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http://www.insightsonindia.com/2013/07/23/how-to-prepare-upsc-civil-services-mains-paper-iii-gs-2/
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How to prepare GS 1 (i.e Paper II)
How to prepare GS-3 (i.e Paper IV)
How to prepare GS 4 (i.e Paper V)
UPSC has brought changes to the Civil Services Mains examination in both the pattern and the syllabus. We
know that now there are 4 General Studies Papers apart from one Essay and Optional paper each.
This article discusses preparation strategy for General Studies -2 (i.e Paper-III)
Before you start reading further, please remember the following important mantra given by the Almighty UPSC:
The questions are likely to test the candidates basic understanding of all relevant issues, and
ability to analyze, and take a view on conflicting socio economic goals, objectives and demands.
The candidates must give relevant, meaningful and succinct answers.
This sentence is the guiding light for your preparation. You dont have to master the topics, all you need is BASIC
UNDERSTANDING and the ability to analyze.
Basic understanding comes from reading and re-reading. Ability to analyze what you have understood from
reading comes from WRITING PRACTICE.
Get familiar with all the topics and sub-topics by writing them many times they should be
strongly etched in your memory.
Keep a copy of the syllabus always near you no matter where you are.
Before you start preparing for this paper, please read following NCERT texts, which might take 2-3 days of your
time.
1.
2.
3.
TOPIC-1
This part is very useful both for Prelims and Mains. Best book to study this section is D.D. Basus Introduction To
The Constitution Of India First 5 chapters in this book exclusively deal with this part of the syllabus.
For Basic Structure, These two articles might help you.
1) Basic Structure of the constitution revisited The Hindu ( PDF)
2) The Basic Structure of the constitution (PDF)
TOPIC-2
Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to
the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein.
One good source to get the critical perspective about these topics is Report of the 2nd Administrative Reforms
Commission, named Organizational Structure Of Government of India (13th Report)
For devolution of finances to local bodies, Read This.. (Dont look anywhere else)
For the concept part read Laxmikants Indian Polity. Buy the new updated 4th edition. (Chapters 12, 13 14
and 30).
But Mains demands not only basic understanding of these topics, but your critical and analytic abilities to answer
questions on these topics. So, try to relate these concepts to current event topics and write small articles. ARC
reports will help you in this regard.
Eg. Though devolution of funds, functionaries and functions is taking place in the local governments,
development is still a mirage in many parts of India. Critically analyze. (you can frame many questions like this)
TOPIC-3
Separation of powers between various organs, dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions.
A book by S. Chand Select Constitutions of the world is famous among Law students. This covers this topic
comprehensively. One should be careful to not to study this topic in depth.
In case you can afford to buy costly book D.D. Basus Classic on the Indian Constitution Shorter Constitution
Of India not only covers all above topics, it also covers the present topic.
Few links that might help:
Constitutions around the world
Evolution of Indian Constitution (It is compared with other constitutions you have to search in between)
Difference between US and EU constitutions.
Try to know some basics about the New Constitutions/reforms being framed/brought out in Nepal, Bhutan,
Myanmar and Pakistan.
(Again, emphasis should be on relating all these topics to the current events)
TOPIC-5
Parliament and State Legislatures structure, functioning, conduct of business, powers &
privileges and issues arising out of these.
To cover this topic, one stop source is Subhash Kashyps Our Parliament. (Why this book? Because it is written
by someone who worked inside the Parliament for most of his career, and this book gives a detailed idea about
the functioning of our Parliament as the above topic suggests, you should be familiar with all aspects of our
Parliament. This books is cheap, and is highly readable with lot of insights)
TOPIC-6
Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary; Ministries and
Departments of the Government; Pressure Groups and formal/informal associations and their role
in the Polity.
BASICS:
Union Executive
Parliament of India
Supreme Court of India
Executive in the States
State Legislature
High Courts and Subordinate Courts
Local Government:Urban and Rural
Pressure Groups
Again, Laxmikant is enough for this topic. Regarding pressure groups/ informal associations recent activism
shown by Civil society, conflict with the government and other such topics should be studied in depth.
TOPIC-7
Read Laxmikant for this part. Part VII,VIII and IX of this book completely covers these topics.
This part of the syllabus has given rise to some contentious issues such as political interference in the
appointment to various constitutional posts and statutory bodies. Eg EC, CBI, CVC, CAG, SC, Governors,
Lokayukta, Lokpal (if it comes into existence) etc. So, read this topic keeping in mind these above issues.
As I said before, you need to read all the above topics with an analytical perspective. To provide you with this,
there is a wonderful book published by Oxford University Press and authored by Pratap Bhanu Mehta, named
Public Institutions in India Performance and Design, will be immensely useful.
As its back cover says, This volume analytically assesses the design, performance, and adaptability of the
principal institutions of governance in India and their critical role in a democratic polity. That is what you need for
this paper.
TOPIC-10
Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out
of their design and implementation.
This part is covered well in the same book I mentioned above: Public Institutions in India Performance and
Design
Also, refer Economic Survey for government policies and PIB site regularly.
TOPIC-11
Development processes and the development industry- the role of NGOs, SHGs, various groups
and associations, donors, charities, institutional and other stakeholders
[Please note the phrase Development Industry it refers to aid industry developed around NGOs, UN bodies,
Charities etc and their role in the development process.]
Planning commission has various articles on these topics.
This report gives critical account of success and failure of SHGs in India . (just read the summary, conclusion and
recommendations NEVER read full report)
Article on NGO their evolution and role.
TOPIC-12
Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and
the performance of these schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions and Bodies constituted for
the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections.
Note the word STATE schemes by the states are also important.
Focus on the schemes being implemented by the Ministry of Women and Child welfare, Ministry of Social
Justice, Ministry of Rural Development and Ministry of Tribal affairs.
List Of Government Schemes India Wikipedia link.
List of All state and central scheme Govt. of India Website (here you can filter queries by the ministry- it is not
We read lot about this these days: Food security bill, PDS reform, Poverty reduction schemes, Poverty-line
controversy, Malnutrition figures, report on malnutrition(remember HungMa report?) etc.
TOPIC-13
Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability, e-governanceapplications, models, successes, limitations, and potential; citizens charters, transparency &
accountability and institutional and other measures
This introductory article on 2nd ARC site and 2nd ARC report on Promoting e-Governance: The SMART Way
Forward will be very useful to cover this topic.
E-governance Concept and Significance (IGNOU)
TOPIC-14
Again, 2nd ARC report (10th report) Refurbishing of Personnel Administration has whole chapter ( ch-4) on this
topic.
International Relations
TOPIC-15
India Bangladesh
India Sri lanka
India Maldives
India China
India Myanmar
2. For critical analysis This Book by Rajiv Sikri Challenge and Strategy Rethinking Indias Foreign Policy is
must for reading this part of the syllabus.
TOPIC 16
Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting
Indias interests
For Indias relations with the other countries, click here. (read only important counries USA, UK, EU, SA, Brazil,
Japan, Russia, Australia etc)
Ministry of External Affairs has briefs on all bilateral relations of India with regional and global groupings:
Andean Community (CAN) February 2013
ASEAN Regional Forum August 2012
Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) May 2013
BRICS April 2013
Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) January 2013
Central American Integration System (SICA) February 2013
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) August 2012
Commonwealth August 2011
Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) August 2012 eraction and Confidence
Building Measures in Asia (CICA) August 2012
East African Community April 2011
East Asia Summit January 2013
G-20 August 2012
Gulf Cooperation Council February 2013
India-African Union Relations
India-ASEAN Relations April 2013
India-EU Relations July 2013
Indian Ocean Rim Association for Regional Cooperation (IORARC) March 2013
India-United Nations Relations, January, 2013
Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC) May 2013
Pan African e-Network Project January 2013
Southern African Development Community Cooperation April 2012
TOPIC-18
Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on Indias interests,
Indian diaspora
This is a dynamic part effects of globalization, WTO policies, domestic policies of developed countries and their
effect on other countries (lot of examples from USA, UK can be given visa row, war on terrorism, immigration
policies, economic policies etc)
Indian diaspora their contribution to India, Indias contribution to them, Their contribution to the world etc. Their
problems in the residing countries, their rights in India constitutional/statutory provisions if any, their participation
in track two diplomacy, their role in Indian economy etc etc.
Newspaper is the best source I guess. For more info, visit the official site.
TOPIC- 19
UNO and its various bodies, agencies must be studied with respect to their structure, role, relevance and reforms.
UN reforms is the hot topic.
International Organizations (no UN bodies) such as APEC, ADB, ASEAN, OECD, NATO should be studied.
For links to all these organizations: click here.
Finally, for some articles from Yojana magazines (2013) that are related to many topics from this Paper, click
here.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
TWO RECOMMENDED BOOKS (Only If You Have More Time At Your Disposal) Both By Granville Austin
Classics On Indian Polity
1) The Indian Constitution: Cornerstone of A Nation (Classic Reissue) Review
2) Working a Democratic Constitution: A History of the Indian Experience Review
A SMALL LECTURE
Until now we saw what books to read. Now the question is how to remember most of the things we read and how
to translate them into better answers.
A common mistake most of the aspirants commit is reading so many books for a single topic.This mistake
costs both your time and ability to remember things clearly and concisely.
Stick to a single source and read it again and again. Remember The Same Source. Avoid the temptation of
doing Research on a topic.
Always Remember UPSC tests Basic Understanding. Not mastery over a topic.
Make short notes on each topic. It is while making notes that readers tend to do RESEARCH and scout
various sources. Stick to one book even if you are not 100% satisfied with it.
Remember that old saying? Jack of all trades, master of NONE. If you try to do Research, most probably
your name wont appear in the Final List. I guarantee it.
For Paper-II (i.e GS-1) being thorough with Current Events plays a crucial role in enabling you to acquire
analytical skills.
Very Important Part In The Preparation
Writing. Writing. Writing.
But what? One must practice answer writing to Previous year questions, or take a Mock Test. Whatever,
before you enter examination hall, you must have spent lot of time on answer writing.
Most Important Part In The Preparation
Revision. Revision. Re-Revision.
You do this and you appear for the Personality Test.
If you dont Revise what you read all these months you slightly miss the Personality Test, or You narrowly
miss appearing in the Final List.
Well, to sum up. To get the interview call all you need to do is: Read, Re-read the same source, Write and
Revise.
Preparation for this paper can be finished in 20 days provided you are focused and determined.
Of course. Eat well, Sleep well and Keep a good health. If you get a running nose on the day of the exam, 2 hours
out of 3 hours goes in draining it and drying it.