Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) building, New Delhi. (Photo by Vivek Singh/The India Today Group/Getty Images)
As the UPSC Mains 2019 examination draws closer, aspirants try their best to prioritise topics in their revision. Here is a list of topics that have been frequently in news in the past year:
GS 1
- 1919 Morley Minto Act
- Rowlatt Act
- Jaliawala Bagh massacre
- Non-cooperation/Khilafat movement
- Erratic rainfall, heatwave and other weather events
- Urban as well as riverine floods
- Urban planning/urbanisation and Climate change
- Women and environment conservation - Eco-feminism
- MeToo, sexual harassment at workplace
- Monsoon
- Communal harmony
- Chinese versus Russian communism
- Decolonisation of China
- INA
- Regionalism, sub-nationalism
- Kashmir issue - integration of people
- water crisis
GS 2
- Triple Talaq
- Assam NRC
- Early childhood education and care
- Reservation based on economic criteria
- Reservation to Marathas, Jats
- Trump and new world order
- US-China trade war and implications for India
- China-Pak evil axis
- US-Iran relations and implications for India
- RBI independence, RBI-government relations
- Jammu and Kashmir reorganisation
- RTI amendment
- UAPA Act amendment
- Indian judiciary: pendency, overreach, infighting, parliamentary supremacy etc
- Lokpal/Lokayuktas
- Counter-terrorism/counter-radicalisation
- Undernourishment - Poshan abhiyan
- Freedom of expression- communication blackout
- Mob lynching
- Labour reforms
- Fit India movement
GS 3
- Current economic slowdown
- $5 trillion economy goal
- Private investment
- Boosting Make in India/ manufacturing share in GDP
- Solar and renewable energy vs coal power plants
- Biofuels
- Electric Vehicles
- UNFCCC COP 24
- Global recession prospects
- Agriculture marketing reforms/agri-exports
- Climate change
- Disaster management: Landslides, Floods, Avalanche, Fire
- Mission Shakti, Chandrayaan-2,
- Gaganyaan, Samudrayaan
- Indigenous defence manufacture
- 5G technology
- coastal regulatory zones
- Electronics, Textile, defence exports
- GSP
- WTO and other multilateral institutions
- North east insurgency, Maoism waning but still a threat
- Chief of Defence Staff
- Coal Mining
- Artifical intelligence, shared mobility
- Data privacy, data sovereignty, cyber security
- new defence commands- space, cyber etc
Candidates should revise and prepare the above topics well. A good strategy is to form a structure of a topic in mind, so that it can be easily recalled. For example, one technique is to explore all the political, social, economic, cultural, constitutional-legal, national security aspects of the topic.
Also, it is important for the candidates to relax and de-focus a day before exam. To be able to recall, and connect current affair points in their answers candidates need to have a relaxed mind. Meditation and Yoga may help.
The candidates should attempt the questions with a fresh mind, not with the baggage of preparation - I have studied this but not that, I know this but not that. The attitude of the candidate should be to do their best at the moment without thinking about the past or the future.