels and extent of its artistic and cultural influence on Southeast Asian Buddhist traditions.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction Briefly introduce the Palas as major patrons of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism and situate their contribution within the broader cultural context of early medieval India.

Zenith of Buddhist art under the Palas – Highlight the development of a distinct style of sculpture, architecture (e.g. Somapura Mahavihara), manuscript art, and bronze casting supported by royal patronage and monastic institutions like Nalanda and Vikramsila.

Influence on Southeast Asia – Explain how this artistic legacy was transmitted via monastic networks, pilgrimages, and maritime trade, and how it shaped iconography, temple architecture, and Buddhist practices in regions like Java, Pagan (Myanmar), Thailand, and Tibet.

Conclusion Conclude by linking the Pala artistic tradition to India’s enduring cultural footprint in Asia and its relevance in contemporary Buddhist diplomacy.

Topic: Turkish conquest of India, Ghaznavid, Muhammad Ghuri

Topic: Turkish conquest of India, Ghaznavid, Muhammad Ghuri

Q2. Trace the changes introduced in Indian architecture due to Turkish invasions. How did the use of new materials and techniques transform existing styles? Examine the role of the Delhi Sultanate in furthering this legacy. (15 M)

Difficulty Level: Difficult

Reference: InsightsIAS

Why the question: The question is relevant to understand the architectural consequences of the Turkish conquest of India and how it initiated long-term stylistic and technological shifts, especially under the Delhi Sultanate. Key Demand of the question: The answer must explain the changes brought in architecture due to Turkish invasions, analyse how new materials and techniques altered Indian styles, and assess how the Delhi Sultanate institutionalised and expanded this architectural legacy. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Mention the historical context of Turkish invasions and how they marked the beginning of Indo-Islamic architecture in India. Body: Changes due to Turkish invasions: New religious forms, destruction and reuse of temples, arches, domes, and geometric decoration. Transformation through materials and techniques: Use of lime mortar, pointed arches, Persian influences, local fusion. Delhi Sultanate’s role: Patronage, regional spread, civic projects, codification of style, transition to Mughal forms. Conclusion: Highlight the long-term significance of these innovations and how they laid the foundation for later syncretic styles.

Why the question: The question is relevant to understand the architectural consequences of the Turkish conquest of India and how it initiated long-term stylistic and technological shifts, especially under the Delhi Sultanate.

Key Demand of the question: The answer must explain the changes brought in architecture due to Turkish invasions, analyse how new materials and techniques altered Indian styles, and assess how the Delhi Sultanate institutionalised and expanded this architectural legacy.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Mention the historical context of Turkish invasions and how they marked the beginning of Indo-Islamic architecture in India.

Changes due to Turkish invasions: New religious forms, destruction and reuse of temples, arches, domes, and geometric decoration.

Transformation through materials and techniques: Use of lime mortar, pointed arches, Persian influences, local fusion.

Delhi Sultanate’s role: Patronage, regional spread, civic projects, codification of style, transition to Mughal forms.

Conclusion: Highlight the long-term significance of these innovations and how they laid the foundation for later syncretic styles.

General Studies – 2

Topic: Parliament and State Legislatures – structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges and issues arising out of these.

Topic: Parliament and State Legislatures – structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers & privileges and issues arising out of these.

Q3. What is the significance of the Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) as a mechanism of legislative oversight? Analyse its effectiveness in ensuring participatory law-making. How can its functioning be strengthened to meet contemporary democratic expectations? (15 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: TH

Why the question: The demand to refer key Sports Bills to a JPC highlights growing concerns about legislative scrutiny, executive overreach, and participatory law-making, making it an important institutional issue. Key Demand of the question: The question requires examining the importance of JPCs as legislative oversight tools, evaluating their success and shortcomings in enabling inclusive law-making, and proposing ways to improve their democratic effectiveness. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Mention the role of JPCs as tools for legislative scrutiny and democratic deepening in the Indian parliamentary system. Body: Significance of JPC as legislative oversight: Write on how it contributes to bipartisan scrutiny, stakeholder engagement, and institutional accountability. Effectiveness in participatory law-making (positive + challenges): Cover both enabling aspects (inclusivity, transparency) and limitations (delays, partisanship, non-binding nature). Ways to strengthen JPCs: Suggest reforms like procedural codification, binding timelines, transparency, and stakeholder inclusion. Conclusion: End with a futuristic line on institutionalising JPCs as vital components of democratic checks and balance in an evolving polity.

Why the question: The demand to refer key Sports Bills to a JPC highlights growing concerns about legislative scrutiny, executive overreach, and participatory law-making, making it an important institutional issue.

Key Demand of the question: The question requires examining the importance of JPCs as legislative oversight tools, evaluating their success and shortcomings in enabling inclusive law-making, and proposing ways to improve their democratic effectiveness.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Mention the role of JPCs as tools for legislative scrutiny and democratic deepening in the Indian parliamentary system.

Significance of JPC as legislative oversight: Write on how it contributes to bipartisan scrutiny, stakeholder engagement, and institutional accountability.

Effectiveness in participatory law-making (positive + challenges): Cover both enabling aspects (inclusivity, transparency) and limitations (delays, partisanship, non-binding nature).

Ways to strengthen JPCs: Suggest reforms like procedural codification, binding timelines, transparency, and stakeholder inclusion.

Conclusion: End with a futuristic line on institutionalising JPCs as vital components of democratic checks and balance in an evolving polity.

Topic: India and its neighbourhood- relations

Topic: India and its neighbourhood- relations

Q4. “In the absence of a coherent Tibet policy, India risks appearing both timid and reactive”. Analyse the risks of ambiguity. How can India craft a long-term approach? (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: IE

Why the question The question arises from the Dalai Lama’s recent succession announcement and China’s aggressive stance, which expose India’s lack of a structured Tibet policy and its strategic consequences. Key Demand of the question It requires an analysis of the strategic, diplomatic, and narrative risks stemming from India’s ambiguity on Tibet, and suggestions for a well-defined long-term policy approach. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Highlight the strategic and civilizational relevance of Tibet to India and the rising urgency to clarify policy amidst China’s assertiveness. Body Analyse the risks of ambiguity, such as strategic perception loss, weakened border claims, and erosion of soft power. Propose long-term measures including official acknowledgment of Tibet’s relevance, institutional policy frameworks, cultural diplomacy, and regional narrative-building. Conclusion Argue for a calibrated yet firm policy posture that aligns national interest with regional stability and democratic values.

Why the question The question arises from the Dalai Lama’s recent succession announcement and China’s aggressive stance, which expose India’s lack of a structured Tibet policy and its strategic consequences.

Key Demand of the question It requires an analysis of the strategic, diplomatic, and narrative risks stemming from India’s ambiguity on Tibet, and suggestions for a well-defined long-term policy approach.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction Highlight the strategic and civilizational relevance of Tibet to India and the rising urgency to clarify policy amidst China’s assertiveness.

Analyse the risks of ambiguity, such as strategic perception loss, weakened border claims, and erosion of soft power.

Propose long-term measures including official acknowledgment of Tibet’s relevance, institutional policy frameworks, cultural diplomacy, and regional narrative-building.

Conclusion Argue for a calibrated yet firm policy posture that aligns national interest with regional stability and democratic values.

General Studies – 3

Topic: Money-laundering and its prevention

Topic: Money-laundering and its prevention

Q5. What role do Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) and international information exchange frameworks play in addressing cross-border money laundering? Evaluate their effectiveness from India’s perspective. (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: TH

Why the question: India’s low conviction rate under PMLA despite a rising number of cases, along with evolving global standards like CRS and FATF compliance, makes it important to assess the effectiveness of cross-border financial cooperation tools. Key Demand of the question: The question seeks to understand how DTAAs and international frameworks help combat money laundering and evaluate their actual utility and constraints from India’s enforcement and policy lens. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Briefly introduce money laundering as a transnational challenge requiring treaty-based and institutional cooperation. Body: DTAAs as anti-laundering tools: Explain how DTAAs enable legal, financial, and investigative cooperation for identifying and recovering illicit foreign assets. Role of global frameworks: Discuss the function of CRS, FATF peer reviews, and FIU-based intelligence in tracking cross-border money flows and pressuring non-compliant jurisdictions. Evaluation from India’s standpoint: Provide a balanced assessment of outcomes, highlighting improvements in data access, diplomatic leverage, and deterrence, along with ongoing issues like poor convictions, cooperation delays, and institutional gaps. Conclusion: Close with the need to bridge domestic institutional capacity with global commitments for a credible and effective anti-money laundering regime.

Why the question: India’s low conviction rate under PMLA despite a rising number of cases, along with evolving global standards like CRS and FATF compliance, makes it important to assess the effectiveness of cross-border financial cooperation tools.

Key Demand of the question: The question seeks to understand how DTAAs and international frameworks help combat money laundering and evaluate their actual utility and constraints from India’s enforcement and policy lens.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Briefly introduce money laundering as a transnational challenge requiring treaty-based and institutional cooperation.

DTAAs as anti-laundering tools: Explain how DTAAs enable legal, financial, and investigative cooperation for identifying and recovering illicit foreign assets.

Role of global frameworks: Discuss the function of CRS, FATF peer reviews, and FIU-based intelligence in tracking cross-border money flows and pressuring non-compliant jurisdictions.

Evaluation from India’s standpoint: Provide a balanced assessment of outcomes, highlighting improvements in data access, diplomatic leverage, and deterrence, along with ongoing issues like poor convictions, cooperation delays, and institutional gaps.

Conclusion: Close with the need to bridge domestic institutional capacity with global commitments for a credible and effective anti-money laundering regime.

Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment

Topic: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment

Q6. What are the main causes behind the recent mass coral loss in the Great Barrier Reef? How do climate-induced and biological stressors interact to intensify reef degradation? Suggest long-term strategies for coral reef conservation. (15 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: DTE

Why the question: The 2025 AIMS report highlighted the most severe coral decline in four decades in the Great Barrier Reef, driven by mass bleaching and compounding ecological pressures, making it a critical global environmental concern. Key Demand of the question: The question requires identifying the primary causes of recent coral loss in the GBR, analysing how climatic and biological stressors interact synergistically to worsen degradation, and proposing comprehensive long-term conservation strategies. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Mention recent sharp coral loss and how it reflects broader marine ecosystem vulnerabilities due to climate change. Body: Causes: List distinct and recent causes including marine heatwaves, cyclones, disease, and crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks. Interaction: Explain how climate change-induced stress worsens biological threats, creating feedback loops. Solutions: Suggest long-term strategies such as climate mitigation, heat-resilient coral restoration, better marine governance, and community-led protection. Conclusion: End with a brief line on the urgent need for integrated global action and scientific resilience to safeguard coral reef ecosystems.

Why the question: The 2025 AIMS report highlighted the most severe coral decline in four decades in the Great Barrier Reef, driven by mass bleaching and compounding ecological pressures, making it a critical global environmental concern.

Key Demand of the question: The question requires identifying the primary causes of recent coral loss in the GBR, analysing how climatic and biological stressors interact synergistically to worsen degradation, and proposing comprehensive long-term conservation strategies.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Mention recent sharp coral loss and how it reflects broader marine ecosystem vulnerabilities due to climate change.

Causes: List distinct and recent causes including marine heatwaves, cyclones, disease, and crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks.

Interaction: Explain how climate change-induced stress worsens biological threats, creating feedback loops.

Solutions: Suggest long-term strategies such as climate mitigation, heat-resilient coral restoration, better marine governance, and community-led protection.

Conclusion: End with a brief line on the urgent need for integrated global action and scientific resilience to safeguard coral reef ecosystems.

General Studies – 4

Q7. Ethical leadership at the top is critical to embedding trust across institutions.” Examine the role of senior leadership in strengthening corporate trust. How does this influence internal governance culture? (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: NIE

Why the question: With increasing emphasis on corporate ethics and institutional credibility, the role of leadership in fostering trust has gained relevance in both public and private sector governance. Key Demand of the question: The answer must examine how ethical leadership at the top helps build trust within institutions and analyse how this shapes the internal governance culture through values, systems, and behaviour. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Define ethical leadership briefly and highlight its relevance in institutional trust-building. Body: Role of senior leadership in corporate trust: Explain how top leaders influence ethical standards, decision-making, and stakeholder relationships. Influence on internal governance culture: Highlight the impact on internal systems, employee conduct, and compliance frameworks. Conclusion: Reinforce that trust rooted in leadership integrity is essential for ethical resilience and long-term credibility.

Why the question: With increasing emphasis on corporate ethics and institutional credibility, the role of leadership in fostering trust has gained relevance in both public and private sector governance.

Key Demand of the question: The answer must examine how ethical leadership at the top helps build trust within institutions and analyse how this shapes the internal governance culture through values, systems, and behaviour.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction: Define ethical leadership briefly and highlight its relevance in institutional trust-building.

Role of senior leadership in corporate trust: Explain how top leaders influence ethical standards, decision-making, and stakeholder relationships.

Influence on internal governance culture: Highlight the impact on internal systems, employee conduct, and compliance frameworks.

Conclusion: Reinforce that trust rooted in leadership integrity is essential for ethical resilience and long-term credibility.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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