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32 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011

Union Public Service Commission


EXAMINATION NOTICE NO. 05/2011-CSP DATED 19.02.2011
(LAST DATE FOR RECEIPT OF APPLICATIONS : 21.03.2011)
CIVIL SERVICES EXAMINATION, 2011
(Commission's website - http://www.upsc.gov.in)
F. No. 1/8/2010-E.I(B) : Preliminary Examination of the Civil Services Examination for
recruitment to the Services and Posts mentioned below will be held by the Union Public
Service Commission on 12th June, 2011 in accordance with the Rules published by the IMPORTANT
Department of Personnel & Training in the Gazette of India Extraordinary dated 19th
February, 2011. 1. CANDIDATES TO ENSURE THEIR ELIGIBILITY FOR THE EXAMINATION:
(i) Indian Administrative Service. The Candidates applying for the examination should ensure that they fulfill all eligibility
(ii) Indian Foreign Service. conditions for admission to examination. Their admission to all the stages of the
(iii) Indian Police Service. examination will be purely provisional subject to satisfying the prescribed eligibility
(iv) Indian P & T Accounts & Finance Service, Group ‘A’. conditions.
(v) Indian Audit and Accounts Service, Group ‘A’. Mere issue of admission certificate to the candidate will not imply that his/her
(vi) Indian Revenue Service (Customs and Central Excise), Group ‘A’. candidature has been finally cleared by the Commission.
(vii) Indian Defence Accounts Service, Group ‘A’. Commission take up verification of eligibility conditions with reference to original
(viii) Indian Revenue Service (I.T.), Group ‘A’. documents only after the candidate has qualified for Interview/Personality Test.
(ix) Indian Ordnance Factories Service, Group ‘A’ (Assistant Works Manager, Admin- 2. HOW TO APPLY:
istration). (a) Candidates may apply Online by using the website http://www.upsconline.nic.in
(x) Indian Postal Service, Group ‘A’.
Detailed instructions for filling up online applications are available on the above-
(xi) Indian Civil Accounts Service, Group ‘A’.
mentioned website.
(xii) Indian Railway Traffic Service, Group ‘A’.
(b) Candidates may also apply Offline in the Common Application Form devised by
(xiii) Indian Railway Accounts Service, Group 'A'.
the Commission for its examinations, which can be purchased from the designated
(xiv) Indian Railway Personnel Service, Group ‘A’.
Head Post Offices/Post Offices (specified in Appendix III of the Notice) throughout the
(xv) Post of Assistant Security Commissioner in Railway Protection Force, Group ‘A’
country against cash payment of Rs. 30/- (Rupees Thirty only). Each such Form can
(xvi) Indian Defence Estates Service, Group ‘A’.
be used only once and only for one examination.
(xvii) Indian Information Service (Junior Grade), Group ‘A’.
In case of any difficulty in obtaining Application Forms from the designated HPOs/
(xviii) Indian Trade Service, Group 'A' (Gr. III).
POs, the candidates should immediately contact the concerned post Master or UPSC’s
(xix) Indian Corporate Law Service, Group "A".
(xx) Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service, Group ‘B’ (Section Officer’s Grade). “FORMS SUPPLY MONITORING CELL” over Telephone No. 011-23389366/FAX
(xxi) Delhi, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Daman & Diu and Dadra & No. 011-23387310.
Nagar Haveli Civil Service, Group 'B'. (c) Candidates are advised to read carefully the Instructions for filling up
(xxii) Delhi, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Daman & Diu and Dadra & the "Online Application Form” given in Appendix-II (A) and Instructions for Offline
Nagar Haveli Police Service, Group 'B'. Applications given in Appendix II (B) of this notice.
(xxiii) Pondicherry Civil Service, Group 'B'. 3. LAST DATE FOR RECEIPT OF APPLICATIONS :
(xxiv) Pondicherry Police Service, Group 'B'. (a) Online:
u The number of vacancies to be filled on the result of the examination is expected to The online Applications can be filled up to 21st March, 2011 till 11.59 PM after
be approximately 880. The number of vacancies may get increased. which the link will be disabled.
u Reservation will be made for candidates belonging to Scheduled Castes. Sched- (b) Offline:
uled Tribes, Other Backward Classes and Physically Disabled Categories in re- All offline applications must reach the “Controller of Examinations, Union Public
spect of vacancies as may be fixed by the Government. Service Commission, Dholpur House, Shahjahan Road, New Delhi - 110069” either
by hand or by Post/Speed Post or by Courier, on or before the 21st March,2011.
Note I : The list of services participating in the Civil Services Examination, 2011 is
Candidates should note that applications will be received by hand, only one at a
tentative.
time, at the designated counter(s) and not in bulk, till 5 PM only.
Note II : Services identified suitable for Physically Disabled Categories alongwith
However, in respect of candidates residing abroad or in certain remote localities
respective functional classification and physical requirements are given below :-
specified in para 6 of this Notice the last date for receipt of application by Post/Speed
Sl Name of the Category(ies) *Functional *Physical Post only (not by Hand or by Courier) is 28th March, 2011.
No. Service for which Classification requirements 4. PENALTY FOR WRONG ANSWERS:
identified Candidates should note that there will be penalty (negative marking) for wrong answers
marked by a candidate in the Objective Type Question Papers.
1. Indian (i) Locomotor BA, OL, OA, S, ST,W, 5. FACILITATION COUNTER FOR GUIDANCE OF CANDIDATES:
Administrative disability BH, MW SE, H, RWT In case of any guidance/information/clarification regarding their applications,
Service (ii) Visual PB candidature etc. candidates can contact UPSC’s Facilitation Counter near gate ‘C’ of
impairment its campus in person or over Telephone No. 011-23385271/011-23381125/011-
(iii) Hearing PD 23098543 on working days between 10.00 hrs and 17.00 hrs.
impairment 6. MOBILE PHONES BANNED:
2. Indian Foreign (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL S, ST, W, RW, (a) Mobile phones, pagers or any other communication devices are not allowed
Service disability C,MF,SE inside the premises where the examination is being conducted. Any infringement of
(ii) Visual LV these instructions shall entail disciplinary action including ban from future examinations.
impairment (b) Candidates are advised in their own interest not to bring any of the banned items
(iii) Hearing HH
including mobile phones/pagers to the venue of the examination, as arrangement for
impairment
safe-keeping cannot be assured.
7. Candidates are advised not to bring any valuable/costly items to the Examination
3. Indian Revenue (i) Locomotor OL, OA S, ST,W, BN,L Halls, as safe-keeping of the same cannot be assured. Commission will not be
Service disability, SE,MF, RW,H,C responsible for any loss in this regard.
(Customs & (ii) Hearing HH
Central Excise, impairment
CANDIDATES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY ONLINE
Gr. 'A') Sl Name of the Category(ies) *Functional *Physical
No. Service for which Classification requirements
4. Indian P&T (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S, W, SE, RW,
identified
Accounts & disability BL C
Finance Service, (ii) Visual LV
7. Indian Revenue (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S,ST,W,SE,
Gr. 'A' impairment Service (I.T.), disability BL RW,C
(iii) Hearing HH
Gr. 'A' (ii) Hearing HH
impairment impairment
5. Indian Audit & (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL S, ST,W,BN, 8. Indian Ordnance (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL S,ST,W,BN,RW,
Accounts disability SE,RW,H,C Factories disability SE,H,C
Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual LV Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual LV
impairment impairment
(iii) Hearing HH (iii) Hearing HH
impairment impairment
9. Indian Postal (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S, ST, W, BN,
6. Indian Defence (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S, ST, W, BN,
Service, Gr. 'A. disability BL RW, SE, H, C
Accounts disability BL SE, RW, C
(ii) Visual B, LV
Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual LV
impairment
impairment
(ii) Hearing HH
(iii) Hearing HH impairment
impairment Contd.....

"Government strives to have a workforce which reflects gender balance and women candidates are encouraged to apply."
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 33

Sl Name of the Category(ies) *Functional *Physical aminations, Union Public Service Commis- sioned Officers and ECOs/SSCOs who
No. Service for which Classification requirements sion, giving full justification as to why he/ have rendered at least five years Military
identified she desires a change in centre. Such re- Service as on 1st August, 2011 and have
10. Indian Civil (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S,ST,W,SE,
quests will be considered on merits but been released (i) on completion of assign-
requests received in the Commission’s ment (including those whose assignment
Accounts disability BL RW,H,C
Office after 20th April, 2011 will not be en- is due to be completed within one year from
Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual LV
impairment
tertained under any circumstances nor will 1st August, 2011) otherwise than by way
such communications be replied to. of dismissal or discharge on account of
(iii) Hearing HH
impairment (B) PLAN OF EXAMINATION : misconduct or inefficiency, or (ii) on account
The Civil Services Examination will con- of physical disability attributable to Military
11. Indian Railway (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S,ST,W,SE,
Accounts disability BL RW, H,C sist of two successive stages (vide Ap- Service, or (iii) on invalidment.
Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual LV pendix I Section-I below). (vi) Upto a maximum of five years in the
impairment (i) Civil Services Preliminary Examination case of ECOs/SSCOs who have completed
(iii) Hearing HH (Objective type) for the selection of candi- an initial period of assignment of five years
impairment dates for the Main Examination; and Military Service as on 1st August, 2011 and
12. Indian Railway (i) Locomotor OA, OL S,ST,W,BN, (ii) Civil Services Main Examination (Writ- whose assignment has been extended
Personnel disability SE,RW,H,C beyond five years and in whose case the
ten and Interview) for the selection of can-
Service, Gr. 'A' (ii) Visual B, LV Ministry of Defence issues a certificate that
impairment didates for the various Services and posts
noted above. they can apply for civil employment and
(iii) Hearing HH
impairment Applications are now invited for the Pre- that they will be released on three months
13. Indian Defence (i) Locomotor OA, OL S,ST,W,BN, liminary Examination only. Candidates who notice on selection from the date of receipt
Estates Service disability MF,PP,KC, are declared by the Commission to have of offer of appointment.
Gr. 'A' (ii) Blindness or LV SE,RW,H,C (vii) upto a maximum of 10 years in the
Low Vision qualified for admission to the Main Exami-
nation will have to apply again, in the case of blind, deaf-mute and
(iii) Hearing HH
impairment Detailed Application Form which would be orthopaedically handicapped persons.
supplied to them. The Main Examination is NOTE I:
14. Indian Information (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, ,
Service, Gr. 'A' disability BL likely to be held in October/November, Candidates belonging to the Scheduled
(ii) Visual B,LV S,ST,W,SE 2011. Castes and the Scheduled Tribes and the
impairment RW,H,C Other Backward Classes who are also cov-
3. ELIGIBILITY CONDITIONS :
(iii) Hearing HH
impairment (i) Nationality ered under any other clauses of para 3(ii)
(1) For the Indian Administrative Service (b) above, viz. those coming under the cat-
15. Indian Trade (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S,ST,W,BN,
and the Indian Police Service, a candidate egory of Ex-servicemen, persons domi-
Service Gr. ‘A’ disability BL MF,SE,RW, must be a citizen of India. ciled in the State of J & K, blind, deaf-mute
(Gr.III) (ii) Visual LV H,C and orthopaedically handicapped etc. will
impairment (2) For other services, a candidate must be
be eligible for grant of cumulative age-re-
(iii) Hearing HH either :—
impairment laxation under both the categories.
(a) a citizen of India, or
NOTE II:
16. Indian Corporate (i) Locomotor OA,OL, ST, RW, SE (b) a subject of Nepal, or
Law Service, disability BL S,BN,H The term ex-servicemen will apply to the
(c) a subject of Bhutan, or
Group 'A' (ii) Visual LV persons who are defined as ex-service-
impairment (d) a Tibetan refugee who came over to
men in the Ex-servicemen (Re-employment
(iii) Hearing HH India before 1st January, 1962 with the in-
in Civil Services and Posts) Rules, 1979,
impairment tention of permanently settling in India, or
as amended from time to time.
17. Armed Forces (i) Locomotor OA, OL S,ST,W,BN, (e) a person of Indian origin who has mi-
NOTE III :
Headquarters disability MF, SE, RW, grated from Pakistan, Burma, Sri Lanka, East
Civil Service, Gr.'B' (ii) Visual LV H,C
The age concession under para 3(ii) (b)
African countries of Kenya, Uganda, the
(Section Officers' impairment (v) and (vi) will not be admissible to Ex-
United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia,
Grade) (iii) Hearing HH Servicemen and Commissioned Officers
impairment Malawi, Zaire, Ethiopia and Vietnam with the
including ECOs/SSCOs who are released
intention of permanently settling in India.
18. Delhi, Andaman & (i) Locomotor OA, OL,OAL, S,ST,W,SE, on own request.
Nicobar Islands, disability BL RW, MF, H,C Provided that a candidate belonging to ca-
NOTE IV:
Lakshadweep, (ii) Hearing HH tegories (b), (c), (d) and (e) shall be a per-
Daman & Diu and impairment Notwithstanding the provision of age-re-
son in whose favour a certificate of eligibil-
Dadra & Nagar laxation under para 3 (ii) (b) (vii) above, a
ity has been issued by the Government of
Haveli Civil physically disabled candidate will be con-
Service, Gr. 'B' India.
sidered to be eligible for appointment only
19. Delhi, Andaman & (i) Locomotor OL S,ST,W,BN, Provided further that candidates belong-
if he/she (after such physical examination
Nicobar Islands, disability PP, KC, MF, ing to categories (b), (c) and (d) above will
as the Government or appointing author-
Lakshadweep, (ii) Hearing HH SE, RW, H,C not be eligible for appointment to the In-
Daman & Diu and impairment ity, as the case may be, may prescribe) is
dian Foreign Service.
Dadra & Nagar found to satisfy the requirements of physi-
Haveli Police A candidate in whose case a certificate of cal and medical standards for the con-
Service, Gr. 'B' eligibility is necessary, may be admitted to
cerned Services/posts to be allocated to
20. Pondicherry (i) Locomotor OA, OL, OAL, S,ST,W,SE, the examination but the offer of appoint-
the physically disabled candidates by the
Civil Service, disability BL, LV RW,H,C ment may be given only after the neces-
Government.
(Group B) (ii) Visual LV sary eligibility certificate has been issued
impairment SAVE AS PROVIDED ABOVE THE AGE
to him/her by the Government of India.
(iii) Hearing HH LIMITS PRESCRIBED CAN IN NO CASE
impairment (ii) Age Limits :
BE RELAXED.
(a) A candidate must have attained the
*For details about Functional Classification and Physical Requirements, para 9 of this Notice may The date of birth accepted by the Commis-
please be referred. age of 21 years and must not have attained
sion is that entered in the Matriculation or
the age of 30 years on 1st August, 2011,
2. (A) CENTRES OF EXAMINATION : The Examination will be held at the following Secondary School Leaving Certificate or in
i.e. he/she must have been born not ear-
Centres: a certificate recognised by an Indian Uni-
lier than 2nd August, 1981 and not later
versity as equivalent to Matriculation or in
AGARTALA CHANDIGARH IMPHAL LUCKNOW RANCHI than 1st August, 1990.
an extract from a Register of Matriculates
AHMEDABAD CHENNAI ITANAGAR MADURAI SAMBALPUR (b) The upper age limit prescribed above maintained by a University, which extract
AIZAWL CUTTACK JAIPUR MUMBAI SHILLONG will be relaxable : must be certified by the proper authority of
ALIGARH DEHRADUN JAMMU NAGPUR SHIMLA (i) upto a maximum of five years if a candi- the University or in the Higher Secondary
ALLAHABAD DELHI JODHPUR PANAJI (GOA) SRINAGAR date belongs to a Scheduled Caste or a or an equivalent examination certificate.
AURANGABAD PATNA THIRUVANANTHAPURAM
Scheduled Tribe. These certificates are required to be sub-
DHARWAD JORHAT
BANGALORE PUDUCHERRY TIRUPATI
(ii) upto a maximum of three years in the mitted only at the time of applying for the
DISPUR KOCHI
case of candidates belonging to Other Back- Civil Services (Main) Examination.
BAREILLY GANGTOK KOHIMA PORT BLAIR UDAIPUR
ward Classes who are eligible to avail of No other document relating to age like horo-
BHOPAL HYDERABAD KOLKATA RAIPUR VISHAKHAPATNAM
reservation applicable to such candidates. scopes, affidavits, birth extracts from Mu-
The centres and the date of holding the Hyderabad, Kolkata, Lucknow, Dispur (iii) upto a maximum of five years if a can- nicipal Corporation, service records and
examination as mentioned above are li- and Mumbai. Candidates admitted to the didate had ordinarily been domiciled in the the like will be accepted.
able to be changed at the discretion of examination will be informed of the time State of Jammu & Kashmir during the pe- The expression Matriculation/Secondary
the Commission. While every effort will table and place or places of examina- riod from the 1st January, 1980 to the 31st Examination Certificate in this part of the
be made to allot the candidates to the tion. day of December, 1989. instruction includes the alternative certifi-
centre of their choice for examination, The candidates should note that no request (iv) upto a maximum of three years in the cates mentionedabove.
the Commission may, at their discretion for change of centre will normally be case of Defence Services personnel dis- NOTE 1:
allot a different centre to a candidate, granted. However, when a candidate de- abled in operations during hostilities with
Candidates should note that only the Date
when circumstances so warrant. Blind sires a change in centre from the one he/ any foreign country or in a disturbed area
of Birth as recorded in the Matriculation/
candidates will, however, be required to she had indicated in his/her Application and released as a consequence thereof.
Secondary Examination Certificate or an
take the examination at any one of the Form for the Examination, he/she must send (v) upto a maximum of five years in the equivalent certificate as on the date of
seven centres viz. Chennai, Delhi, a letter addressed to the Controller of Ex- case of ex-servicemen including Commis- submission of applications will be ac-
34 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
cepted by the Commission and no sub- permitted four attempts at the examination. overflows on the application form itself but an Information Brochure containing gen-
sequent request for its change will be Provided that this restriction on the num- within the space provided on the Applica- eral instructions for filling up the form, an
considered or granted. ber of attempts will not apply in the case of tion form itself. The impression of the can- acknowledgement card and an envelope
NOTE 2 : Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes cellation mark should be clear and distinct for sending the application will be obtain-
Candidates should also note that once a candidates who are otherwise eligible. to facilitate the identification of date and able from the designated Head Post Of-
Date of Birth has been claimed by them Provided further that the number of the Post Office of issue. fices/Post Offices throughout the country
and entered in the records of the Com- attempts permissible to candidates belong- Candidates residing abroad should deposit as listed in Appendix-III of Notice against
mission for the purpose of admission to ing to Other Backward Classes, who are the prescribed fee in the office of India's cash payment of Rs. 30/- (Rupees Thirty
an examination, no change will be allowed otherwise eligible shall be seven. The re- High Commissioner, Ambassador or rep- only). Form should be purchased from the
subsequently (or at any other examina- laxation will be available to the candidates resentative abroad as the case may be for designated Head Post Offices/Post Offices
tion of the Commission) on any grounds who are eligible to avail of reservation ap- credit to account head "051-Public Service only and not from any other agency. This
whatsoever. plicable to such candidates. Commission-Examination Fees" and at- Form can be used only once and for only
NOTE 3 : Provided further that a physically handi- tach the receipt with the application. one examination. Candidates who wish
capped will get as many attempts as are All female candidates and candidates to apply offline must use the form supplied
The candidate should exercise due care
available to other non-physically handi- belonging Scheduled Caste/Scheduled with the Information Brochure only and they
while entering their date of birth in col-
capped candidates of his or her commu- Tribe/ Physically Handicapped catego- should in no case use photocopy/repro-
umn 3 of the Application Form for the Pre-
nity, subject to the condition that a physi- ries are exempted from payment of fee. duction/unauthorisedly printed copy of the
liminary Examination. If on verification at
cally handicapped candidate belonging to No fee exemption is, however, available Form. Since this form is electronically
any subsequent stage, any variation is
the General Category shall be eligible for to OBC candidates and they are required scanned, due care should be taken to fill
found in their date of birth from the one
seven attempts. The relaxation will be avail- to pay the prescribed fee in full. up the application form, correctly. While fill-
entered in their matriculation or equiva-
able to the physically handicapped candi- Physically disabled persons are exempted ing up the application form, please refer
lent Examination certificate, disciplinary
dates who are eligible to avail of reserva- from the payment of fee provided they are to detailed instructions given in Appen-
action will be taken against them by the
tion applicable to such candidates. otherwise eligible for appointment to the dix-II(B) of this Notice. The candidates
Commission under the Rules.
NOTE : Services/Posts to be filled on the results of should also fill up in the relevant places of
(iii) Minimum Educational Qualifica-
this examination on the basis of the stan- the Acknowledgement Card, their Appli-
tions : (i) An attempt at a Preliminary Examina-
dards of medical fitness for these Services/ cation Form Number and the name of the
The candidate must hold a degree of any of tion shall be deemed to be an attempt at
Posts (including any concessions specifi- examination. The applicants are required
Universities incorporated by an Act of the the Examination.
cally extended to the physically disabled). to affix the postage stamp of Rs. Six on the
Central or State Legislature in India or other (ii) If a candidate actually appears in any
A physically disabled candidate claiming Acknowledgement Card and send the
educational institutions established by an one paper in the Preliminary Examination,
fee concession will be required by the same along with application form to UPSC.
Act of Parliament or declared to be deemed he/she shall be deemed to have made an
Commission to submit along with their If an applicant fails to affix the postage
as a University Under Section-3 of the Uni- attempt at the Examination.
Detailed Application Form, a certified copy stamp of requisite amount his
versity Grants Commission Act, 1956, or (iii) Notwithstanding the disqualification/
of the certificate from a Government Hos- acknowledgement card will not be dis-
possess an equivalent qualification. cancellation of candidature, the fact of ap-
pital/Medical Board in support of his/her patched and Commission will not be re-
NOTE I : pearance of the candidate at the examina-
claim for being physically disabled. sponsible for non-receipt of
Candidates who have appeared at an ex- tion will count as an attempt. acknowledgement cards by the applicant.
(v) Restrictions on applying for the ex- NOTE :
amination the passing of which would ren- The duly filled in application form and the
der them educationally qualified for the amination : Notwithstanding the aforesaid provision for
acknowledgement card should then be
Commission’s examination but have not A candidate who is appointed to the Indian fee exemption, a physically disabled can-
mailed in the special envelope supplied
been informed of the results as also the Administrative Service or the Indian For- didate will be considered to be eligible for
with the Information Brochure. The candi-
candidates who intend to appear at such a eign Service on the results of an earlier appointment only if he/she (after such
date should also write the name of exami-
qualifying examination will also be eligible examination and continues to be a mem- physical examination as the Government
nation viz. Civil Services (Preliminary)
for admission to the Preliminary Examina- ber of that service will not be eligible to or the Appointing Authority, as the case
Examination, 2011 on the envelope be-
tion. All candidates who are declared quali- compete at this examination. may be, may prescribe) is found to satisfy
fore dispatching it to Controller of Exami-
fied by the Commission for taking the Civil the requirements of physical and medical
In case such a candidate is appointed to nations, Union Public Service Commission,
Services (Main) Examination will be re- standards for the concerned Services/
the IAS/IFS after the Preliminary Examina- Dholpur House, Shahjahan Road, New
quired to produce proof of passing the req- Posts to be allocated to physically disabled
tion of Civil Services Examination, 2011 is Delhi-110069.
uisite examination with their application for candidates by the Government.
over and he/she continues to be a mem- (c) All candidates, whether already in Gov-
the Main Examination failing which such ber of that service, he/she shall not be eli- 'Postage Stamps' will in no case be ac-
ernment Service, Government owned in-
candidates will not be admitted to the Main gible to appear in the Civil Services (Main) cepted in lieu of 'Central Recruitment Fee
dustrial undertakings or other similar
Examination. The applications for the Main Examination, 2011 notwithstanding his/her Stamp'.
organisations or in private employment
Examination will be called sometime in the having qualified in the Preliminary Exami- Candidates should note that the fee sent
should submit their applications direct to
month of July/August, 2011. nation, 2011. through Indian Postal Orders, Bank Draft,
the Commission. If any candidate forwards
NOTE II : Also provided that if such a candidate is Money Order, Crossed Cheque, Cur-
his/her application through his/her em-
In exceptional cases the Union Public Ser- appointed to IAS/IFS after the commence- rency notes or Treasury Challan etc. will
ployer and it reaches the Union Public
vice Commission may treat a candidate who ment of the Civil Services (Main) Examina- not be accepted by the Commission and
Service Commission late, the application,
has not any of the foregoing qualifications tion, 2011 but before the result thereof and such applications will be treated as with-
even if submitted to the employer before
as a qualified candidate provided that he/ continues to be a member of that service, out fee and will be summarily rejected.
the closing date, will not be considered.
she has passed examination conducted by he/she shall not be considered for appoint- NOTE I :
Persons already in Government Service,
the other Institutions, the standard of which ment to any service/post on the basis of APPLICATIONS NOT ACCOMPANIED BY
whether in a permanent or temporary ca-
in the opinion of the Commission justifies the result of this examination viz. Civil Ser- THE PRESCRIBED FEE (UNLESS RE-
pacity or as workcharged employees other
his/her admission to the examination. vices Examination, 2011. MISSION OF FEE IS CLAIMED) SHALL BE
than casual or daily rated employees or
NOTE III : (vi) Physical Standards : SUMMARILY REJECTED.
those serving under the Public Enterprises
Candidates possessing professional and Candidates must be physically fit accord- NOTE II : are however, required to submit an under-
technical qualifications which are ing to physical standards for admission to Fee once paid shall not be refunded under taking that they have informed in writing
recognised by Government as equivalent Civil Services Examination, 2011 as per any circumstances nor can the fee be held their Head of Office/Department that they
to professional and technical degree guidelines given in Appendix-III of Rules in reserve for any other examination or have applied for the Examination.
would also be eligible for admission to the for Examination published in the Gazette selection. Candidates should note that in case a com-
examination. of India Extraordinary dated 19th Febru- NOTE III : munication is received from their employer
NOTE IV : ary, 2011. If any candidate who took the Civil Ser- by the Commission withholding permission
Candidates who have passed the final pro- 4. FEE : vices Examination held in 2010 wishes to to the candidates applying for/appearing
fessional M.B.B.S. or any other Medical (a) Candidates applying Online (exempt- apply for admission to this examination, at the examination, their application will
Examination but have not completed their ing Female/SC/ST/PH Candidates who are he/she must submit his/her application so be liable to be rejected/candidature will be
internship by the time of submission of their exempted from payment of fee) are re- as to reach the Commission’s Office by liable to be cancelled.
applications for the Civil Services (Main) quired to pay a reduced fee of Rs. 50/- (Ru- the prescribed date without waiting for the NOTE 1 :
Examination, will be provisionally admit- pees Fifty only) either by remitting the results or an offer of appointment. While filling in his/her Application Form,
ted to the Examination provided they sub- money in any Branch of SBI by Cash, or by NOTE IV : the candidate should carefully decide
mit along with their application a copy of using net banking facility of SBI or by using Candidates admitted to the Main Exami- about his/her choice of centre for the Ex-
certificate from the concerned authority of Visa/Master Credit/Debit Card. nation will be required to pay a further fee amination. More than one application
the University/Institution that they had (b) Candidates applying Offline (through of Rs. 200/- (Rupees Two hundreds only). from a candidate giving different centres
passed the requisite final professional Common Application Form) are required 5. HOW TO APPLY : will not be accepted in any case. Even if
medical examination. In such cases, the to pay a fee of Rs. 100/- (Rupees One Hun- (a) Candidates may apply online using the a candidate sends more than one com-
candidates will be required to produce at dred only) through a single Central Re- website http://www.upsconline.nic.in De- pleted application the Commission will
the time of their interview original Degree cruitment Stamp. Central Recruitment Fee tailed instructions for filling up online ap- accept only one application at their dis-
or a certificate from the concerned compe- Stamp (NOT Postage Stamp) of the requi- plications are available on the cretion and the Commission's decision
tent authority of the University/Institution that site denomination may be obtained from abovementioned website. in the matter shall be final.
they had completed all requirements (in- the Post Office and affixed on the applica- (b) Candidates may also apply offline in If any candidate appears at a centre
cluding completion of internship) for the tion form in the space provided therein. The the Common Application form devised by other than the one indicated by the Com-
award of the Degree. stamp must be got cancelled from the issu- the commission for its examinations which mission in his/her Admission Certificate,
(iv) Number of attempts : ing Post Office with the date stamp of the can be processed on computerized ma- the papers of such a candidate will not
Every candidate appearing at the exami- Post Office in such a manner that the im- chines. This application form along with be valued and his/her candidature will be
nation who is otherwise eligible, shall be pression of the cancellation mark partially liable to cancellation.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 35
NOTE 2 : Certificates permitting them to take the ex- The candidates should note that Preliminary examination have been ac-
Since these Application Forms are to be amination, or applications will be received by hand only cepted by the Commission as true and
processed in a computerised system, (xiii)attempting to commit or as the case one at a time at the designated correct. Candidates may note that the
due care should be taken by the candi- may be abetting the Commission of all or counter(s) and not in bulk, till 5 PM only. Commission takes up the verification of
dates to fill up their Application Form cor- any of the acts specified in the foregoing NOTE IV: eligibility conditions of a candidate, with
rectly. Necessary instructions for filling clauses; Applications received through Couriers or reference to original documents, only af-
up the Form may be seen at Appendix II may in addition to rendering himself/her- Courier Services of any type shall be ter the candidate has qualified for Civil
(B). No relevant columns of the applica- self liable to criminal prosecution, be liable. treated as having been received "By hand" Services (Main) Examination. Unless can-
tion should be left blank. Incomplete or (a) to be disqualified by the Commis- at the Commission's Counter. didature is formally confirmed by the Com-
defective applications shall be sum- sion from the examination for 7. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICA- mission, it continues to be provisional.
marily rejected. No representation or which he/she is a candidate and/ TIONS : The decision of the Commission as to the
correspondence regarding such rejec- or Immediately on receipt of an application eligibility or otherwise of a candidate for
tion shall be entertained under any cir- (b) to be debarred either permanently from a candidate, the Acknowledgement admission to the Examination shall be final.
cumstances. or for a specified period Card submitted by him/her alongwith the Candidates should note that the name in the
Candidates are not required to submit (i) by the Commission from any Application Form will be despatched to him/ Admission Certificate in some cases, may
alongwith their applications any certifi- examination or selection held her by the Commission’s Office duly be abbreviated due to technical reasons.
cate in support of their claims regarding by them; stamped in token of receipt of his/her Ap- (ii) In the event of a candidate receiving
Age, Educational Qualifications, Sched- (ii) by the Central Government plication. If a candidate does not receive more than one Admission Certificate from
uled Castes/Scheduled Tribes/Other from any employment under the Acknowledgement Card within 30 days, the Commission, he/she should use only
Backward Classes and Physically dis- them; and he/she should at once contact the Com- one of these Admission Certificates for ap-
abled etc. which will be verified at the (c) if he/she is already in service un- mission by quoting his/her Application pearing in the examination and return the
time of the Main examination only. The der Government to disciplinary ac- Form No. and name & year of examina- other(s) to the Commission's Office.
candidates applying for the examination tion under the appropriate Rules. tion. Candidates delivering the Application (iii) A candidate must see that communica-
should ensure that they fulfil all the eligi- Form in person at the Commission’s tions sent to him/her at the address stated
Provided that no penalty under this Rules
bility conditions for admission to the Ex- Counter will be issued Acknowledgement in his/her application are redirected, if nec-
shall be imposed except after
amination. Their admission at all the Card at the Counter itself. The mere fact essary. Change in address should be com-
(i) giving the candidate an opportunity of
stages of examination for which they are that a candidate’s application has been ac- municated to the Commission at the earli-
making such representation, in writing as
admitted by the Commission viz. Prelimi- knowledged by the Commission does not est opportunity. Although the Commission
he/she may wish to make in that behalf; and
nary Examination, Main (Written) Exami- mean that his/her candidature for the ex- make every effort to take account of such
nation and Interview Test will be purely (ii) taking the representation, if any, sub-
amination has been accepted by the Com- changes, they cannot accept any respon-
provisional, subject to their satisfying the mitted by the candidate within the period
mission. Candidates will be informed at the sibility in the matter.
prescribed eligibility conditions. If on veri- allowed to him/her into consideration.
earliest possible about their admission to (iv) Candidates are informed that as the
fication at any time before or after the 6. LAST DATE FOR RECEIPT OF AP- the examination or rejection of their appli- Preliminary Examination is only a screening
Preliminary Examination, Main (written) PLICATIONS : cation. test, no marks sheets will be supplied to suc-
Examination and Interview Test, it is (i) ONLINE : 8. CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE cessful or unsuccessful to be Confirmed can-
found that they do not fulfil any of the The Online Applications can be filled COMMISSION: didates and no correspondence will be en-
eligibility conditions, their candidature up to 21st March 2011 till 11.59 pm after The Commission will not enter into any cor- tertained by the Commission, in this regard.
for the examination will be cancelled by which the link will be disabled. respondence with the candidates about their (v) If a candidate receives an Admission
the Commission. (ii) OFFLINE : candidature except in the following cases: Certificate in respect of some other candi-
If any of their claims is found to be incor- (i) Every candidate for this examination will date on account of handling error, the same
(a) All Offline Applications must reach the
rect, they may render themselves liable be informed at the earliest possible date of should be immediately returned to the
"Controller of Examinations, Union Public
to disciplinary action by the Commission the result of his/her application. Admission Commission with a request to issue the
Service Commission, Dholpur House,
in terms of Rule 14 of the Rules for the Certificates, indicating the Roll Nos. will be correct Admission Certificate. Candidates
Shahjahan Road, New Delhi-110069" ei-
Civil Services Examination, 2011 repro- issued to the candidates who are admitted may note that they will not be allowed to
ther by hand or by Post/Speed Post or by
duced below : to the examination. The Admission Certifi- take the examination on the strength of an
Courier, on or before the 21st March, 2011.
A candidate who is or has been declared cate will bear the photograph of the candi- Admission Certificate issued in respect of
(b) In respect of applications received only
by the Commission to be guilty of : date. If a candidate does not receive his Ad- another candidate.
by post (by post/speed post) from the can-
(i) Obtaining support for his/her candida- didates residing in Assam, Meghalaya, mission Certificate or any other communica- IMPORTANT : ALL COMMUNICATIONS
ture by the following means, namely :– Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur, tion regarding his/her candidature for the TO THE COMMISSION SHOULD INVARI-
(a) offering illegal gratification to, or Nagaland, Tripura, Sikkim, Jammu & Kash- examination three weeks before the com- ABLY CONTAIN THE FOLLOWING PAR-
(b) applying pressure on, or mir, Lahaul and Spiti District and Pangi Sub- mencement of the examination, he/she TICULARS.
(c) blackmailing, or threatening to Division of Chamba District of Himachal should at once contact the Commission. On 1. NAME AND YEAR OF THE EXAMINA-
blackmail any person connected with the Pradesh, Andaman and Nicobar Islands receipt of such a communication, Admission TION.
conduct of the examination, or or Lakshadweep or abroad, the last date Certificate or a duplicate copy thereto will be 2. APPLICATION FORM NUMBER
(ii) impersonating, or for receipt of applications is 28th March, issued to the admitted candidate. Informa- 3. ROLL NUMBER (IF RECEIVED)
(iii) procuring impersonation by any per- 2011 till 5 P.M. only. The benefit of ex- tion in this regard can also be obtained from 4. NAME OF CANDIDATE (IN FULL AND
son, or tended time will be available only in re- the Facilitation Counter located in the IN BLOCK LETTERS)
spect of applications received by Post/ Commission’s Office either in person or over
(iv) submitting fabricated documents or 5. COMPLETE POSTAL ADDRESS AS
Speed Post from the abovementioned ar- phone Nos. 011-23381125/011-23385271/
documents which have been tampered GIVEN IN THE APPLICATION.
eas/regions. In the case of applications 011-23098543. In case no communication
with, or N.B. I. COMMUNICATION NOT CONTAIN-
received by hand or through courier ser- is received in the Commission's Office
(v) making statements which are incor- ING THE ABOVE PARTICULARS MAY
vice, benefit of extended time will not be from the candidate regarding non-receipt
rect or false or suppressing material infor- NOT BE ATTENDED TO.
available regardless of the place of resi- of his/her Admission Certificate atleast 3
mation, or N.B. II. CANDIDATES SHOULD ALSO
dence of the applicant. weeks before the examination, he/she
(vi) resorting to the following means in con- NOTE DOWN THEIR APPLICATION FORM
Candidates who are claiming the benefit of himself/herself will be solely responsible
nection with his/her candidature for the ex- NUMBER FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.
extended time should clearly indicate in col- for non-receipt of his/her Admission Cer-
amination, namely THEY MAY BE REQUIRED TO INDICATE
umn 13 of the Application Form, the area tificate. It may be noted that the Admission
(a) obtaining copy of question paper THE SAME IN CONNECTION WITH THEIR
code of the particular area or region (e.g. Certificate will be issued at the address as
through improper means, CANDIDATURE FOR THE CIVIL SER-
Assam, Meghalaya, J&K etc.) where they are photocopied from the Application Form filled
(b) finding out the particulars of the VICES (MAIN) EXAMINATION.
residing. In case they fail to do so, the benefit in by the candidate. The candidate should,
persons connected with secret therefore, ensure that address given by him/ 9. The eligibility for availing reservation
of extended time will not be allowed to them. against the vacancies reserved for the
work relating to the examination. her in the Application Form is correct and
NOTE I : physically disabled persons shall be the
(c) influencing the examiners, or complete with pin code.
Candidates should clearly note that the same as prescribed in "The Persons with
(vii) using unfair means during the exami- No candidate will ordinarily be allowed to
Commission will in no case be responsible Disability (Equal Opportunities, Protection
nation, or take the examination unless he/she holds
for non-receipt of their application or any of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995."
(viii)writing obscene matter or drawing a certificate of admission for the exami-
delay in receipt thereof on any account Provided further that the physically dis-
obscene sketches in the scripts, or nation. On the receipt of Admission Cer-
whatsoever. No application received after abled candidates shall also be required to
(ix) misbehaving in the examination hall tificate, check it carefully and bring dis-
the prescribed last date will be entertained meet special eligibility criteria in terms of
including tearing of the scripts, provoking crepancies/errors, if any, to the notice of
under any circumstances and all the late physical requirements/functional classifi-
fellow examinees to boycott examination, UPSC immediately.
applications will be summarily rejected. cation (abilities/disabilities) consistent with
creating a disorderly scene and the like, or They should therefore, ensure that their The candidates should note that their ad-
requirements of the identified Service/Post
(x) harassing or doing bodily harm to the applications reach the Commission's Of- mission to the examination will be purely
as may be prescribed by its Cadre Con-
staff employed by the Commission for the fice on or before the prescribed last date. provisional based on the information given
trolling Authority.
conduct of their examinations, or by them in the Application Form. This will
NOTE II : The physical requirement and functional
(xi) being in possession of or using mo- be subject to verification of all the eligibility
Candidates can also deliver their applica- classification can for example be one or
bile phone, pager or any electronic equip- conditions by the UPSC.
tions personally at the Commission's more of the following :
ment or device or any other equipment The mere fact that a certificate of admis-
counter against proper acknowledgement. Code Physical Requirements
capable of being used as a communica- sion to the Examination has been issued
The Commission will not be responsible for MF 1. Work performed by Manipula-
tion device during the examination; or to a candidate, will not imply that his/her
the applications delivered to any other func- tion by Fingers
(xii) violating any of the instructions issued candidature has been finally cleared by
tionary of the Commission.
to candidates along with their Admission the Commission or that entries made by PP 2. Work Performed by Pulling &
NOTE III: Pushing
the candidate in his/her application for the
36 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
L 3. Work Performed by Lifting amination by the candidates who are de- Interview Test will carry 300 marks. Literature of one of the following lan-
KC 4. Work Performed by Kneeling clared qualified for admission to the Main NOTE (i) The papers on Indian Languages guages :
and Crouching Examination will not be counted for deter- and English will be of Matriculation or Arabic, Assamese, Bodo, Bengali, Chi-
BN 5. Work Performed by Bending mining their final order of merit. The num- equivalent standard and will be of qualify- nese, Dogri, English, French, German,
S 6. Work Performed by Sitting (on ber of candidates to be admitted to the Main ing nature; the marks obtained in these Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri,
bench or chair) Examination will be about twelve to thirteen papers will not be counted for ranking. Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Manipuri,
ST 7. Work Performed by Standing times the total approximate number of va- NOTE (ii) Evaluation of the papers, namely, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Pali, Persian,
cancies to be filled in the year in the various 'Essay, 'General Studies' and Optional Sub- Punjabi, Russian, Sanskrit, Santali, Sindhi,
W 8. Work Performed by Walking
Services and Posts. Only those candidates jects of all candidates would be done si-
SE 9. Work Performed by Seeing Tamil, Telugu, Urdu.
who are declared by the Commission to multaneously along with evaluation of their
H 10. Work Performed by Hearing/ NOTE (i) Candidates will not be allowed to
have qualified in the Preliminary Examina- qualifying papers on 'Indian languages' and
Speaking tion in the year will be eligible for admission offer the following combinations of subjects:–
English' but the papers on 'Essay', Gen-
RW 11. Work Performed by Reading to the Main Examination of that year pro- (a) Political Science & International Re-
eral Studies' and 'Optional Subjects' of only
and Writing vided they are otherwise eligible for admis- lations and Public Administration;
such candidates will be taken cognizance
C 12. Communication sion to the Main Examination. (b) Commerce & Accountancy and Man-
of as attain such minimum standard as
Code FUNCTIONAL CLASSIFICATION 3. The Main Examination will consist of a may be fixed by the Commission at their agement;
BL 1. Both legs affected but not arms written examination and an Interview Test. discretion for the qualifying papers on 'In- (c) Anthropology and Sociology;
BA 2. Both arms affected The written examination will consist of 9 dian language' and 'English' and, there- (d) Mathematics and Statistics;
a. Impaired Reach papers of conventional essay type in the fore, the marks in 'Essay' 'General studies (e) Agriculture and Animal Husbandry &
b. Weakness of Grip. subjects set out in sub-section (B) of Sec- and Optional subjects' will not be disclosed Veterinary Science.
c. ataxic tion-II. Also see Note (ii) under para I of to those candidates who fail to obtain such
(f) Management and Public Administration;
BLA 3. Both legs and both arms af- Section-II (B). minimum qualifying standard in 'Indian lan-
(g) Of the Engineering subjects, viz., Civil
fected. 4. Candidates who obtain such minimum guage and 'English'.
qualifying marks in the written part of the Engineering, Electrical Engineering
OL 4. One leg affected (R or L) NOTE (iii) The paper-I on Indian Lan-
Main Examination as may be fixed by the and Mechanical Engineering–not
a. impaired reach guages will not, however, be compulsory
Commission at their discretion, shall be for candidates hailing from the North-East- more than one subject.
b. weakness of grip
summoned by them for an interview/for a ern States of Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, (h) Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Sci-
c. ataxic ence and Medical Science.
Personality Test vide sub-section ‘C’ of Meghalaya, Mizoram and Nagaland and
OA 5. One arm affected (R or L) Section-II. However, the papers on Indian also for candidates hailing from the State (ii) The question papers for the examina-
a. impaired reach Languages and English will be of qualify- of Sikkim. tion will be of conventional (essay) type.
b. weakness of grip ing nature. Also see Note (ii) under para 1 NOTE (iv) For the Language papers, the (iii) Each paper will be of three hours dura-
c. ataxic of Section-II (B). The marks obtained in script to be used by the candidates will be tion. Blind candidates will, however, be al-
OAL 6. One arm and one leg affected these papers will not be counted for rank- as under :– lowed an extra time of thirty minutes at each
MW 7. Muscular weakness. ing. The number of candidates to be sum- Language Script paper.
B 8. Blind moned for interview will be about twice the Assamese Assamese (iv) Candidates will have the option to an-
LV 9. Low vision number of vacancies to be filled. The inter-
Bengali Bengali swer all the question papers, except the
H 10. Hearing view will carry 300 marks (with no mini-
Bodo Devanagari language papers viz. Papers I and II above
mum qualifying marks).
Note : The above list is subject to revision. Dogri Devanagari in any one of the languages included in
Marks thus obtained by the candidates in
10. A candidate will be eligible to get the Gujarati Gujarati the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution or
the Main Examination (written part as well
benefit of community reservation only in Hindi Devanagari in English.
as interview) would determine their final
case the particular caste to which the can- Kannada Kannada
ranking. Candidates will be allotted to the (v) Candidates exercising the option to
didates belongs is included in the list of
various Services keeping in view their Kashmiri Persian answer papers III to IX in any one of the
reserved communities issued by the Cen-
ranks in the examination and the prefer- Konkani Devanagari languages included in the Eighth Sched-
tral Government. If a candidate indicates
ences expressed by them for the various Maithili Devanagari ule to the Constitution may, if they so de-
in his/her application form for Civil Services
Services and Posts. Malayalam Malayalam sire, give English version within brackets
(Preliminary) Examination that he/she be-
longs to General category but subse- Section-II Manipuri Bengali of only the description of the technical
quently writes to the Commission to change Scheme and subjects for the Preliminary Marathi Devanagari terms, if any, in addition to the version in
his/her category to a reserved one, such and Main Examinations. Nepali Devanagari the language opted by them.
request shall not be entertained by the A. Preliminary Examination Oriya Oriya Candidates should, however, note that if they
Commission. The Examination shall comprise two Punjabi Gurumukhi misuse the above rule, a deduction will be
While the above principle will be fol- compulsory papers of 200 marks each. Sanskrit Devanagari made on this account from the total marks
lowed in general, there may be a few cases NOTE (i) Both the question papers will be Santali Devanagari or Olchiki otherwise accruing to them and in extreme
where there was a little gap (say 2-3 of the objective type (multiple choice ques- cases, their script(s) will not be valued for
Sindhi Devanagari or Arabic
months) between the issuance of a Gov- tions). being in an unauthorised medium.
Tamil Tamil
ernment Notifications enlisting a particular (ii) The question papers will be set both in (vi) The question papers other than lan-
Telugu Telugu
community in the list of any of the reserved Hindi and English. However, questions guage papers will be set both in Hindi and
Urdu Persian
communities and the date of submission relating to English Language Comprehen- English.
of the application by the candidate. In such sion skills of Class X level will be tested NOTE : For Santali language, question pa-
per will be printed in Devanagari script; (vii) The details of the syllabi are set out in
cases the request of change of comunity through passages from English Language
but candidates will be free to answer ei- Part B of Section-III.
from General to Reserved may be consid- only without providing Hindi translation
ered by the Commission on merit. thereof in the question paper. ther in Devanagari script or in Olchiki. "General Instructions (Preliminary as
11. WITHDRAWAL OF APPLICATIONS : (iii) Details of the syllabi are indicated in 2. List of optional subjects for Main well as Main Examination)" :
Part A of Section III. Examination (i) Candidates must write the papers in
NO REQUEST FOR WITHDRAWAL OF
CANDIDATURE RECEIVED FROM A (iv) Each paper will be of two hours dura- Agriculture their own hand. In no circumstances, will
CANDIDATE AFTER HE/SHE HAS SUB- tion. Blind candidates will however, be al- Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science they be allowed the help of a scribe to write
MITTED HIS/HER APPLICATION WILL BE lowed an extra time of twenty minutes at Anthropology the answers for them. However, blind can-
ENTERTAINED UNDER ANY CIRCUM- each paper. Botany didates will be allowed to write the exami-
STANCES. B. Main Examination Chemistry nation with the help of a scribe.
(VINAYA PRAKASH SINGH) The written examination will consist of Civil Engineering (ii) An extra time of twenty minutes per hour
JOINT SECRETARY the following papers : Commerce and Accountancy shall be permitted for the candidates with
UNION PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION Paper I One of the Indian 300 marks Economics locomotor disability and cerebral palsy
languages to be Electrical Engineering where dominant (writing) extremity is af-
APPENDIX-I fected to the extent of slowing the perfor-
selected by the Geography
Section-I mance of function (minimum of 40% im-
candidate from the Geology
PLAN OF EXAMINATION pairment) in the Civil Services (Main) Ex-
Languages included History
The competitive examination comprises amination only. However, no scribe shall
in the Eighth Schedule Law
two successive stages : be permitted to such candidates.
to the Constitution. Management
(i) Civil Services (Preliminary) Examina-
Paper II English 300 marks Mathematics NOTE 1 : The eligibility conditions of a
tions (Objective Type) for the selection of
Paper III Essay 200 marks Mechanical Engineering scribe, his/her conduct inside the exami-
candidates for Main Examination; and
Papers IV General Studies 300 marks Medical Science nation hall and the manner in which and
(ii) Civil Services (Main) Examination (Writ-
and V for each paper Philosophy extent to which he/she can help the blind
ten and Interview) for the selection of can-
Papers VI Any two 300 marks Physics candidate in writing the Civil Services Ex-
didates for the various services and posts.
amination shall be governed by the instruc-
2. The Preliminary Examination will consist VII, VIII subjects to for each Political Science and International
Relations tions issued by the UPSC in this regard.
of two papers of Objective type (multiple and IX be selected from paper
Psychology Violation of all or any of the said instruc-
choice questions) and carry a maximum of the list of the
400 marks in the subjects set out in sub- tions shall entail the cancellation of the
optional subjects set Public Administration
section (A) of Section-II. This examination candidature of the blind candidate in addi-
out in para 2 below. Sociology
is meant to serve as a screening test only; tion to any other action that the UPSC may
Each subject will have Statistics
the marks obtained in the Preliminary Ex- take against the scribe.
two papers. Zoology
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 37
NOTE 2 : For purpose of these rules the 3. The interview test is not intended to be a The pattern of questions would be broadly related issues such as the preservation of
candidate shall be deemed to be a blind test either of the specialised or general as follows :- communal harmony.
candidate if the percentage of visual im- knowledge of the candidates which has (i) Comprehension of given passages. (vi) Issues relating to good governance and
pairment is 40% or more. The criteria for been already tested through their written (ii) Precis Writing accountability to the citizens including the
determining the percentage of visual im- papers. Candidates are expected to have (iii) Usage and Vocabulary maintenance of human rights, and of pro-
pairment shall be as follows : taken an intelligent interest not only in their bity in public life.
(iv) Short Essay
All with corrections Perce- special subjects of academic study but also (vii) Environmental issues, ecological pres-
INDIAN LANGUAGES
_______________ ntage in the events which are happening around ervation, conservation of natural resources
(i) Comprehension of given passages.
Better eye Worse eye them both within and outside their own and national heritage.
(ii) Precis Writing
Category 0 6/9-6/18 6/24 to 6/36 20% state or country as well as in modern cur- PAPER - II
rents of thought and in new discoveries (iii) Usage and Vocabulary.
Category I 6/18-6/36 6/60 to nil 40% 1. India and the World :
which should rouse the curiosity of well (iv) Short Essay
Category II 6/60-4/60 3/60 to nil 75% This part will include questions to test
educated youth. (v) Translation from English to the Indian
or field of candidate’s awareness of India’s relation-
Section-III language and vice-versa.
vision 10-200 ship with the world in various spheres such
SYLLABI FOR THE EXAMINATION Note 1 : The Papers on Indian Languages
as the following:-
Category III 3/60-1/60 F.C. at 1 ft 100% and English will be of Matriculation or
PART-A Foreign Affairs with special emphasis on
or field of to nil equivalent standard and will be of qualify-
PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION India’s relations with neighbouring coun-
vision 100 ing nature only. The marks obtained in
The Examination shall comprise two com- tries and in the region.
Category IV FC. at 1 ft F.C. at 1 ft 100% these papers will not be counted for rank-
pulsory papers of 200 marks each. Security and defence related matters.
to nil field of to nil field of ing.
Paper I - (200 marks) Duration : Two Nuclear policy, issues, and conflicts.
vision 1000 vision 1000 Note 2 : The candidates will have to an-
hours The Indian Diaspora and its contribution to
One eyed 6/6 F.C. at 1 ft 30% swer the English and Indian Languages
r Current events of national and inter- India and the world.
papers in English and the respective In-
person to nil national importance. 2. India’s Economic Interaction with the
dian language (except where translation
NOTE 3 : For availing of the concession r History of India and Indian National World :
is involved).
admissible to a blind candidate, the candi- Movement. In this part, questions will be on economic
ESSAY
date concerned shall produce a certificate r Indian and World Geography - Physi- and trade issues such as foreign trade,
in the prescribed proforma from a Medical Candidates will be required to write an
cal, Social, Economic Geography of foreign investment; economic and diplo-
Board constituted by the Central/State Gov- essay on a specific topic. The choice of
India and the World. macy issues relating to oil, gas and energy
ernments alongwith his application for the subjects will be given. They will be ex-
r Indian Polity and Governance - Con- pected to keep closely to the subject of the flows; the role and functions of I.M.F., World
Main Examination. stitution, Political System, Panchayati Bank, W.T.O., WIPO etc. which influence
essay to arrange their ideas in orderly fash-
NOTE 4 : (i) The concession admissible to Raj, Public Policy, Rights Issues, etc. India’s economic interaction with other
ion, and to write concisely. Credit will be
blind candidates shall not be admissible r Economic and Social Development - countries and international institutions.
given for effective and exact expression.
to those suffering from Myopia. Sustainable Development, Poverty, In- 3. Developments in the Field of Science
(ii) The Commission have discretion to fix
GENERAL STUDIES
clusion, Demographics, Social Sector & Technology, IT and space :
qualifying marks in any or all the subjects General Guidelines:
initiatives, etc. In this part, questions will test the
of the examination. The nature and standard of questions in
r General issues on Environmental candidate’s awareness of the develop-
(iii) If a candidate’s handwriting is not eas- the General Studies papers will be such
Ecology, Bio-diversity and Climate ments in the field of science and technol-
ily legible, a deduction will be made on that a well-educated person will be able to
Change - that do not require subject ogy, information technology, space and
this account from the total marks otherwise answer them without any specialized
specialisation basic ideas about computers, robotics,
accruing to him. study. The questions will be such as to test
r General Science. nanotechnology, biotechnology and re-
(iv) Marks will not be allotted for mere su- a candidate’s general awareness of a va-
Paper II- (200 marks) Duration: Two lated issues regarding intellectual property
perficial knowledge. riety of subjects, which will have relevance
hours rights.
for a career in Civil Services. The ques-
(v) Credit will be given for orderly, effective 4. International Affairs and Institutions :
r Comprehension tions are likely to test the candidate’s basic
and exact expression combined with due This part will include questions on impor-
r Interpersonal skills including understanding of all relevant issues, and
economy of words in all subjects of the tant events in world affairs and on interna-
communication skills; ability to analyze, and take a view on con-
examination. tional institutions.
r Logical reasoning and analytical flicting socio-economic goals, objectives
(vi) In the question papers, wherever re- 5. Statistical analysis, graphs and dia-
ability and demands. The candidates must give
quired, SI units will be used. grams :
relevant, meaningful and succinct answers.
(vii) Candidates should use only interna- r Decision-making and problem- This part will test the candidate’s ability to
PAPER - I
tional form of Indian numerals (i.e. solving draw conclusions from information pre-
1. History of Modern India and Indian
1,2,3,4,5,6 etc.) while answering question r General mental ability sented in statistical, graphical or
Culture :
papers. r Basic numeracy (numbers and their diagrammatical form and to interpret them.
The History of Modern India will cover his-
(viii) Candidates will be allowed the use of relations, orders of magnitude, etc.) AGRICULTURE
tory of the Country from about the middle
Scientific (Non-Programmable type) Cal- (Class X level), Data interpretation PAPER - I
of nineteenth century and would also in-
culators at the conventional (Essay) type (charts, graphs, tables, data clude questions on important personalities Ecology and its relevance to man, natural
examination of UPSC. Programmable type sufficiency etc. - Class X level) who shaped the freedom movement and resources, their sustainable management
calculators will however not be allowed
r English Language Comprehension social reforms. The part relating to Indian and conservation. Physical and social en-
and the use of such calculators shall tanta-
skills (Class X level). culture will cover all aspects of Indian cul- vironment as factors of crop distribution
mount to resorting to unfair means by the
Note 1 : Questions relating to English ture from the ancient to modern times as and production. Agro ecology; cropping
candidates. Loaning or interchanging of
Language Comprehension skills of Class well as principal features of literature, arts pattern as indicators of environments. En-
calculators in the Examination Hall is not
X level (last item in the Syllabus of Paper- and architecture. vironmental pollution and associated haz-
permitted.
II) will be tested through passages from 2. Geography of India : ards to crops, animals and humans. Cli-
It is also important to note that candidates mate change – International conventions
English language only without providing In this part, questions will be on the physical,
are not permitted to use calculators for an- and global initiatives. Green house effect
Hindi translation thereof in the question economic and social geography of India.
swering objective type papers (Test Book- and global warming. Advance tools for eco-
paper. 3. Constitution of India and Indian Polity:
lets). They should not therefore, bring the system analysis – Remote sensing (RS)
Note 2 : The questions will be of multiple This part will include questions on the Con-
same inside the Examination Hall. and Geographic Information Systems
choice, objective type. stitution of India as well as all constitutional,
C. Interview test (GIS).
PART-B legal, administrative and other issues
The candidate will be interviewed by a Board Cropping patterns in different agro-climatic
who will have before them a record of his/her MAIN EXAMINATION emerging from the politico-administrative
zones of the country. Impact of high-yield-
The main Examination is intended to as- system prevalent in the country.
career. He/she will be asked questions on ing and short-duration varieties on shifts in
matters of general interest. The object of the sess the overall intellectual traits and depth 4. Current National Issues and Topics of cropping patterns. Concepts of various
interview is to assess the personal suitability of understanding of candidates rather than Social Relevance : cropping and farming systems. Organic
of the candidate for a career in public service merely the range of their information and This part is intended to test the candidate’s and Precision farming. Package of prac-
by a Board of competent and unbiased ob- memory. awareness of current national issues and tices for production of important cereals,
servers. The test is intended to judge the The scope of the syllabus for the optional topics of social relevance in present-day pulses, oil seeds, fibres, sugar, commer-
mental calibre of a candidate. In broad terms subject papers for the examination is India, such as the following: cial and fodder crops.
this is really an assessment of not only his broadly of the honours degree level i.e. a (i) The Indian economy and issues relat- Important features and scope of various
intellectual qualities but also social traits and level higher than the bachelors degree and ing to planning, mobilization of resources, types of forestry plantations such as social
his interest in current affairs. Some of the lower than the masters degree. In the case growth, development and employment. forestry, agro-forestry, and natural forests.
qualities to be judged are mental alertness, of Engineering and law, the level corre- (ii) Issues arising from the social and eco- Propagation of forest plants. Forest prod-
critical powers of assimilation, clear and logi- sponds to the bachelor's degree. nomic exclusion of large sections from the ucts. Agro forestry and value addition. Con-
cal exposition, balance of judgement, vari- COMPULSORY SUBJECTS benefits of development. servation of forest flora and fauna.
ety and depth of interest, ability for social co- ENGLISH AND INDIAN LANGUAGUES (iii) Other issues relating to the develop- Weeds, their characteristics, dissemination
hesion and leadership, intellectual and moral The aim of the paper is to test the ment and management of human resource. and association with various crops; their
integrity. candidate's ability to read and understand (iv) Health issues including the manage- multiplications; cultural, biological, and
2. The technique of the interview is not that serious discursive prose, and to express ment of Public Health, Health education and chemical control of weeds.
of a strict cross-examination but of a natu- his ideas clearly and correctly in English/ ethical concerns regarding health-care, Soil- physical, chemical and biological
ral, though directed and purposive conver- Indian language concerned. medical research and pharmaceuticals. properties. Processes and factors of soil
sation which is intended to reveal the men- (v) Law enforcement, internal security and formation. Soils of India. Mineral and or-
tal qualities of the candidate. ganic constituents of soils and their role in
38 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
maintaining soil productivity. Essential Carbohydrate, protein and fat metabolism. breeding bulls. Strategies for feeding milch 4. Livestock Production and Manage-
plant nutrients and other beneficial ele- Growth and development; photoperiodism animals during different stages of lactation ment:
ments in soils and plants. Principles of soil and vernalilzation. Plant growth sub- cycle. Effect of feeding on milk composi- 4.1 Commercial Dairy Farming- Compari-
fertility, soil testing and fertilizer recommen- stances and their role in crop production. tion. Feeding of goats for meat and milk son of dairy farming in India with advanced
dations, integrated nutrient management. Physiology of seed development and ger- production. Feeding of sheep for meat and countries. Dairying under mixed farming
Biofertilizers. Losses of nitrogen in soil, ni- mination; dormancy. Stress physiology – wool production. and as specialized farming, economic
trogen-use efficiency in submerged rice draught, salt and water stress. 1.7 Swine Nutrition. Nutrient requirements. dairy farming. Starting of a dairy farm, Capi-
soils, nitrogen fixation in soils. Efficient Major fruits, plantation crops, vegetables, Creep, starter, grower and finisher rations. tal and land requirement, organization of
phosphorus and potassium use. Problem spices and flower crops. Package prac- Feeding of pigs for lean meat production. the dairy farm. Opportunities in dairy farm-
soils and their reclamation. Soil factors af- tices of major horticultural crops. Protected Low cost rations for swine. ing, factors determining the efficiency of
fecting greenhouse gas emission. cultivation and high tech horticulture. Post 1.8 Poultry nutrition. Special features of dairy animal. Herd recording, budgeting,
Soil conservation, integrated watershed harvest technology and value addition of poultry nutrition. Nutrient requirements for cost of milk production, pricing policy; Per-
management. Soil erosion and its manage- fruits and vegetables. Landscaping and meat and egg production. Formulation of sonnel Management. Developing Practi-
ment. Dry land agriculture and its problems. commercial floriculture. Medicinal and aro- rations for different classes of layers and cal and Economic rations for dairy cattle;
Technology for stabilizing agriculture pro- matic plants. Role of fruits and vegetables broilers. supply of greens throughout the year, feed
duction in rain fed areas. in human nutrition. 2. Animal Physiology: and fodder requirements of Dairy Farm.
Water-use efficiency in relation to crop pro- Diagnosis of pests and diseases of field 2.1 Physiology of blood and its circulation, Feeding regimes for young stock and bulls,
duction, criteria for scheduling irrigations, crops, vegetables, orchard and plantation respiration; excretion. Endocrine glands in heifers and breeding animals; new trends
ways and means of reducing run-off losses crops and their economic importance. Clas- health and disease. in feeding young and adult stock; Feeding
of irrigation water. Rainwater harvesting. sification of pests and diseases and their 2.2 Blood constituents - Properties and records.
Drip and sprinkler irrigation. Drainage of management. Integrated pest and disease functions-blood cell formation-Haemoglo- 4.2 Commercial meat, egg and wool pro-
waterlogged soils, quality of irrigation wa- management. Storage pests and their bin synthesis and chemistry-plasma pro- duction- Development of practical and eco-
ter, effect of industrial effluents on soil and management. Biological control of pests teins production, classification and prop- nomic rations for sheep, goats, pigs, rab-
water pollution. Irrigation projects in India. and diseases. Epidemiology and forecast- erties, coagulation of blood;Haemorrhagic bits and poultry. Supply of greens, fodder,
Farm management, scope, importance and ing of major crop pests and diseases. Plant disorders-anticoagulants-blood groups- feeding regimes for young and mature
characteristics, farm planning. Optimum quarantine measures. Pesticides, their for- Blood volume-Plasma expanders-Buffer stock. New trends in enhancing produc-
resource use and budgeting. Economics mulation and modes of action. systems in blood. Biochemical tests and tion and management. Capital and land
of different types of farming systems. Mar- Food production and consumption trends their significance in disease diagnosis. requirements and socio-economic con-
keting management – strategies for devel- in India. Food security and growing popu- 2.3 Circulation - Physiology of heart, car- cept.
opment, market intelligence. Price fluctua- lation – vision 2020. Reasons for grain diac cycle, heart sounds, heart beat, elec- 4.3 Feeding and management of animals
tions and their cost; role of co-operatives surplus. National and international food trocardiograms. Work and efficiency of under drought, flood and other natural ca-
in agricultural economy; types and systems policies. Production, procurement, distri- heart-effect of ions on heart function-me- lamities.
of farming and factors affecting them. Agri- bution constraints. Availability of food tabolism of cardiac muscle, nervous and 5. Genetics and Animal Breeding:
cultural price policy. Crop Insurance. grains, per capita expenditure on food. chemical regulation of heart, effect of tem- History of animal genetics. Mitosis and
Agricultural extension, its importance and Trends in poverty, Public Distribution Sys- perature and stress on heart, blood pres- Meiosis: Mendelian inheritance; deviations
role, methods of evaluation of extension tem and Below Poverty Line population, sure and hypertension, osmotic regulation, to Mendelian genetics; Expression of
programmes, socio-economic survey and Targeted Public Distribution System (PDS), arterial pulse, vasomotor regulation of cir- genes; Linkage and crossing over; Sex
status of big, small and marginal farmers policy implementation in context to global- culation, shock. Coronary and pulmonary determination, sex influenced and sex lim-
and landless agricultural labourers. Train- ization. Processing constraints. Relation of circulation, Blood-Brain barrier- Cere- ited characters; Blood groups and polymor-
ing programmes for extension workers. food production to National Dietary Guide- brospinal fluid- circulation in birds. phism; Chromosome aberrations; Cyto-
Role of Krishi Vigyan Kendra’s (KVK) in lines and food consumption pattern. Food 2.4 Respiration - Mechanism of respira- plasmic inheritance. Gene and its struc-
dissemination of Agricultural technologies. based dietary approaches to eliminate tion, Transport and exchange of gases – ture; DNA as a genetic material; Genetic
Non Government Organization (NGO) and hunger. Nutrient deficiency – Micro nutri- neural control of respiration-chemo-recep- code and protein synthesis; Recombinant
self-help group approach for rural devel- ent deficiency : Protein Energy Malnutri- tors-hypoxia-respiration in birds. DNA technology. Mutations, types of mu-
opment. tion or Protein Calorie Malnutrition (PEM 2.5 Excretion-Structure and function of kid- tations, methods for detecting mutations
PAPER - II or PCM), Micro nutrient deficiency and ney-formation of urine-methods of study- and mutation rate. Trans-genesis.
Cell structure, function and cell cycle. Syn- HRD in context of work capacity of women ing renal function-renal regulation of acid- 5.1 Population Genetics applied to Animal
thesis, structure and function of genetic and children. Food grain productivity and base balance: physiological constituents Breeding- Quantitative Vs. qualitative traits;
material. Laws of heredity. Chromosome food security. of urine-renal failure-passive venous con- Hardy Weinberg Law; Population Vs. indi-
structure, chromosomal aberrations, link- ANIMAL HUSBANDRY AND gestion-Urinary secretion in chicken-Sweat vidual; Gene and genotypic frequency;
age and cross-over, and their significance VETERINARY SCIENCE glands and their function. Bio-chemical test Forces changing gene frequency; Random
in recombination breeding. Polyploidy, PAPER – I for urinary dysfunction. drift and small populations; Theory of path
euploids and aneuploids. Mutations - and 2.6 Endocrine glands - Functional disor- coefficient; Inbreeding, methods of estimat-
1. Animal Nutrition:
their role in crop improvement. Heritability, ders their symptoms and diagnosis. Syn- ing inbreeding coefficient, systems of in-
1.1 Partitioning of food energy within the
sterility and incompatibility, classification thesis of hormones, mechanism and con- breeding, Effective population size; Breed-
animal. Direct and indirect calorimetry.
and their application in crop improvement. trol of secretion- hormonal receptors-clas- ing value, estimation of breeding value,
Carbon – nitrogen balance and compara-
Cytoplasmic inheritance, sex-linked, sex- sification and function. dominance and epistatic deviation; Parti-
tive slaughter methods. Systems for ex-
influenced and sex-limited characters. 2.7 Growth and Animal Production- Pre- tioning of variation; Genotype X environ-
pressing energy value of foods in rumi-
History of plant breeding. Modes of repro- natal and postnatal growth, maturation, ment correlation and genotype X environ-
nants, pigs and poultry. Energy require-
duction, selfing and crossing techniques. growth curves, measures of growth, fac- ment interaction; role of multiple measure-
ments for maintenance, growth, pregnancy,
Origin, evolution and domestication of crop tors affecting growth, conformation, body ments; Resemblance between relatives.
lactation, egg, wool, and meat production.
plants, center of origin, law of homologous composition, meat quality. 5.2 Breeding Systems- Breeds of livestsock
1.2 Latest advances in protein nutrition.
series, crop genetic resources- conserva- 2.8 Physiology of Milk Production, Repro- and Poultry. Heritability, repeatability and
Energy protein interrelationships. Evalua-
tion and utilization. Application of principles duction and Digestion- Current status of genetic and phenotypic correlations, their
tion of protein quality. Use of NPN com-
of plant breeding, improvement of crop hormonal control of mammary develop- methods of estimation and precision of es-
pounds in ruminant diets. Protein require-
plants. Molecular markers and their appli- ment, milk secretion and milk ejection, Male timates; Aids to selection and their relative
ments for maintenance, growth, preg-
cation in plant improvement. Pure-line se- and Female reproductive organs, their merits; Individual, pedigree, family and
nancy, lactation, egg, wool and meat pro-
lection, pedigree, mass and recurrent se- components and functions. Digestive or- within family selection; Progeny testing;
duction.
lections, combining ability, its significance gans and their functions. Methods of selection; Construction of se-
1.3 Major and trace minerals - Their
in plant breeding. Heterosis and its ex- lection indices and their uses; Compara-
sources, physiological functions and defi- 2.9 Environmental Physiology- Physiologi-
ploitation. Somatic hybridization. Breeding tive evaluation of genetic gains through
ciency symptoms. Toxic minerals. Mineral cal relations and their regulation; mecha-
for disease and pest resistance. Role of various selection methods; Indirect selec-
interactions. Role of fat-soluble and water nisms of adaptation, environmental factors
interspecific and intergeneric hybridization. tion and correlated response; Inbreeding,
– soluble vitamins in the body, their sources and regulatory mechanisms involved in
Role of genetic engineering and biotech- out breeding, upgrading, cross-breeding
and deficiency symptoms. animal behaviour, climatology – various
nology in crop improvement. Genetically and synthesis of breeds; Crossing of in-
1.4 Feed additives – methane inhibitors, parameters and their importance. Animal
modified crop plants. bred lines for commercial production; Se-
probiotics, enzymes, antibiotics, hormones, ecology. Physiology of behaviour. Effect
Seed production and processing technolo- of stress on health and production. lection for general and specific combining
oligosaccharides, antioxidants, emulsifiers,
gies. Seed certification, seed testing and ability; Breeding for threshold characters.
mould inhibitors, buffers etc. Use and abuse 3. Animal Reproduction:
storage. DNA finger printing and seed reg- Sire index.
of growth promoters like hormones and Semen quality- Preservation and Artificial
istration. Role of public and private sec- 6. Extension:
antibiotics – latest concepts. Insemination- Components of semen, com-
tors in seed production and marketing. In- Basic philosophy, objectives, concept and
1.5 Conservation of fodders. Storage of position of spermatozoa, chemical and
tellectual Property Rights (IPR) issues, principles of extension. Different Methods
feeds and feed ingredients. Recent ad- physical properties of ejaculated semen,
WTO issues and its impact on Agriculture. adopted to educate farmers under rural
vances in feed technology and feed pro- factors affecting semen in vivo and in vitro.
Principles of Plant Physiology with refer- conditions. Generation of technology, its
cessing. Anti – nutritional and toxic factors Factors affecting semen production and
ence to plant nutrition, absorption, translo- transfer and feedback. Problems and con-
present in livestock feeds. Feed analysis quality, preservation, composition of
cation and metabolism of nutrients. Soil - straints in transfer of technology. Animal
and quality control. Digestibility trials – di- diluents, sperm concentration, transport of
water- plant relationship. husbandry programmes for rural develop-
rect, indirect and indicator methods. Pre- diluted semen. Deep freezing techniques
Enzymes and plant pigments; photosyn- in cows, sheep, goats, swine and poultry. ment.
dicting feed intake in grazing animals.
thesis- modern concepts and factors affect- Detection of oestrus and time of insemina- PAPER – II
1.6 Advances in ruminant nutrition. Nutri-
ing the process, aerobic and anaerobic tion for better conception. Anoestrus and 1. Anatomy, Pharmacology and Hygiene:
ent requirements. Balanced rations. Feed-
respiration; C3, C4 and CAM mechanisms. repeat breeding. 1.1 Histology and Histological Techniques:
ing of calves, pregnant, work animals and
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 39
Paraffin embedding technique of tissue placement- Caesarian operations. Ru- and maintenance. Marketing of poultry the perspectives of structure, blood rela-
processing and H.E. staining - Freezing menotomy-Castrations. meat, eggs and products. Value added tion, marriage, residence and succession);
microtomy- Microscopy-Bright field micro- 2.8 Disease investigation techniques.- meat products. Impact of urbanization, industrialization
scope and electron microscope. Cytology- Materials for laboratory investigation- Es- 5.5 Rabbit/Fur Animal farming - Rabbit and feminist movements on family.
structure of cell, organells and inclusions; tablishment of Animal Health Centers- Dis- meat production. Disposal and utilization 2.5 Kinship: Consanguinity and Affinity;
cell division-cell types- Tissues and their ease free zone. of fur and wool and recycling of waste by Principles and types of descent (Unilineal,
classification-embryonic and adult tissues- 3. Veterinary Public Health: products. Grading of wool. Double, Bilateral, Ambilineal); Forms of
Comparative histology of organs-Vascu- 3.1 Zoonoses. - Classification, definition, descent groups (lineage, clan, phratry, moi-
ANTHROPOLOGY
lar. Nervous, digestive, respiratory, role of animals and birds in prevalence and ety and kindred); Kinship terminology (de-
PAPER - I
musculo- skeletal and urogenital systems- transmission of zoonotic diseases- occu- scriptive and classificatory); Descent, Fili-
Endocrine glands -Integuments-sense or- 1.1 Meaning, scope and development of
pational zoonotic diseases. ation and Complimentary Filiation; De-
gans. Anthropology.
3.2 Epidemiology- Principle, definition of scent and Alliance.
1.2 Embryology – Embryology of verte- 1.2 Relationships with other disciplines:
epidemiological terms, application of epi- 3. Economic organization: Meaning,
brates with special reference to aves and Social Sciences, Behavioural Sciences,
demiological measures in the study of dis- scope and relevance of economic anthro-
domestic mammals gametogenesis-fertili- Life Sciences, Medical Sciences, Earth Sci-
eases and disease control. Epidemiologi- pology; Formalist and Substantivist debate;
zation-germ layers- foetal membranes and ences and Humanities.
cal features of air, water and food borne Principles governing production, distribu-
placentation-types of placenta in domestic 1.3 Main branches of Anthropology, their tion and exchange (reciprocity, redistribu-
infections. OIE regulations, WTO, sanitary
mammals-Teratology-twins and twinning- scope and relevance: tion and market), in communities, subsist-
and phytosanitary measures.
organogenesis -germ layer derivatives- en- (a) Social- cultural Anthropology. ing on hunting and gathering, fishing,
3.3 Veterinary Jurisprudence- Rules and
dodermal, mesodermal and ectodermal (b) Biological Anthropology. swiddening, pastoralism, horticulture, and
Regulations for improvement of animal
derivates. quality and prevention of animal diseases (c) Archaeological Anthropology. agriculture; globalization and indigenous
1.3 Bovine Anatomy- Regional Anatomy: - State and central rules for prevention of (d) Linguistic Anthropology. economic systems.
Paranasal sinuses of OX- surface anatomy animal and animal product borne diseases- 1.4 Human Evolution and emergence of 4. Political organization and Social Con-
of salivary glands. Regional anatomy of S P C A- Veterolegal cases- Certificates - Man: trol: Band, tribe, chiefdom, kingdom and
infraorbital, maxillary, mandibuloal- Materials and Methods of collection of (a) Biological and Cultural factors in hu- state; concepts of power, authority and le-
veolar,mental and cornual nerve block. samples for veterolegal investigation. man evolution. gitimacy; social control, law and justice in
Regional anatomy of paravertebral nerves, 4. Milk and Milk Products Technology: (b) Theories of Organic Evolution (Pre- simple societies.
pudendal nerve, median ulnar and radial Darwinian, Darwinian and Post-Dar- 5. Religion: Anthropological approaches
4.1 Market Milk: Quality, testing and grad-
nerves-tibial,fibular and digital nerves-Cra- winian). to the study of religion (evolutionary, psy-
ing of raw milk. Processing, packaging,
nial nerves-structures involved in epidural (c) Synthetic theory of evolution; Brief out- chological and functional); monotheism
storing, distribution, marketing, defects and
anaesthesia-superficial lymph nodes-sur- line of terms and concepts of evolu- and polytheism; sacred and profane; myths
their control. Preparation of the following
face anatomy of visceral organs of thoracic, tionary biology (Doll’s rule, Cope’s and rituals; forms of religion in tribal and
milks: Pasteurized, standardized, toned,
abdominal and pelvic cavities-comparative rule, Gause’s rule, parallelism, con- peasant societies (animism, animatism,
double toned, sterilized, homogenized,
features of locomotor apparatus and their vergence, adaptive radiation, and fetishism, naturism and totemism); religion,
reconstituted, recombined and flavoured
application in the biomechanics of mam- mosaic evolution). magic and science distinguished; magico-
milks. Preparation of cultured milks, cul-
malian body. religious functionaries (priest, shaman,
tures and their management, yoghurt, 1.5 Characteristics of Primates; Evolution-
1.4 Anatomy of Fowl- Musculo-skeletal sys- Dahi, Lassi and Srikhand. Preparation of ary Trend and Primate Taxonomy; Primate medicine man, sorcerer and witch).
tem-functional anatomy in relation to res- flavoured and sterilized milks. Legal stan- Adaptations; (Arboreal and Terrestrial) Pri- 6. Anthropological theories:
piration and flying, digestion and egg pro- dards. Sanitation requirement for clean and mate Taxonomy; Primate Behaviour; Ter- (a) Classical evolutionism (Tylor, Morgan
duction. safe milk and for the milk plant equipment. tiary and Quaternary fossil primates; Liv- and Frazer)
1.5 Pharmacology and therapeutic drugs - 4.2 Milk Products Technology: Selection ing Major Primates; Comparative Anatomy (b) Historical particularism (Boas);
Cellular level of pharmacodynamics and of raw materials, processing, storing , dis- of Man and Apes; Skeletal changes due to Diffusionism (British, German and
pharmacokinetics. Drugs acting on fluids tributing and marketing milk products such erect posture and its implications. American)
and electrolyte balance. Drugs acting on as Cream, Butter, Ghee, Khoa, Channa, 1.6 Phylogenetic status, characteristics and (c) Functionalism (Malinowski); Struc-
Autonomic nervous system. Modern con- Cheese, condensed, evaporated, dried geographical distribution of the following: tural- functionlism (Radcliffe-Brown)
cepts of anaesthesia and dissociative milk and baby food, Ice cream and Kulfi; (a) Plio-pleistocene hominids in South (d) Structuralism (L’evi - Strauss and E.
anaesthetics. Autacoids. Antimicrobials by-products, whey products, butter milk, and East Africa - Australopithecines. Leach)
and principles of chemotherapy in micro- lactose and casein. Testing, grading, judg- (b) Homo erectus: Africa (Paranthropus), (e) Culture and personality (Benedict,
bial infections. Use of hormones in thera- ing milk products- BIS and Agmark specifi- Europe (Homo erectus heidelber- Mead, Linton, Kardiner and Cora - du
peutics- chemotherapy of parasitic infec- cations, legal standards, quality control and gensis), Asia (Homo erectus Bois).
tions. Drug and economic concerns in the nutritive properties. Packaging, process- javanicus, Homo erectus pekinensis). (f) Neo - evolutionism (Childe, White,
Edible tissues of animals- chemotherapy ing and operational control. Costing of (c) Neanderthal Man- La-Chapelle-aux- Steward, Sahlins and Service)
of Neoplastic diseases. Toxicity due to in- dairy products. saints (Classical type), Mt. Carmel (Pro- (g) Cultural materialism (Harris)
secticides, plants, metals, non-metals,
5. Meat Hygiene and Technology: gressive type). (h) Symbolic and interpretive theories
zootoxins and mycotoxins.
5.1 Meat Hygiene. (d) Rhodesian man. (Turner, Schneider and Geertz)
1.6 Veterinary Hygiene with reference to
5.1.1 Ante mortem care and management (e) Homo sapiens — Cromagnon, (i) Cognitive theories (Tyler, Conklin)
water, air and habitation - Assessment of
of food animals, stunning, slaughter and Grimaldi and Chancelede. (j) Post- modernism in anthropology
pollution of water, air and soil- Importance
dressing operations; abattoir requirements 1.7 The biological basis of life: The Cell,
of climate in animal health- effect of envi- 7. Culture, language and communication:
and designs; Meat inspection procedures DNA structure and replication, Protein Syn-
ronment on animal function and perfor- Nature, origin and characteristics of lan-
and judgment of carcass meat cuts- grad- thesis, Gene, Mutation, Chromosomes,
mance-relationship between industrializa- guage; verbal and non-verbal communi-
ing of carcass meat cuts- duties and func- and Cell Division.
tion and animal agriculture- animal hous- cation; social context of language use.
tions of Veterinarians in wholesome meat 1.8 (a) Principles of Prehistoric Archaeol-
ing requirements for specific categories of 8. Research methods in anthropology:
production. ogy. Chronology: Relative and Absolute
domestic animals viz. pregnant cows and (a) Fieldwork tradition in anthropology
5.1.2 Hygienic methods of handling pro- Dating methods.
sows, milking cows, broiler birds- stress, (b) Distinction between technique,
duction of meat- Spoilage of meat and con- (b) Cultural Evolution- Broad Outlines of
strain and productivity in relation to animal method and methodology
trol measures- Post - slaughter physico- Prehistoric cultures:
habitation. (c) Tools of data collection: observation,
chemical changes in meat and factors that
2. Animal Diseases: (i) Paleolithic interview, schedules, questionnaire,
influence them- Quality improvement meth-
2.1 Etiology, epidemiology pathogenesis, (ii) Mesolithic Case study, genealogy, life-history,
ods – Adulteration of meat and detection -
symptoms, postmortem lesions, diagnosis, (iii) Neolithic oral history, secondary sources of in-
Regulatory provisions in Meat trade and
and control of infectious diseases of cattle, (iv) Chalcolithic formation, participatory methods.
Industry.
sheep and goat, horses, pigs and poultry. (v) Copper-Bronze Age (d) Analysis, interpretation and presenta-
5.2 Meat Technology.
2.2 Etiology, epidemiology, symptoms, di- (vi) Iron Age tion of data.
5.2.1 Physical and chemical characteris-
agnosis, treatment of production diseases 2.1 The Nature of Culture: The concept 9.1 Human Genetics : Methods and Ap-
tics of meat- Meat emulsions- Methods of
of cattle, horse, pig and poultry. and characteristics of culture and civiliza- plication: Methods for study of genetic prin-
preservation of meat- Curing, canning, ir-
2.3 Deficiency diseases of domestic ani- tion; Ethnocentrism vis-à-vis cultural Rela- ciples in man-family study (pedigree analy-
radiation, packaging of meat and meat
mals and birds. tivism. sis, twin study, foster child, co-twin method,
products, processing and formulations.
2.4 Diagnosis and treatment of non-spe- 2.2 The Nature of Society: Concept of Soci- cytogenetic method, chromosomal and
5.3 By- products- Slaughter house by- prod-
cific conditions like impaction, Bloat, Diar- ety; Society and Culture; Social Institutions; karyo-type analysis), biochemical methods,
ucts and their utilization- Edible and ined-
rhoea, Indigestion, dehydration, stroke, Social groups; and Social stratification. immunological methods, D.N.A. technol-
ible by products- Social and economic im-
poisoning. 2.3 Marriage: Definition and universality; ogy and recombinant technologies.
plications of proper utilization of slaughter
2.5 Diagnosis and treatment of neurologi- house by-products- Organ products for food Laws of marriage (endogamy, exogamy, 9.2 Mendelian genetics in man-family
cal disorders. and pharmaceuticals. hypergamy, hypogamy, incest taboo); study, single factor, multifactor, lethal, sub-
2.6 Principles and methods of immuniza- Types of marriage (monogamy, polygamy, lethal and polygenic inheritance in man.
5.4 Poultry Products Technology- Chemi-
tion of animals against specific diseases- cal composition and nutritive value of poul- polyandry, group marriage). Functions of 9.3 Concept of genetic polymorphism and
herd immunity- disease free zones- ‘zero’ try meat, pre - slaughter care and manage- marriage; Marriage regulations (preferen- selection, Mendelian population, Hardy-
disease concept- chemoprophylaxis. ment. Slaughtering techniques, inspection, tial, prescriptive and proscriptive); Marriage Weinberg law; causes and changes which
2.7 Anaesthesia- local, regional and gen- preservation of poultry meat and products. payments (bride wealth and dowry). bring down frequency – mutation, isola-
eral-preanesthetic medication. Symptoms Legal and BIS standards. 2.4 Family: Definition and universality; tion, migration, selection, inbreeding and
and surgical interference in fractures and Family, household and domestic groups; genetic drift. Consanguineous and non-
Structure, composition and nutritive value
dislocation. Hernia, choking abomasal dis- functions of family; Types of family (from consanguineous mating, genetic load, ge-
of eggs. Microbial spoilage. Preservation
40 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
netic effect of consanguineous and cousin 2. Demographic profile of India — Ethnic and trol of soil and water pollution; Prion and Polytene chromosomes; B-chromosomes
marriages. linguistic elements in the Indian population Prion hypothesis. – structure, behaviour and significance.
9.4 Chromosomes and chromosomal ab- and their distribution. Indian population - fac- Important crop diseases caused by viruses, 2. Genetics, Molecular Biology and Evo-
errations in man, methodology. tors influencing its structure and growth. bacteria, mycoplasma, fungi and nema- lution:
(a) Numerical and structural aberrations 3.1 The structure and nature of traditional todes; Modes of infection and dissemina- Development of genetics; Gene versus al-
(disorders). Indian social system — Varnashram, tion; Molecular basis of infection and dis- lele concepts (Pseudoalleles); Quantitative
(b) Sex chromosomal aberrations – Purushartha, Karma, Rina and Rebirth. ease resistance/defence; Physiology of genetics and multiple factors; Incomplete
Klinefelter (XXY), Turner (XO), Super 3.2 Caste system in India- structure and parasitism and control measures; Fungal dominance, polygenic inheritance, multiple
female (XXX), intersex and other characteristics, Varna and caste, Theories toxins; Modelling and disease forecasting; alleles; Linkage and crossing over; Meth-
syndromic disorders. of origin of caste system, Dominant caste, Plant quarantine. ods of gene mapping, including molecular
(c) Autosomal aberrations – Down syn- Caste mobility, Future of caste system, 2. Cryptogams: maps (idea of mapping function); Sex chro-
drome, Patau, Edward and Cri-du-chat Jajmani system, Tribe- caste continuum. Algae, fungi, lichens, bryophytes, pterido- mosomes and sex-linked inheritance, sex
syndromes. 3.3 Sacred Complex and Nature- Man- phytes - structure and reproduction from determination and molecular basis of sex
(d) Genetic imprints in human disease, Spirit Complex. evolutionary viewpoint; Distribution of differentiation; Mutations (biochemical and
genetic screening, genetic counseling, 3.4 Impact of Buddhism, Jainism, Islam and Cryptogams in India and their ecological molecular basis); Cytoplasmic inheritance
human DNA profiling, gene mapping Christianity on Indian society. and economic importance. and cytoplasmic genes (including genet-
and genome study. 4. Emergence and growth of anthropology 3. Phanerogams: ics of male sterility).
9.5 Race and racism, biological basis of in India-Contributions of the 18th, 19th and Gymnosperms: Concept of Progymnos- Structure and synthesis of nucleic acids
morphological variation of non-metric and early 20th Century scholar-administrators. perms; Classification and distribution of and proteins; Genetic code and regulation
metric characters. Racial criteria, racial Contributions of Indian anthropologists to gymnosperms; Salient features of Cycada- of gene expression; Gene silencing;
traits in relation to heredity and environ- tribal and caste studies. les, Ginkgoales, Coniferales and Gnetales, Multigene families; Organic evolution – evi-
ment; biological basis of racial classifica- 5.1 Indian Village: Significance of village their structure and reproduction; General dences, mechanism and theories.
tion, racial differentiation and race cross- study in India; Indian village as a social account of Cycadofilicales, Bennettitales Role of RNA in origin and evolution.
ing in man. system; Traditional and changing patterns and Cordaitales; Geological time scale; 3. Plant Breeding, Biotechnology and
9.6 Age, sex and population variation as of settlement and inter-caste relations; Type of fossils and their study techniques. Biostatistics:
genetic marker- ABO, Rh blood groups, Agrarian relations in Indian villages; Im- Angiosperms: Systematics, anatomy, em- Methods of plant breeding – introduction,
HLA Hp, transferring, Gm, blood enzymes. pact of globalization on Indian villages. bryology, palynology and phylogeny. selection and hybridization (pedigree,
Physiological characteristics-Hb level, 5.2 Linguistic and religious minorities and Taxonomic hierarchy; International Code backcross, mass selection, bulk method);
body fat, pulse rate, respiratory functions their social, political and economic status. of Botanical Nomenclature; Numerical tax- Mutation, polyploidy, male sterility and het-
and sensory perceptions in different cul- 5.3 Indigenous and exogenous processes onomy and chemotaxonomy; Evidence erosis breeding; Use of apomixes in plant
tural and socio-economic groups. of socio-cultural change in Indian society: from anatomy, embryology and palynology. breeding; DNA sequencing; Genetic engi-
9.7 Concepts and methods of Ecological Sanskritization, Westernization, Moderni- Origin and evolution of angiosperms; Com- neering – methods of transfer of genes;
Anthropology. Bio-cultural Adaptations – zation; Inter-play of little and great tradi- parative account of various systems of clas- Transgenic crops and biosafety aspects;
Genetic and Non- genetic factors. Man’s tions; Panchayati raj and social change; sification of angiosperms; Study of Development and use of molecular mark-
physiological responses to environmental Media and social change. angiospermic families – Mangnoliaceae, ers in plant breeding; Tools and techniques
stresses: hot desert, cold, high altitude cli- 6.1 Tribal situation in India – Bio-genetic Ranunculaceae, Brassicaceae, Ro- - probe, southern blotting, DNA fingerprint-
mate. variability, linguistic and socio-economic saceae, Fabaceae, Euphorbiaceae, ing, PCR and FISH.
9.8 Epidemiological Anthropology: Health characteristics of tribal populations and Malvaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Apiaceae, Standard deviation and coefficient of varia-
and disease. Infectious and non-infectious their distribution. Asclepiadaceae, Verbenaceae, Solan- tion (CV); Tests of significance (Z-test, t-
diseases. Nutritional deficiency related dis- 6.2 Problems of the tribal Communities — aceae, Rubiaceae, Cucurbitaceae, Astera- test and chi-square test); Probability and
eases. land alienation, poverty, indebtedness, low ceae, Poaceae, Arecaceae, Liliaceae, distributions (normal, binomial and Pois-
10. Concept of human growth and devel- literacy, poor educational facilities, unem- Musaceae and Orchidaceae. son); Correlation and regression.
opment: stages of growth - pre-natal, na- ployment, underemployment, health and Stomata and their types; Glandular and 4. Physiology and Biochemistry:
tal, infant, childhood, adolescence, matu- nutrition. non-glandular trichomes; Unusual second- Water relations, mineral nutrition and ion
rity, senescence. 6.3 Developmental projects and their im- ary growth; Anatomy of C3 and C4 plants; transport, mineral deficiencies; Photosyn-
- Factors affecting growth and develop- pact on tribal displacement and problems Xylem and phloem differentiation; Wood thesis – photochemical reactions; photo-
ment genetic, environmental, bio- of rehabilitation. Development of forest anatomy. phosphorylation and carbon fixation path-
chemical, nutritional, cultural and policy and tribals. Impact of urbanization Development of male and female gameto- ways; C3, C4 and CAM pathways; Mecha-
socio-economic. and industrialization on tribal populations. phytes, pollination, fertilization; Endosperm nism of phloem transport; Respiration
- Ageing and senescence. Theories and 7.1 Problems of exploitation and depriva- - its development and function; Patterns of (anerobic and aerobic, including fermen-
observations - biological and chrono- tion of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled embryo development; Polyembroyony and tation) – electron transport chain and oxi-
logical longevity. Human physique and Tribes and Other Backward Classes. Con- apomixes; Applications of palynology; Ex- dative phosphorylation; Photorespiration;
somatotypes. Methodologies for stitutional safeguards for Scheduled Tribes perimental embryology including pollen Chemiosmotic theory and ATP synthesis;
growth studies. and Scheduled Castes. storage and test-tube fertilization. Lipid metabolism; Nitrogen fixation and
7.2 Social change and contemporary tribal 4. Plant Resource Development: nitrogen metabolism; Enzymes, coen-
11.1 Relevance of menarche, menopause
societies: Impact of modern democratic in- Domestication and introduction of plants; zymes; Energy transfer and energy con-
and other bioevents to fertility. Fertility pat-
stitutions, development programmes and Origin of cultivated plants; Vavilov’s cen- servation; Importance of secondary me-
terns and differentials.
welfare measures on tribals and weaker tres of origin; Plants as sources for food, tabolites; Pigments as photoreceptors
11.2 Demographic theories- biological,
sections. fodder, fibre, spices, beverages, edible oils, (plastidial pigments and phytochrome);
social and cultural.
drugs, narcotics, insecticides, timber, gums, Plant movements; Photoperiodism and
11.3 Biological and socio-ecological fac- 7.3 The concept of ethnicity; Ethnic con-
resins and dyes, latex, cellulose, starch and flowering, vernalization, senescence;
tors influencing fecundity, fertility, natality flicts and political developments; Unrest
its products; Perfumery; Importance of Eth- Growth substances – their chemical na-
and mortality. among tribal communities; Regionalism
nobotany in Indian context; Energy planta- ture, role and applications in agri-horticul-
12. Applications of Anthropology: Anthro- and demand for autonomy; Pseudo-tribal-
tions; Botanical Gardens and Herbaria. ture; Growth indices, growth movements;
pology of sports, Nutritional anthropology, ism; Social change among the tribes dur-
5. Morphogenesis: Stress physiology (heat, water, salinity,
Anthropology in designing of defence and ing colonial and post-Independent India.
metal); Fruit and seed physiology; Dor-
other equipments, Forensic Anthropology, 8.1 Impact of Hinduism, Buddhism, Chris- Totipotency, polarity, symmetry and
mancy, storage and germination of seed;
Methods and principles of personal identi- tianity, Islam and other religions on tribal dfferentiation; Cell, tissue, organ and pro-
Fruit ripening – its molecular basis and
fication and reconstruction, Applied human societies. toplast culture; Somatic hybrids and
manipulation.
genetics – Paternity diagnosis, genetic 8.2 Tribe and nation state — a compara- Cybrids; Micropropagation; Somaclonal
variation and its applications; Pollen hap- 5. Ecology and Plant Geography:
counseling and eugenics, DNA technol- tive study of tribal communities in India and
loids, embryo rescue methods and their Concept of ecosystem; Ecological factors;
ogy in diseases and medicine, other countries.
applications. Concepts and dynamics of community;
serogenetics and cytogenetics in repro- 9.1 History of administration of tribal ar-
PAPER – II Plant succession; Concept of biosphere;
ductive biology. eas, tribal policies, plans, programmes of
Ecosystems; Conservation; Pollution and
PAPER – II tribal development and their implementa- 1. Cell Biology:
its control (including phytoremediation);
1.1 Evolution of the Indian Culture and Civi- tion. The concept of PTGs (Primitive Tribal Techniques of cell biology; Prokaryotic and
Plant indicators; Environment (Protection)
lization — Prehistoric (Palaeolithic, Groups), their distribution, special eukaryotic cells - structural and ultrastruc-
Act.
Mesolithic, Neolithic and Neolithic - programmes for their development. Role tural details; Structure and function of ex-
Forest types of India - Ecological and eco-
Chalcolithic). Protohistoric (Indus Civiliza- of N.G.O.s in tribal development. tracellular matrix (cell wall), membranes-
nomic importance of forests, afforestation,
tion): Pre- Harappan, Harappan and post- 9.2 Role of anthropology in tribal and rural cell adhesion, membrane transport and ve-
deforestation and social forestry; Endan-
Harappan cultures. Contributions of tribal development. sicular transport; Structure and function of
gered plants, endemism, IUCN categories,
cultures to Indian civilization. 9.3 Contributions of anthropology to the cell organelles (chloroplasts, mitochondria,
Red Data Books; Biodiversity and its con-
1.2 Palaeo – anthropological evidences understanding of regionalism, communa- ER, dictyosomes ribosomes, endosomes,
servation; Protected Area Network; Con-
from India with special reference to Siwaliks lism, and ethnic and political movements. lysosomes, peroxisomes); Cytoskelaton
vention on Biological Diversity; Farmers’
and Narmada basin (Ramapithecus, BOTANY and microtubules; Nucleus, nucleolus,
Rights and Intellectual Property Rights;
Sivapithecus and Narmada Man). nuclear pore complex; Chromatin and nu-
PAPER – I Concept of Sustainable Development; Bio-
1.3 Ethno-archaeology in India : The con- cleosome; Cell signalling and cell recep-
1. Microbiology and Plant Pathology: geochemical cycles; Global warming and
cept of ethno-archaeology; Survivals and tors; Signal transduction; Mitosis and meio-
Structure and reproduction/multiplication climatic change; Invasive species; Envi-
Parallels among the hunting, foraging, fish- sis; Molecular basis of cell cycle; Numeri-
of viruses, viroids, bacteria, fungi and my- ronmental Impact Assessment; Phytogeo-
ing, pastoral and peasant communities in- cal and structural variations in chromo-
coplasma; Applications of microbiology in graphical regions of India.
cluding arts and crafts producing commu- somes and their significance; Chromatin
agriculture, industry, medicine and in con- organization and packaging of genome;
nities.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 41
CHEMISTRY flow and relaxation methods; Collisions Claisen, Cope, Stevens and Wagner- deflection, moment distribution,
PAPER - I and transition state theories. Meerwein rearrangements. Rolling loads and Influences lines: Influ-
1. Atomic Structure: 10. Photochemistry: (b) Aldol condensation, Claisen conden- ences lines for Shear Force and Bending
Absorption of light; decay of excited state sation, Dieckmann, Perkin, Knoevenagel, moment at a section of beam. Criteria for
Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle,
by different routes; photochemical react- Witting, Clemmensen, Wolff-Kishner, maximum shear force and bending Mo-
Schrodinger wave equation (time indepen-
ions between hydrogen and halogens and Cannizzaro and von Richter reactions; ment in beams traversed by a system of
dent); Interpretation of wave function, par-
their quantum yields. Stobbe, benzoin and acyloin condensat- moving loads. Influences lines for simply
ticle in one-dimensional box, quantum
11. Surface Phenomena and Catalysis: ions; Fischer indole synthesis, Skraup syn- supported plane pin jointed trusses.
numbers, hydrogen atom wave functions;
thesis, Bischler-Napieralski, Sandmeyer, Arches: Three hinged, two hinged and
Shapes of s, p and d orbitals. Absorption from gases and solutions on
Reimer-Tiemann and Reformatsky reactions. fixed arches, rib shortening and tempera-
2. Chemical Bonding: solid adsorbents, Langmuir and B.E.T. ad-
3. Pericyclic Reactions: ture effects.
Ionic bond, characteristics of ionic com- sorption isotherms; determination of sur-
Matrix methods of analysis: Force method
pounds, lattice energy, Born-Haber cycle; face area, characteristics and mechanism Classification and examples; Woodward-
and displacement method of analysis of
covalent bond and its general characteris- of reaction on heterogeneous catalysts. Hoffmann rules – electrocyclic reactions,
indeterminate beams and rigid frames.
tics, polarities of bonds in molecules and 12. Bio-inorganic Chemistry: cycloaddition reactions [2+2 and 4+2] and
Plastic Analysis of beams and frames:
their dipole moments; Valence bond Metal ions in biological systems and their sigmatropic shifts [1, 3; 3, 3 and 1, 5] FMO
Theory of plastic bending, plastic analysis,
theory, concept of resonance and reso- role in ion transport across the membranes approach.
statical method, Mechanism method.
nance energy; Molecular orbital theory (molecular mechanism), oxygen-uptake 4. (i) Preparation and Properties of Poly- Unsymmetrical bending: Moment of iner-
(LCAO method); bonding in H2+, H2, He2+ to proteins, cytochromes and ferredoxins. mers: Organic polymers–polyethy-lene, tia, product of inertia, position of Neutral
Ne2, NO, CO, HF, and CN–; Comparison of 13. Coordination Compounds: polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, teflon, ny- Axis and Principle axes, calculation of
valence bond and molecular orbital theo- (i) Bonding theories of metal complexes; lon, terylene, synthetic and natural rubber. bending stresses.
ries, bond order, bond strength and bond Valence bond theory, crystal field theory (ii) Biopolymers: Structure of proteins, 2. Design of Structures: Steel, Concrete
length. and its modifications; applications of theo- DNA and RNA. and Masonry Structures:
3. Solid State: ries in the explanation of magnetism and 5. Synthetic Uses of Reagents: 2.1 Structural Steel Design:
Crystal systems; Designation of crystal electronic spectra of metal complexes. OsO4, HIO4, CrO3, Pb(OAc)4, SeO2, NBS, Structural Steel: Factors of safety and load
faces, lattice structures and unit cell; (ii) Isomerism in coordination compounds; B2H6, Na-Liquid NH3, LiAlH4, NaBH4, n-BuLi factors. Riveted, bolted and welded joints
Bragg’s law; X-ray diffraction by crystals; IUPAC nomenclature of coordination com- and MCPBA. and connections. Design of tension and
Close packing, radius ratio rules, calcula- pounds; stereochemistry of complexes 6. Photochemistry: compression member, beams of built up
tion of some limiting radius ratio values; with 4 and 6 coordination numbers; che- Photochemical reactions of simple organic section, riveted and welded plate girders,
Structures of NaCl, ZnS, CsCl and CaF2; late effect and polynuclear complexes; compounds, excited and ground states, gantry girders, stancheons with battens
Stoichiometric and nonstoichiometric de- trans effect and its theories; kinetics of sub- singlet and triplet states, Norrish-Type I and and lacings.
fects, impurity defects, semi-conductors. stitution reactions in square-planer com- Type II reactions. 2.2 Design of Concrete and Masonry
4. The Gaseous State and Transport Phe- plexes; thermodynamic and kinetic stabil- Structures:
7. Spectroscopy:
nomenon: ity of complexes. Concept of mix design. Reinforced Con-
Principle and applications in structure elu-
crete: Working Stress and Limit State
Equation of state for real gases, inter-mo- (iii) EAN rule, Synthesis structure and re- cidation:
method of design–Recommendations of
lecular interactions and critical pheno- activity of metal carbonyls; carboxylate (i) Rotational: Diatomic molecules; isoto- I.S. codes Design of one way and two way
mena and liquefaction of gases, Maxwell’s anions, carbonyl hydrides and metal ni- pic substitution and rotational constants. slabs, stair-case slabs, simple and continu-
distribution of speeds, intermolecular col- trosyl compounds. (ii) Vibrational: Diatomic molecules, linear ous beams of rectangular, T and L sec-
lisions, collisions on the wall and effusion; (iv) Complexes with aromatic systems, syn- triatomic molecules, specific frequencies tions. Compression members under direct
Thermal conductivity and viscosity of ideal thesis, structure and bonding in metal ole- of functional groups in polyatomic mol- load with or without eccentricity, Cantile-
gases. fin complexes, alkyne complexes and ecules. ver and Counter fort type retaining walls.
5. Liquid State: cyclopentadienyl complexes; coordinative (iii) Electronic: Singlet and triplet states; Water tanks: Design requirements for Rect-
Kelvin equation; Surface tension and sur- unsaturation, oxidative addition reactions, n Ý π* and π π*Ý transitions; application to angular and circular tanks resting on
face energy, wetting and contact angle, insertion reactions, fluxional molecules and conjugated double bonds and conjugated ground.
interfacial tension and capillary action. their characterization; Compounds with carbonyls–Woodward-Fieser rules; Prestressed concrete: Methods and sys-
6. Thermodynamics: metal-metal bonds and metal atom clus- Charge transfer spectra. tems of prestressing, anchorages, Analy-
Work, heat and internal energy; first law of ters. (iv) Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (1H sis and design of sections for flexure based
thermodynamics. 14. Main Group Chemistry: NMR): Basic principle; chemical shift and on working stress, loss of prestress.
Second law of thermodynamics; entropy Boranes, borazines, phosphazenes and spin-spin interaction and coupling con- Design of brick masonry as per I.S. Codes
as a state function, entropy changes in vari- cyclic phosphazene, silicates and sili- stants. 3. Fluid Mechanics, Open Channel Flow
ous processes, entropy–reversibility and cones, Interhalogen compounds; Sulphur (v) Mass Spectrometry: Parent peak, base and Hydraulic Machines:
irreversibility, Free energy functions; Ther- – nitrogen compounds, noble gas com- peak, metastable peak, McLafferty rear- 3.1 Fluid Mechanics:
modynamic equation of state; Maxwell re- pounds. rangement. Fluid properties and their role in fluid mo-
lations; Temperature, volume and pressure 15. General Chemistry of ‘f’ Block Ele- tion, fluid statics including forces acting on
CIVIL ENGINEERING
dependence of U, H, A, G, Cp and Cv á and ments: plane and curved surfaces.
PAPER – I Kinematics and Dynamics of Fluid flow:
â; J-T effect and inversion temperature; Lanthanides and actinides; separation,
1. Engineering Mechanics, Strength of Velocity and accelerations, stream lines,
criteria for equilibrium, relation between oxidation states, magnetic and spectral
Materials and Structural Analysis: equation of continuity, irrotational and ro-
equilibrium constant and thermodynamic properties; lanthanide contraction.
1.1 Engineering Mechanics: tational flow, velocity potential and stream
quantities; Nernst heat theorem, introduc- PAPER - II
tory idea of third law of thermodynamics. Units and Dimensions, SI Units, Vectors, functions.
1. Delocalised Covalent Bonding:
Concept of Force, Concept of particle and Continuity, momentum and energy equa-
7. Phase Equilibria and Solutions: Aromaticity, anti-aromaticity; annulenes, rigid body. Concurrent, Non Concurrent tion, Navier-Stokes equation, Euler’s equa-
Clausius-Clapeyron equation; phase dia- azulenes, tropolones, fulvenes, sydnones. and parallel forces in a plane, moment of tion of motion, application to fluid flow prob-
gram for a pure substance; phase equilib- 2. (i) Reaction Mechanisms: General lems, pipe flow, sluice gates, weirs.
force, free body diagram, conditions of
ria in binary systems, partially miscible liq- methods (both kinetic and non-kinetic) of 3.2 Dimensional Analysis and Similitude:
equilibrium, Principle of virtual work,
uids–upper and lower critical solution tem- study of mechanism of organic reactions: Buckingham’s Pi-theorem, dimensionless
equivalent force system.
peratures; partial molar quantities, their sig- isotopic method, cross-over experiment, parameters.
First and Second Moment of area, Mass
nificance and determination; excess ther- intermediate trapping, stereochemistry; 3.3 Laminar Flow:
moment of Inertia.
modynamic functions and their determina- energy of activation; thermodynamic con- Laminar flow between parallel, stationary
Static Friction.
tion. trol and kinetic control of reactions. and moving plates, flow through tube.
Kinematics and Kinetics:
8. Electrochemistry: (ii) Reactive Intermediates: Generation, 3.4 Boundary layer:
Kinematics in Cartesian Co-ordinates,
Debye-Huckel theory of strong electrolytes geometry, stability and reactions of car- Laminar and turbulent boundary layer on
motion under uniform and nonuniform ac-
and Debye-Huckel limiting Law for vari- bonium ions and carbanions, free radicals, a flat plate, laminar sub layer, smooth and
celeration, motion under gravity. Kinetics
ous equilibrium and transport properties. carbenes, benzynes and nitrenes. rough boundaries, drag and lift.
of particle: Momentum and Energy prin-
Galvanic cells, concentration cells; elec- (iii) Substitution Reactions: SN1, SN2 and Turbulent flow through pipes: Characteris-
ciples, collision of elastic bodies, rotation tics of turbulent flow, velocity distribution
trochemical series, measurement of e.m.f. SNi mechanisms; neighbouring group par-
of rigid bodies. and variation of pipe friction factor, hydrau-
of cells and its applications fuel cells and ticipation; electrophilic and nucleophilic
1.2 Strength of Materials: lic grade line and total energy line.
batteries. reactions of aromatic compounds includ-
ing heterocyclic compounds–pyrrole, fu- Simple Stress and Strain, Elastic constants, 3.5 Open channel flow:
Processes at electrodes; double layer at
ran, thiophene and indole. axially loaded compression members, Uniform and non-uniform flows, momen-
the interface; rate of charge transfer, cur-
Shear force and bending moment, theory tum and energy correction factors, specific
rent density; overpotential; electro-analyti- (iv) Elimination Reactions: E1, E2 and
cal techniques: Polarography, of simple bending, Shear Stress distribu- energy and specific force, critical depth,
E1cb mechanisms; orientation in E2 reac-
amperometry, ion selective electrodes and tion across cross sections, Beams of uni- rapidly varied flow, hydraulic jump, gradu-
tions–Saytzeff and Hoffmann; pyrolytic syn
their uses. form strength. ally varied flow, classification of surface
elimination – Chugaev and Cope elimina-
Deflection of beams: Macaulay’s method, profiles, control section, step method of in-
9. Chemical Kinetics: tions.
Mohr’s Moment area method, Conjugate tegration of varied flow equation.
Differential and integral rate equations for (v) Addition Reactions: Electrophilic ad-
beam method, unit load method. Torsion 3.6 Hydraulic Machines and Hydro-
zeroth, first, second and fractional order dition to C=C and C=C; nucleophilic addi-
of Shafts, Elastic stability of columns, power:
reactions; Rate equations involving re- tion to C=0, C=N, conjugated olefins and
Euler’s Rankine’s and Secant formulae. Hydraulic turbines, types classification,
verse, parallel, consecutive and chain re- carbonyls.
1.3 Structural Analysis: Choice of turbines, performance param-
actions; branching chain and explosions; (vi) Reactions and Rearrangements: (a) eters, controls, characteristics, specific
effect of temperature and pressure on rate Pinacol-pinacolone, Hoffmann, Beck- Castiglianio’s theorems I and II, unit load
method of consistent deformation applied speed.
constant; Study of fast reactions by stop- mann, Baeyer–Villiger, Favorskii, Fries,
to beams and pin jointed trusses. Slope-
42 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
Principles of hydropower development. their functions – Functions and Design con- Working principles, units, chambers, sedi- cedures and Appraisal Methods. Risk and
4. Geotechnical Engineering: stituents of turn and crossings – Necessity mentation tanks, trickling filters, oxidation Uncertainty Analysis and Methods.
Soil Type and structure – gradation and par- of geometric design of track – Design of ponds, activated sludge process, septic Cost of capital: Concept, Computation of
ticle size distribution – consistency limits. station and yards. tank, disposal of sludge, recycling of waste- Specific Costs and Weighted Average Cost
Water in soil – capillary and structural – 2.3 Highway Engineering: water. of Capital. CAPM as a Tool of Determining
effective stress and pore water pressure – Principles of Highway alignments – classi- 4.6 Solid waste: Cost of Equity Capital.
permeability concept – field and labora- fication and geometrical design elements Collection and disposal in rural and urban Financing Decisions: Theories of Capital
tory determination of permeability – Seep- and standards for Roads. contexts, management of long-term ill ef- Structure - Net Income (NI) Approach,
age pressure – quick sand conditions – Pavement structure for flexible and rigid fects. Net Operating Income (NOI) Approach, MM
Shear strength determination – Mohr Cou- pavements - Design principles and meth- 5. Environmental pollution: Approach and Traditional Approach. De-
lomb concept. odology of pavements. Sustainable development. Radioactive signing of Capital structure: Types of Lever-
Compaction of soil – Laboratory and field Typical construction methods and stan- wastes and disposal. Environmental im- ages (Operating, Financial and Combined),
tests. dards of materials for stabilized soil, WBM, pact assessment for thermal power plants, EBIT- EPS Analysis, and other Factors.
Compressibility and consolidation concept Bituminous works and CC roads. mines, river valley projects. Air pollution. Dividend Decisions and Valuation of Firm:
– consolidation theory – consolidation Surface and sub-surface drainage ar- Pollution control acts. Walter’s Model, MM Thesis, Gordan’s
settlement analysis. rangements for roads - culvert structures. COMMERCE AND ACCOUNTANCY Model Lintner’s Model. Factors Affecting
Earth pressure theory and analysis for re- Pavement distresses and strengthening by PAPER - I Dividend Policy.
taining walls, Application for sheet piles overlays. Working Capital Management: Planning of
Accounting and Finance
and Braced excavation. Traffic surveys and their applications in traf- Working Capital. Determinants of Working
Accounting, Taxation & Auditing
Bearing capacity of soil – approaches for fic planning - Typical design features for Capital. Components of Working Capital -
1. Financial Accounting: Cash, Inventory and Receivables.
analysis – Field tests – settlement analysis channelized, intersection, rotary etc – sig-
Accounting as a Financial Information Sys- Corporate Restructuring with focus on
– stability of slope of earth walk. nal designs – standard Traffic signs and
tem; Impact of Behavioural Sciences. Ac- Mergers and Acquisitions (Financial as-
Subsurface exploration of soils – methods markings.
counting Standards e.g., Accounting for pects only)
Foundation – Type and selection criteria 3. Hydrology, Water Resources and En- Depreciation, Inventories, Research and
for foundation of structures – Design crite- gineering: 2. Financial Markets and Institutions:
Development Costs, Long-term Construct-
ria for foundation – Analysis of distribution 3.1 Hydrology: Indian Financial System: An Overview
ion Contracts, Revenue Recognition, Fixed
of stress for footings and pile – pile group Hydrological cycle, precipitation, evapora- Money Markets: Participants, Structure and
Assets, Contingencies, Foreign Exchange
action-pile load test. tion, transpiration, infiltration, overland Instruments. Commercial Banks. Reforms
Transactions, Investments and Govern-
Ground improvement techniques. flow, hydrograph, flood frequency analy- in Banking sector. Monetary and Credit
ment Grants, Cash Flow Statement, Earn-
PAPER - II sis, flood routing through a reservoir, chan- Policy of RBI. RBI as a Regulator.
ings Per Share.
1. Construction Technology, Equipment, nel flow routing-Muskingam method. Capital Market: Primary and Secondary
Accounting for Share Capital Transactions
Planning and Management: 3.2 Ground water flow: Market. Financial Market Instruments and
including Bonus Shares, Right Shares,
Specific yield, storage coefficient, coeffi- Innovative Debt Instruments; SEBI as a
1.1 Construction Technology: Employees Stock Option and Buy- Back of
cient of permeability, confined and uncon- Regulator.
Engineering Materials: Securities.
fined equifers, aquifers, aquitards, radial Financial Services: Mutual Funds, Venture
Physical properties of construction materi- Preparation and Presentation of Company
flow into a well under confined and uncon- Capital, Credit Rating Agencies, Insurance
als with respect to their use in construction Final Accounts.
fined conditions. and IRDA.
- Stones, Bricks and Tiles; Lime, Cement, Amalgamation, Absorption and Reconstru-
3.3 Water Resources Engineering: PAPER – II
different types of Mortars and Concrete. ction of Companies.
Ground and surface water resource, single Organisation Theory and Behaviour,
Specific use of ferro cement, fibre rein- 2. Cost Accounting:
and multipurpose projects, storage capac- Human Resource Management
forced C.C, High strength concrete. Nature and Functions of Cost Accounting.
ity of reservoirs, reservoir losses, reservoir and Industrial Relations
Timber, properties and defects - common Installation of Cost Accounting System.
preservation treatments. sedimentation. Cost Concepts related to Income Measure- Organisation Theory and Behaviour
Use and selection of materials for specific 3.4 Irrigation Engineering: ment, Profit Planning, Cost Control and 1. Organisation Theory:
use like Low Cost Housing, Mass Hous- (i) Water requirements of crops: con- Decision Making. Nature and Concept of Organisation; Ex-
ing, High Rise Buildings. sumptive use, duty and delta, irriga- Methods of Costing: Job Costing, Process ternal Environment of Organizations -Tech-
1.2 Construction: tion methods and their efficiencies. Costing, Activity Based Costing. nological, Social, Political, Economical and
(ii) Canals: Distribution systems for canal Volume – cost – Profit Relationship as a Legal; Organizational Goals - Primary and
Masonry principles using Brick, stone,
irrigation, canal capacity, canal losses, tool of Profit Planning. Secondary goals, Single and Multiple
Blocks – construction detailing and strength
alignment of main and distributory ca- Goals; Management by Objectives.
characteristics. Incremental Analysis/ Differential Costing
nals, most efficient section, lined ca- as a Tool of Pricing Decisions, Product Evolution of Organisation Theory: Classi-
Types of plastering, pointing, flooring, roof-
nals, their design, regime theory, criti- Decisions, Make or Buy Decisions, Shut- cal, Neo-classical and Systems Approach.
ing and construction features.
cal shear stress, bed load. Down Decisions etc. Modern Concepts of Organisation Theory:
Common repairs in buildings.
(iii) Water logging: causes and control, Techniques of Cost Control and Cost Re- Organisational Design, Organisational
Principles of functional planning of build-
salinity. duction: Budgeting as a Tool of Planning Structure and Organisational Culture.
ing for residents and specific use - Build-
(iv) Canal structures: Design of, head regu- and Control. Standard Costing and Vari- Organisational Design–Basic Challenges;
ing code provisions.
lators, canal falls, aqueducts, meter- ance Analysis. Differentiation and Integration Process;
Basic principles of detailed and approxi-
ing flumes and canal outlets. Responsibility Accounting and Divisional Centralization and Decentralization Pro-
mate estimating - specification writing and
(v) Diversion headwork: Principles and Performance Measurement. cess; Standardization / Formalization and
rate analysis – principles of valuation of
design of weirs of permeable and im- Mutual Adjustment. Coordinating Formal
real property. 3. Taxation:
permeable foundation, Khosla’s and Informal Organizations. Mechanistic
Machinery for earthwork, concreting and Income Tax: Definitions; Basis of Charge;
theory, energy dissipation. and Organic Structures.
their specific uses – Factors affecting se- Incomes which do not form Part of Total
(vi) Storage works: Types of dams, design, Designing Organizational structures–Au-
lection of equipments – operating cost of Income. Simple problems of Computation
principles of rigid gravity, stability thority and Control; Line and Staff Func-
Equipments. of Income (of Individuals only) under Vari-
analysis. tions, Specialization and Coordination.
1.3 Construction Planning and Manage- ous Heads, i.e., Salaries, Income from
(vii) Spillways: Spillway types, energy dis- Types of Organization Structure –Func-
ment: House Property, Profits and Gains from
sipation. tional. Matrix Structure, Project Structure.
Construction activity – schedules- organi- Business or Profession, Capital Gains, In-
(viii)River training: Objectives of river train- Nature and Basis of Power , Sources of
zation for construction industry – Quality come from other sources, Income of other
ing, methods of river training. Power, Power Structure and Politics. Im-
assurance principles. Persons included in Assessee’s Total In-
pact of Information Technology on Organi-
Use of Basic principles of network – analy- 4. Environmental Engineering: come .
zational Design and Structure.
sis in form of CPM and PERT – their use in 4.1 Water Supply: Set - Off and Carry Forward of Loss.
Managing Organizational Culture.
construction monitoring, Cost optimization Predicting demand for water, impurities of Deductions from Gross Total Income.
2. Organisation Behaviour:
and resource allocation. water and their significance, physical, Salient Features/Provisions Related to VAT
chemical and bacteriological analysis, Meaning and Concept; Individual in orga-
Basic principles of Economic analysis and and Services Tax.
waterborne diseases, standards for potable nizations: Personality, Theories, and De-
methods. 4. Auditing:
water. terminants; Perception - Meaning and Pro-
Project profitability – Basic principles of Company Audit: Audit related to Divisible
cess.
Boot approach to financial planning – 4.2 Intake of water: Profits, Dividends, Special investigations,
Motivation: Concepts, Theories and Appli-
simple toll fixation criterions. Water treatment: principles of coagulation, Tax audit.
cations. Leadership-Theories and Styles.
2. Surveying and Transportation Engi- flocculation and sedimentation; slow-; Audit of Banking, Insurance, Non-Profit
Quality of Work Life (QWL): Meaning and
neering : rapid-, pressure-, filters; chlorination, soft- Organizations and Charitable Societies/
its impact on Performance, Ways of its En-
2.1 Surveying: ening, removal of taste, odour and salinity. Trusts/Organizations. hancement. Quality Circles (QC) – Mean-
Common methods and instruments for dis- 4.3 Sewerage systems: Financial Management, Financial Institu- ing and their Importance. Management of
tance and angle measurement for CE work Domestic and industrial wastes, storm sew- tions and Markets Conflicts in Organizations. Transactional
– their use in plane table, traverse survey, age–separate and combined systems, flow 1. Financial Management: Analysis, Organizational Effectiveness,
leveling work, triangulation, contouring and through sewers, design of sewers. Finance Function: Nature, Scope and Ob- Management of Change.
topographical map. 4.4 Sewage characterization: jectives of Financial Management: Risk Human Resources Management and In-
Basic principles of photogrammetry and BOD, COD, solids, dissolved oxygen, ni- and Return Relationship. dustrial Relations
remote sensing. trogen and TOC. Standards of disposal in Tools of Financial Analysis: Ratio Analy- 1. Human Resources Management
2.2 Railway Engineering: normal watercourse and on land. sis, Funds-Flow and Cash-Flow Statement. (HRM):
Permanent way – components, types and 4.5 Sewage treatment: Capital Budgeting Decisions: Process, Pro-
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 43
Meaning, Nature and Scope of HRM, Hu- Currency Boards. (v) New Economic Policy and Public principles of operation; triggering circuits;
man Resource Planning, Job Analysis, Job (v) Trade Policy and Developing Finance: Fiscal Responsibility Act, phase control rectifiers; bridge converters:
Description, Job Specification, Recruitment Countries. Twelfth Finance Commission and fully-controlled and half-controlled;
Process, Selection Process, Orientation (vi) BOP, adjustments and Policy Co- Fiscal Federalism and Fiscal principles of thyristor choppers and
and Placement, Training and Develop- ordination in open economy Consolidation. inverters; DC-DC converters; Switch mode
ment Process, Performance Appraisal and macro-model. (vi) New Economic Policy and Mon- inverter; basic concepts of speed control
360° Feed Back, Salary and Wage Admin- (vii) Speculative attacks etary system. Role of RBI under of DC and AC Motor drives applications of
istration, Job Evaluation, Employee Wel- (viii)Trade Blocks and Monetary the new regime. variable-speed drives.
fare, Promotions, Transfers and Separa- Unions. (vii) Planning: From central Planning 8. Analog Communication:
tions. (ix) WTO: TRIMS, TRIPS, Domestic to indicative planning, Relation Random variables: continuous, discrete;
2. Industrial Relations (IR): Measures, Different Rounds of between planning and markets probability, probability functions. Statistical
Meaning, Nature, Importance and Scope WTO talks. for growth and decentralized plan- averages; probability models; Random
of IR, Formation of Trade Unions, Trade 5. Growth and Development: ning: 73rd and 74th Constitutional signals and noise: white noise, noise
Union Legislation, Trade Union Movement (a) (i) Theories of growth: Harrod’s amendments. equivalent bandwidth; signal transmission
in India. Recognition of Trade Unions, Prob- model, (viii)New Economic Policy and Em- with noise; signal to noise ratio. Linear CW
lems of Trade Unions in India. Impact of ployment: Employment and pov- modulation: Amplitude modulation: DSB,
(ii) Lewis model of development with
Liberalization on Trade Union Movement. erty, Rural wages, Employment DSB-SC and SSB. Modulators and
surplus labour
Nature of Industrial Disputes : Strikes and Generation, Poverty alleviation Demodulators; Phase and Frequency
(iii) Balanced and Unbalanced
Lockouts , Causes of Disputes, Prevention schemes, New Rural, Employ- modulation: PM & FM signals; narrowband
growth,
and Settlement of Disputes. ment Guarantee Scheme. FM; generation & detection of FM and PM,
(iv) Human Capital and Economic
Worker’s Participation in Management: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Deemphasis, Preemphasis. CW
Growth.
Philosophy, Rationale, Present Day Sta- PAPER - I modulation system: Superhetrodyne
(v) Research and Development and receivers, AM receivers, communication
tus and Future Prospects. 1. Circuit Theory:
Economic Growth receivers, FM receivers, phase locked loop,
Adjudication and Collective Bargaining. Circuit components; network graphs; KCL,
(b) Process of Economic Development of SSB receiver Signal to noise ratio
Industrial Relations in Public Enterprises, KVL; circuit analysis methods: nodal
Less developed countries: Myrdal and calculation for AM and FM receivers.
Absenteeism and Labour Turnover in Indian analysis, mesh analysis; basic network
Kuzments on economic development PAPER - II
Industries and their Causes and Remedies. theorems and applications; transient
and structural change: Role of Agri-
ILO and its Functions. analysis: RL, RC and RLC circuits; 1. Control Systems:
culture in Economic Development of
ECONOMICS sinusoidal steady state analysis; resonant Elements of control systems; block-
less developed countries.
circuits; coupled circuits; balanced 3-phase diagram representation; open-loop &
PAPER – I (c) Economic development and Interna-
circuits; Two-port networks. closed-loop systems; principles and
1. Advanced Micro Economics: tional Trade and Investment, Role of
2. Signals & Systems: applications of feed-back. Control system
(a) Marshallian and Walrasiam Ap- Multinationals.
components. LTI systems: time-domain
proaches to Price determination. (d) Planning and Economic Develop- Representation of continuous–time and
and transform-domain analysis. Stability:
(b) Alternative Distribution Theories: ment: changing role of Markets and discrete-time signals & systems; LTI
Routh Hurwitz criterion, root-loci, Bode-
Ricardo, Kaldor, Kaleeki Planning, Private- Public Partnership systems; convolution; impulse response;
plots and polar plots, Nyquist’s criterion;
(c) Markets Structure: Monopolistic (e) Welfare indicators and measures of time-domain analysis of LTI systems based
Design of lead-lad compensators.
Competition, Duopoly, Oligopoly. growth – Human Development Indi- on convolution and differential/difference
Proportional, PI, PID controllers. State-
ces. The basic needs approach. equations. Fourier transform, Laplace
(d) Modern Welfare Criteria: Pareto variable representation and analysis of
transform, Z-transform, Transfer function.
Hicks & Scitovsky, Arrow’s Impossi- (f) Development and Environmental control systems.
Sampling and recovery of signals DFT, FFT
bility Theorem, A.K. Sen’s Social Sustainability – Renewable and Non 2. Microprocessors and Microcom-
Processing of analog signals through
Welfare Function. Renewable Resources, Environmen- puters:
discrete-time systems.
2. Advanced Macro Economics: tal Degradation, Intergenerational eq- PC organisation; CPU, instruction set,
uity development. 3. E.M. Theory:
Approaches to Employment Income and register set, timing diagram, programming,
PAPER – II Maxwell’s equations, wave propagation in
Interest Rate determination: Classical, interrupts, memory interfacing, I/O
bounded media. Boundary conditions,
Keynes (IS-LM) curve, Neo classical syn- 1. Indian Economy in Pre-Independence interfacing, programmable peripheral
reflection and refraction of plane waves.
thesis and New classical, Theories of In- Era: devices.
Transmission line: travelling and standing
terest Rate determination and Interest Rate Land System and its changes, Commer- 3. Measurement and Instrumentation:
waves, impedance matching, Smith chart.
Structure. cialization of agriculture, Drain theory, Error analysis; measurement of current,
4. Analog Electronics:
3. Money - Banking and Finance: Laissez faire theory and critique. Manu- voltage, power, energy, power-factor,
facture and Transport: Jute, Cotton, Rail- Characteristics and equivalent circuits
(a) Demand for and Supply of Money: resistance, inductance, capacitance and
ways, Money and Credit. (large and small-signal) of Diode, BJT, JFET
Money Multiplier Quantity Theory of frequency; bridge measurement. Signal
and MOSFET. Diode circuits: clipping,
Money (Fisher, Pique and Friedman) 2. Indian Economy after Independence: conditioning circuit; Electronic measuring
clamping, rectifier. Biasing and bias
and Keyne’s Theory on Demand for A The Pre Liberalization Era: instruments: multimeter, CRO, digital
stability. FET amplifiers. Current mirror;
Money, Goals and Instruments of Mon- (i) Contribution of Vakil, Gadgil and voltmeter, frequency counter, Q-meter,
Amplifiers: single and multi-stage,
etary Management in Closed and V.K.R.V. Rao. spectrum-analyzer, distortion-meter.
differential, operational, feedback and
Open Economies. Relation between (ii) Agriculture: Land Reforms and Transducers: thermocouple, thermistor,
power. Analysis of amplifiers; frequency-
the Central Bank and the Treasury. land tenure system, Green Revo- LVDT, strain-gauge, piezo-electric crystal.
response of amplifiers. OPAMP circuits.
Proposal for ceiling on growth rate of lution and capital formation in ag- 4. Power Systems: Analysis and Control:
Filters; sinusoidal oscillators: criterion for
money. riculture, Steady-state performance of overhead
oscillation; single-transistor and OPAMP
(b) Public Finance and its Role in Market (iii) Industry Trends in composition transmission lines and cables; principles
configurations. Function generators and
Economy: In stabilization of supply, and growth, Role of public and of active and reactive power transfer and
wave-shaping circuits. Linear and
allocation of resources and in distri- private sector, Small scale and distribution; per-unit quantities; bus
switching power supplies.
bution and development. Sources of cottage industries. admittance and impedance matrices; load
5. Digital Electronics:
Govt. revenue, forms of Taxes and (iv) National and Per capita income: flow; voltage control and power factor
Subsidies, their incidence and effects. Boolean algebra; minimization of Boolean
patterns, trends, aggregate and correction; economic operation; symme-
Limits to taxation, loans, crowding-out functions; logic gates; digital IC families
Sectoral composition and trical components, analysis of symmetrical
effects and limits to borrowings. Pub- (DTL, TTL, ECL, MOS, CMOS). Combina-
changes their in. and unsymmetrical faults. Concept of
lic Expenditure and its effects. tional circuits: arithmetic circuits, code
(v) Broad factors determining Na- system stability: swing curves and equal
converters, multiplexers and decoders.
4. International Economics: tional Income and distribution, area criterion. Static VAR system. Basic
Sequential circuits: latches and flip-flops,
(a) Old and New Theories of International Measures of poverty, Trends in concepts of HVDC transmission.
counters and shift-registers. Comparators,
Trade poverty and inequality. 5. Power System Protection:
timers, multivibrators. Sample and hold
(i) Comparative Advantage B The Post Liberalization Era: circuits, ADCs and DACs. Semiconductor Principles of overcurrent, differential and
(ii) Terms of Trade and Offer Curve. (i) New Economic Reform and Agri- memories. Logic implementation using distance protection. Concept of solid state
(iii) Product Cycle and Strategic Trade culture: Agriculture and WTO, programmable devices (ROM, PLA, FPGA). relays. Circuit breakers. Computer aided
Theories. Food processing, Subsidies, Ag- 6. Energy Conversion: protection: Introduction; line bus, generator,
(iv) Trade as an engine of growth and ricultural prices and public distri- Principles of electromechanical energy transformer protection; numeric relays and
theories of under development in bution system, Impact of public ex- conversion: Torque and emf in rotating application of DSP to protection.
an open economy. penditure on agricultural growth. machines. DC machines: characteristics 6. Digital Communication:
(b) Forms of Protection: Tariff and quota. (ii) New Economic Policy and Indus- and performance analysis; starting and Pulse code modulation (PCM), differential
(c) Balance of Payments Adjustments: try: Strategy of industrialization, speed control of motors; Transformers: pulse code modulation (DPCM), delta
Alternative Approaches. Privatization, Disinvestments, principles of operation and analysis; modulation (DM), Digital modulation and
(i) Price versus income, income ad- Role of foreign direct investment regulation, efficiency; 3-phase transfor- demodulation schemes: amplitude, phase
justments under fixed exchange and multinationals. mers. 3-phase induction machines and and frequency keying schemes (ASK, PSK,
rates, (iii) New Economic Policy and Trade: synchronous machines: characteristics and FSK). Error control coding: error detection
(ii) Theories of Policy Mix Intellectual property rights: Impli- preformance analysis; speed control. and correction, linear block codes,
(iii) Exchange rate adjustments under cations of TRIPS, TRIMS, GATS 7. Power Electronics and Electric Drives: convolution codes. Information measure
capital mobility and new EXIM policy. Semiconductor power devices: diode, and source coding. Data networks, 7-layer
(iv) Floating Rates and their Implica- (iv) New Exchange Rate Regime: transistor, thyristor, triac, GTO and architecture.
tions for Developing Countries: Partial and full convertibility, Capi- MOSFET–static characteristics and
tal account convertibility.
44 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
GEOGRAPHY morphology: Concepts of primate city and 8. Regional Development and Planning: importance; Index fossils and their
PAPER - I rank-size rule; Functional classification of Experience of regional planning in India; significance.
PRINCIPLES OF GEOGRAPHY towns; Sphere of urban influence; Rural - Five Year Plans; Integrated rural develop- 5. Indian Stratigraphy:
urban fringe; Satellite towns; Problems and ment programmes; Panchayati Raj and Classification of stratigraphic sequences:
Physical Geography:
remedies of urbanization; Sustainable de- decentralised planning; Command area lithostratigraphic, biostratigraphic, chro-
1. Geomorphology: Factors controlling
velopment of cities. development; Watershed management; nostratigraphic and magnetostratigraphic
landform development; endogenetic and
4. Regional Planning: Concept of a region; Planning for backward area, desert, and their interrelationships; Distribution
exogenetic forces; Origin and evolution of
Types of regions and methods of drought prone, hill, tribal area develop- and classification of Precambrian rocks of
the earth’s crust; Fundamentals of geo-
regionalisation; Growth centres and ment; multi-level planning; Regional plan- India; Study of stratigraphic distribution and
magnetism; Physical conditions of the
growth poles; Regional imbalances; re- ning and development of island territories. lithology of Phanerozoic rocks of India with
earth’s interior; Geosynclines; Continental
gional development strategies; environ- 9. Political Aspects: Geographical basis reference to fauna, flora and economic
drift; Isostasy; Plate tectonics; Recent views
mental issues in regional planning; Plan- of Indian federalism; State reorganisation; importance; Major boundary problems-
on mountain building; Vulcanicity; Earth-
ning for sustainable development. Emergence of new states; Regional con- Cambrian/Precambrian, Permian/Triassic,
quakes and Tsunamis; Concepts of geo-
5. Models, Theories and Laws in Human sciousness and inter state issues; interna- Cretaceous/Tertiary and Pliocene/
morphic cycles and Landscape develop-
Geography: Systems analysis in Human tional boundary of India and related issues; Pleistocene; Study of climatic conditions,
ment ; Denudation chronology; Channel
geography; Malthusian, Marxian and de- Cross border terrorism; India’s role in world paleogeography and igneous activity in the
morphology; Erosion surfaces; Slope de-
mographic transition models; Central affairs; Geopolitics of South Asia and In- Indian subcontinent in the geological past;
velopment ; Applied Geomorphology :
Place theories of Christaller and dian Ocean realm. Tectonic framework of India; Evolution of
Geohydrology, economic geology and en-
Losch;Perroux and Boudeville; Von 10. Contemporary Issues: Ecological is- the Himalayas.
vironment.
Thunen’s model of agricultural location; sues: Environmental hazards: landslides, 6. Hydrogeology and Engineering
2. Climatology: Temperature and pressure Weber’s model of industrial location; earthquakes, Tsunamis, floods and Geology:
belts of the world; Heat budget of the earth; Ostov’s model of stages of growth. Heart- droughts, epidemics; Issues relating to Hydrologic cycle and genetic classification
Atmospheric circulation; atmospheric sta- land and Rimland theories; Laws of inter- environmental pollution; Changes in pat- of water; Movement of subsurface water;
bility and instability. Planetary and local national boundaries and frontiers. terns of land use; Principles of environmen- Springs; Porosity, permeability, hydraulic
winds; Monsoons and jet streams; Air
PAPER – II tal impact assessment and environmental conductivity, transmissivity and storage
masses and fronto genesis, Temperate and
GEOGRAPHY OF INDIA management; Population explosion and coefficient, classification of aquifers; Water-
tropical cyclones; Types and distribution
1. Physical Setting: Space relationship of food security; Environmental degradation; bearing characteristics of rocks; Ground-
of precipitation; Weather and Climate;
India with neighboring countries; Structure Deforestation, desertification and soil ero- water chemistry; Salt water intrusion; Types
Koppen’s, Thornthwaite’s and Trewartha’s
and relief; Drainage system and water- sion; Problems of agrarian and industrial of wells; Drainage basin morphometry;
classification of world climates; Hydrologi-
sheds; Physiographic regions; Mechanism unrest; Regional disparities in economic Exploration for groundwater; Groundwater
cal cycle; Global climatic change and role
of Indian monsoons and rainfall patterns, development; Concept of sustainable recharge; Problems and management of
and response of man in climatic changes,
Tropical cyclones and western distur- growth and development; Environmental groundwater; Rainwater harvesting;
Applied climatology and Urban climate.
bances; Floods and droughts; Climatic re- awareness; Linkage of rivers; Globalisation Engineering properties of rocks; Geolo-
3. Oceanography: Bottom topography of gions; Natural vegetation; Soil types and and Indian economy. gical investigations for dams, tunnels
the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans; their distributions. NOTE: Candidates will be required to an- highways, railway and bridges; Rock as
Temperature and salinity of the oceans;
2. Resources: Land, surface and ground swer one compulsory map question perti- construction material; Landslides-causes,
Heat and salt budgets, Ocean deposits;
water, energy, minerals, biotic and marine nent to subjects covered by this paper. prevention and rehabilitation; Earthquake-
Waves, currents and tides; Marine re-
resources; Forest and wild life resources GEOLOGY resistant structures.
sources: biotic, mineral and energy re- and their conservation; Energy crisis.
sources; Coral reefs, coral bleaching; sea- PAPER - I PAPER - II
3. Agriculture: Infrastructure: irrigation, 1. Mineralogy:
level changes; law of the sea and marine 1. General Geology:
seeds, fertilizers, power; Institutional fac-
pollution. The Solar System, Meteorites, Origin and Classification of crystals into systems and
tors: land holdings, land tenure and land
4. Biogeography: Genesis of soils; Clas- interior of the earth and age of earth; classes of symmetry; International system
reforms; Cropping pattern, agricultural pro-
sification and distribution of soils; Soil pro- Volcanoes- causes and products, Volcanic of crystallographic notation; Use of
ductivity, agricultural intensity, crop com-
file; Soil erosion, Degradation and conser- belts; Earthquakes-causes, effects, projection diagrams to represent crystal
bination, land capability; Agro and social-
vation; Factors influencing world distribu- Seismic zones of India; Island arcs, symmetry; Elements of X-ray crystallo-
forestry; Green revolution and its socio-
tion of plants and animals; Problems of trenches and mid-ocean ridges; graphy.
economic and ecological implications; Sig-
deforestation and conservation measures; nificance of dry farming; Livestock re- Continental drifts; Seafloor spreading, Physical and chemical characters of rock
Social forestry; agro-forestry; Wild life; Ma- sources and white revolution; aqua - cul- Plate tectonics; Isostasy. forming silicate mineral groups; Structural
jor gene pool centres. ture; sericulture, apiculture and poultry; ag- 2. Geomorphology and Remote Sensing: classification of silicates; Common minerals
5. Environmental Geography: Principle of ricultural regionalisation; agro-climatic Basic concepts of geomorphology; of igneous and metamorphic rocks;
ecology; Human ecological adaptations; zones; agro- ecological regions. Weathering and soil formations; Land- Minerals of the carbonate, phosphate,
Influence of man on ecology and environ- 4. Industry: Evolution of industries; forms, slopes and drainage; Geomorphic sulphide and halide groups; Clay minerals.
ment; Global and regional ecological Locational factors of cotton, jute, textile, iron cycles and their interpretation; Morphology Optical properties of common rock forming
changes and imbalances; Ecosystem their and steel, aluminium, fertilizer, paper, and its relation to structures and lithology; minerals; Pleochroism, extinction angle,
management and conservation; Environ- chemical and pharmaceutical, automobile, Coastal geomorphology; Applications of double refraction, birefringence, twinning
mental degradation, management and cottage and agro-based industries; Indus- geomorphology in mineral prospecting, and dispersion in minerals.
conservation; Biodiversity and sustainable trial houses and complexes including pub- civil engineering; Hydrology and 2. Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology:
development; Environmental policy; Envi- lic sector undertakings; Industrial regionali- environmental studies; Geomorphology of Generation and crystallization of magmas;
ronmental hazards and remedial mea- sation; New industrial policies; Multination- Indian subcontinent. Crystallization of albite-anorthite, diopside-
sures; Environmental education and leg- als and liberalization; Special Economic Aerial photographs and their interpretation- anorthite and diopside-wollastonite-silica
islation. Zones; Tourism including eco -tourism. merits and limitations; The Electromagnetic systems; Bowen’s Reaction Principle;
Human Geography: 5. Transport, Communication and Trade: spectrum; Orbiting satellites and sensor Magmatic differentation and assimilation;
1. Perspectives in Human Geography: Road, railway, waterway, airway and pipe- systems; Indian Remote Sensing Satellites; Petrogenetic significance of the textures
Areal differentiation; regional synthesis; Di- line networks and their complementary Satellites data products; Applications of and structures of igneous rocks; Petro-
chotomy and dualism; Environmentalism; roles in regional development; Growing remote sensing in geology; The graphy and petrogenesis of granite,
Quantitative revolution and locational importance of ports on national and for- Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and syenite, diorite, basic and ultrabasic
analysis; radical, behavioural, human and eign trade; Trade balance; Trade Policy; Global Positioning System (GPS) - its groups, charnockite, anorthosite and
welfare approaches; Languages, religions Export processing zones; Developments applications. alkaline rocks; Carbonatites; Deccan
and secularisation; Cultural regions of the in communication and information technol- 3. Structural Geology: volcanic province.
world; Human development index. ogy and their impacts on economy and Principles of geologic mapping and map Types and agents of metamorphism;
2. Economic Geography: World economic society; Indian space programme. Metamorphic grades and zones; Phase
reading, Projection diagrams, Stress and
development: measurement and problems; 6. Cultural Setting: Historical Perspective strain ellipsoid and stress-strain rule; Facies of regional and contact
World resources and their distribution; En- of Indian Society; Racial, linguistic and metamorphism; ACF and AKF diagrams;
relationships of elastic, plastic and viscous
ergy crisis; the limits to growth; World agri- ethnic diversities; religious minorities; ma- Textures and structures of metamorphic
materials; Strain markers in deformed rocks;
culture: typology of agricultural regions; ag- jor tribes, tribal areas and their problems; rocks; Metamorphism of arenaceous,
Behaviour of minerals and rocks under
cultural regions; Growth, distribution and argillaceous and basic rocks; Minerals
ricultural inputs and productivity; Food and deformation conditions; Folds and faults
density of population; Demographic at- assemblages Retrograde metamorphism;
nutrition problems; Food security; famine: classification and mechanics; Structural
tributes: sex-ratio, age structure, literacy Metasomatism and granitisation,
causes, effects and remedies; World indus- analysis of folds, foliations, lineations, joints
rate, work-force, dependency ratio, longev- migmatites, Granulite terrains of India.
tries: locational patterns and problems; pat- and faults, unconformities; Time-relation-
ity; migration (inter-regional, intra- regional 3. Sedimentary Petrology:
terns of world trade. ship between crystallization and defor-
and international) and associated prob- mation. Sediments and Sedimentary rocks:
3. Population and Settlement Geography:
lems; Population problems and policies; Processes of formation; digenesis and
Growth and distribution of world popula- 4. Paleontology:
Health indicators. lithification; Clastic and non-clastic rocks-
tion; demographic attributes; Causes and Species- definition and nomenclature;
7. Settlements: Types, patterns and mor- their classification, petrography and
consequences of migration; concepts of Megafossils and Microfossils; Modes of
phology of rural settlements; Urban devel- depositional environment; Sedimentary
over-under-and optimum population; preservation of fossils; Different kinds of
opments; Morphology of Indian cities; Func- facies and provenance; Sedimentary
Population theories, world population prob- microfossils; Application of microfossils in
tional classification of Indian cities; structures and their significance; Heavy
lems and policies, Social well-being and correlation, petroleum exploration, paleo-
Conurbations and metropolitan regions; minerals and their significance; Sedimen-
quality of life; Population as social capital. climatic and paleoceanographic studies;
urban sprawl; Slums and associated prob- tary basins of India.
Types and patterns of rural settlements; Evolutionary trend in Hominidae, Equidae
lems; town planning; Problems of urban- 4. Economic Geology:
Environmental issues in rural settlements; and Proboscidae; Siwalik fauna;
ization and remedies. Ore, ore minerals and gangue, tenor of ore,
Hierarchy of urban settlements; Urban Gondwana flora and fauna and its
classification of ore deposits; Process of
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 45
formation of minerals deposits; Controls of and sculpture; External contacts; Religion; rial expansion, agrarian and economic - Classical music
ore localization; Ore textures and structu- Spread of religion; Literature. measures - Science and technology
res; Metallogenic epochs and provinces; Disintegration of the empire; Sungas and - Muhammad Tughluq: Major projects, 24. The Eighteenth Century:
Geology of the important Indian deposits Kanvas. agrarian measures, bureaucracy of - Factors for the decline of the Mughal
of aluminium, chromium, copper, gold, iron, 8. Post - Mauryan Period (Indo-Greeks, Muhammad Tughluq Empire
lead zinc, manganese, titanium, uranium Sakas, Kushanas, Western Kshatrapas): - Firuz Tughluq: Agrarian measures, - The regional principalities: Nizam’s
and thorium and industrial minerals; Contact with outside world; growth of urban achievements in civil engineering and Deccan, Bengal, Awadh
Deposits of coal and petroleum in India; centres, economy, coinage, development public works, decline of the Sultanate, - Maratha ascendancy under the
National Mineral Policy; Conservation and foreign contacts and Ibn Battuta’s ac-
of religions, Mahayana, social conditions, Peshwas
utilization of mineral resources; Marine count
art, architecture, culture, literature and - The Maratha fiscal and financial sys-
mineral resources and Law of Sea.
science. 17. Society, Culture and Economy in the tem
5. Mining Geology: Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries:
9. Early State and Society in Eastern - Emergence of Afghan Power, Battle of
Methods of prospecting-geological, India, Deccan and South India: - Society: composition of rural society,
geophysical, geochemical and geobotani- Panipat:1761
Kharavela, The Satavahanas, Tamil States ruling classes, town dwellers, women, - State of politics, culture and economy
cal; Techniques of sampling; Estimation of religious classes, caste and slavery
of the Sangam Age; Administration, on the eve of the British conquest
reserves or ore; Methods of exploration and under the Sultanate, Bhakti movement,
economy, land grants, coinage, trade PAPER - II
mining metallic ores, industrial minerals, Sufi movement
guilds and urban centres; Buddhist centres;
marine mineral resources and building 1. European Penetration into India:
Sangam literature and culture; Art and - Culture: Persian literature, literature in
stones; Mineral beneficiation and ore The Early European Settlements; The
architecture. the regional languages of North India,
dressing. Portuguese and the Dutch; The English and
10. Guptas, Vakatakas and Vardhanas: literature in the languages of South In-
6. Geochemistry and Environmental the French East India Companies; Their
Polity and administration, Economic dia, Sultanate architecture and new
Geology: struggle for supremacy; Carnatic Wars;
conditions, Coinage of the Guptas, Land structural forms, painting, evolution of a
Cosmic abundance of elements; Bengal -The conflict between the English
grants, Decline of urban centres, Indian composite culture
Composition of the planets and meteorites; and the Nawabs of Bengal; Siraj and the
feudalism, Caste system, Position of - Economy: Agricultural production, rise
Structure and composition of Earth and English; The Battle of Plassey; Significance
women, Education and educational of urban economy and non-agricultural
distribution of elements; Trace elements; of Plassey.
institutions; Nalanda, Vikramshila and production, trade and commerce
Elements of crystal chemistry-types of 2. British Expansion in India:
Vallabhi, Literature, scientific literature, art 18. The Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth
chemical bonds, coordination number; Bengal – Mir Jafar and Mir Kasim; The
and architecture. Century – Political Developments and
Isomorphism and polymorphism; Battle of Buxar; Mysore; The Marathas; The
11. Regional States during Gupta Era: Economy:
Elementary thermodynamics. three Anglo-Maratha Wars; The Punjab.
The Kadambas, Pallavas, Chalukyas of - Rise of Provincial Dynasties: Bengal,
Natural hazards-floods, mass wasting, 3. Early Structure of the British Raj:
Badami; Polity and Administration, Trade Kashmir (Zainul Abedin), Gujarat,
costal hazards, earthquakes and volcanic The early administrative structure; From
guilds, Literature; growth of Vaishnava and Malwa, Bahmanids
activity and mitigation; Environmental diarchy to direct control; The Regulating
Saiva religions. Tamil Bhakti movement, - The Vijayanagra Empire
impact of urbanization, mining, industrial Act (1773); The Pitt’s India Act (1784); The
Shankaracharya; Vedanta; Institutions of - Lodis
and radioactive waste disposal, use of Charter Act (1833); The voice of free trade
temple and temple architecture; Palas, - Mughal Empire, First phase: Babur and
fertilizers, dumping of mine waste and fly and the changing character of British
Senas, Rashtrakutas, Paramaras, Polity Humayun
ash; Pollution of ground and surface water, colonial rule; The English utilitarian and
and administration; Cultural aspects. Arab - The Sur Empire: Sher Shah’s adminis-
marine pollution; Environment protection - India.
conquest of Sind; Alberuni, The Chalukyas tration
legislative measures in India; Sea level 4. Economic Impact of British Colonial
of Kalyana, Cholas, Hoysalas, Pandyas; - Portuguese Colonial enterprise
changes: causes and impact. Rule:
Polity and Administration; local Govern-
HISTORY - Bhakti and Sufi Movements (a) Land revenue settlements in British
ment; Growth of art and architecture,
PAPER - I 19. The Fifteenth and early Sixteenth India; The Permanent Settlement; Ryotwari
religious sects, Institution of temple and
1. Sources: Century – Society and Culture: Settlement; Mahalwari Settlement;
Mathas, Agraharas, education and
Archaeological sources: literature, economy and society. - Regional cultural specificities Economic impact of the revenue
Exploration, excavation, epigraphy, 12. Themes in Early Indian Cultural - Literary traditions arrangements; Commercialization of
numismatics, monuments History: - Provincial architecture agriculture; Rise of landless agrarian
- Society, culture, literature and the arts labourers; Impoverishment of the rural
Literary sources: Languages and texts, major stages in the
in Vijayanagara Empire. society.
Indigenous: Primary and secondary; evolution of art and architecture, major
20. Akbar: (b) Dislocation of traditional trade and
poetry, scientific literature, literature, philosophical thinkers and schools, ideas
- Conquests and consolidation of the commerce; De-industrialisation; Decline of
literature in regional languages, religious in Science and Mathematics.
Empire traditional crafts; Drain of wealth; Economic
literature. 13. Early Medieval India, 750-1200:
- Establishment of Jagir and Mansab sys- transformation of India; Railroad and
Foreign accounts: Greek, Chinese and - Polity: Major political developments in
tems communication network including tele-
Arab writers. Northern India and the Peninsula, ori-
graph and postal services; Famine and
2. Pre-history and Proto-history: gin and the rise of Rajputs - Rajput policy
poverty in the rural interior; European
Geographical factors; hunting and - The Cholas: administration, village - Evolution of religious and social out-
business enterprise and its limitations.
gathering (paleolithic and mesolithic); economy and society look, theory of Sulh-i-kul and religious
5. Social and Cultural Developments:
Beginning of agriculture (neolithic and - “Indian Feudalism” policy
The state of indigenous education, its
chalcolithic). - Agrarian economy and urban settle- - Court patronage of art and technology
dislocation; Orientalist-Anglicist contro-
3. Indus Valley Civilization: ments 21. Mughal Empire in the Seventeenth
versy, The introduction of western
Origin, date, extent, characteristics, decline, - Trade and commerce Century:
education in India; The rise of press,
survival and significance, art and - Society: the status of the Brahman and - Major administrative policies of
literature and public opinion; The rise of
architecture. the new social order Jahangir, Shahjahan and Aurangzeb
modern vernacular literature; Progress of
4. Megalithic Cultures: - Condition of women - The Empire and the Zamindars science; Christian missionary activities in
Distribution of pastoral and farming cultures - Indian science and technology - Religious policies of Jahangir, India.
outside the Indus, Development of 14. Cultural Traditions in India, 750-1200: Shahjahan and Aurangzeb 6. Social and Religious Reform
community life, Settlements, Development - Philosophy: Skankaracharya and - Nature of the Mughal State movements in Bengal and Other Areas:
of agriculture, Crafts, Pottery, and Iron Vedanta, Ramanuja and Vishishtad- - Late Seventeenth century crisis and the Ram Mohan Roy, The Brahmo Movement;
industry. vaita, Madhva and Brahma-Mimansa revolts Devendranath Tagore; Iswarchandra
5. Aryans and Vedic Period: - Religion: Forms and features of religion, - The Ahom Kingdom Vidyasagar; The Young Bengal Movement;
Expansions of Aryans in India. Tamil devotional cult, growth of Bhakti, - Shivaji and the early Maratha Kingdom. Dayanada Saraswati; The social reform
Vedic Period: Religious and philosophic Islam and its arrival in India, Sufism 22. Economy and Society in the Sixteenth movements in India including Sati, widow
literature; Transformation from Rig Vedic - Literature: Literature in Sanskrit, growth and Seventeenth Centuries: remarriage, child marriage etc.; The
period to the later Vedic period; Political, of Tamil literature, literature in the newly - Population, agricultural production, craft contribution of Indian renaissance to the
social and economical life; Significance of developing languages, Kalhan’s production growth of modern India; Islamic revivalism
the Vedic Age; Evolution of Monarchy and Rajtarangini, Alberuni’s India - Towns, commerce with Europe through – the Feraizi and Wahabi Movements.
Varna system. - Art and Architecture: Temple architec- Dutch, English and French companies : 7. Indian Response to British Rule:
6. Period of Mahajanapadas: ture, sculpture, painting a trade revolution Peasant movements and tribal uprisings
Formation of States (Mahajanapada) : 15. The Thirteenth Century: - Indian mercantile classes, banking, in- in the 18th and 19th centuries including the
Republics and monarchies; Rise of urban - Establishment of the Delhi Sultanate: surance and credit systems Rangpur Dhing (1783), the Kol Rebellion
centres; Trade routes; Economic growth; The Ghurian invasions – factors behind - Condition of peasants, condition of (1832), the Mopla Rebellion in Malabar
Introduction of coinage; Spread of Jainism Ghurian success women (1841-1920), the Santal Hul (1855), Indigo
and Buddhism; Rise of Magadha and - Evolution of the Sikh community and the Rebellion (1859-60), Deccan Uprising
- Economic, social and cultural conse-
Nandas. Khalsa Panth (1875) and the Munda Ulgulan (1899-
quences
Iranian and Macedonian invasions and 1900); The Great Revolt of 1857 - Origin,
- Foundation of Delhi Sultanate and early 23. Culture in the Mughal Empire:
their impact. character, causes of failure, the
Turkish Sultans - Persian histories and other literature
7. Mauryan Empire: consequences; The shift in the character
- Consolidation: The rule of Iltutmish and - Hindi and other religious literature
Foundation of the Mauryan Empire, of peasant uprisings in the post-1857
Balban - Mughal architecture
Chandragupta, Kautilya and Arthashastra; period; the peasant movements of the
16. The Fourteenth Century: - Mughal painting
Ashoka; Concept of Dharma; Edicts; Polity, 1920s and 1930s.
- “The Khalji Revolution” - Provincial architecture and painting
Administration; Economy; Art, architecture 8. Factors leading to the birth of Indian
- Alauddin Khalji: Conquests and territo-
46 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
Nationalism; Politics of Association; The (iii) Disintegration of Empires in the Power and functions 10. Conspiracy.
Foundation of the Indian National face of the emergence of nation- (c) Election Commission – Power and 11. False imprisonment.
Congress; The Safety-valve thesis relating alities across the world. functions. 12. Malicious prosecution.
to the birth of the Congress; Programme 20. Imperialism and Colonialism: 10. Emergency provisions. 13. Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
and objectives of Early Congress; the social (i) South and South-East Asia 11. Amendment of the Constitution. Law of Contracts and Mercantile Law
composition of early Congress leadership; (ii) Latin America and South Africa 12. Principles of natural justice – Emerging 1. Nature and formation of contract/E-
the Moderates and Extremists; The (iii) Australia trends and judicial approach. contract.
Partition of Bengal (1905); The Swadeshi
(iv) Imperialism and free trade: Rise 13. Delegated legislation and its consti- 2. Factors vitiating free consent.
Movement in Bengal; the economic and
of neo-imperialism. tutionality. 3. Void, voidable, illegal and unenfor-
political aspects of Swadeshi Movement;
21. Revolution and Counter-Revolution: 14. Separation of powers and constitutional ceable agreements.
The beginning of revolutionary extremism
(i) 19th Century European revolu- governance. 4. Performance and discharge of
in India.
tions 15. Judicial review of administrative action. contracts.
9. Rise of Gandhi; Character of Gandhian
nationalism; Gandhi’s popular appeal; (ii) The Russian Revolution of 1917- 16. Ombudsman: Lokayukta, Lokpal etc. 5. Quasi- Contracts.
Rowlatt Satyagraha; the Khilafat 1921 International Law 6. Consequences of breach of contract.
Movement; the Non-cooperation (iii) Fascist Counter-Revolution, Italy 1. Nature and definition of international 7. Contract of indemnity, guarantee and
Movement; National politics from the end and Germany. law. insurance.
of the Non-cooperation movement to the (iv) The Chinese Revolution of 1949 2. Relationship between international 8. Contract of agency.
beginning of the Civil Disobedience 22. World Wars: law and municipal law. 9. Sale of goods and hire purchase.
movement; the two phases of the Civil (i) 1st and 2nd World Wars as Total 3. State recognition and state 10. Formation and dissolution of
Disobedience Movement; Simon Wars: Societal implications succession. partnership.
Commission; The Nehru Report; the (ii) World War I: Causes and conse- 4. Law of the sea: Inland waters, territorial 11. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881.
Round Table Conferences; Nationalism quences sea, contiguous zone, continental 12. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
and the Peasant Movements; Nationalism (iii) World War II: Causes and conse- shelf, exclusive economic zone, high 13. Standard form contracts.
and Working class movements; Women quence seas.
Contemporary Legal Developments
and Indian youth and students in Indian 23. The World after World War II: 5. Individuals: Nationality, statelessness;
1. Public Interest Litigation.
politics (1885-1947); the election of 1937 (i) Emergence of two power blocs Human rights and procedures
and the formation of ministries; Cripps 2. Intellectual property rights – Concept,
(ii) Emergence of Third World and available for their enforcement.
Mission; the Quit India Movement; the types/prospects.
non-alignment 6. Territorial jurisdiction of States,
Wavell Plan; The Cabinet Mission. 3. Information Technology Law including
(iii) UNO and the global disputes. extradition and asylum.
10. Constitutional Developments in the Cyber Laws – Concept, purpose/
24. Liberation from Colonial Rule: 7. Treaties: Formation, application,
Colonial India between 1858 and 1935 prospects.
(i) Latin America-Bolivar termination and reservation.
11. Other strands in the National Move- 4. Competition Law- Concept, purpose/
(ii) Arab World-Egypt 8. United Nations: Its principal organs,
ment prospects.
powers, functions and reform.
(iii) Africa-Apartheid to Democracy 5. Alternate Dispute Resolution –
The Revolutionaries: Bengal, the Punjab, 9. Peaceful settlement of disputes –
Maharashtra, U.P, the Madras Presidency, (iv) South-East Asia-Vietnam Concept, types/prospects.
different modes.
Outside India. 25. Decolonization and Underdevelop- 6. Major statutes concerning environ-
10. Lawful recourse to force: aggression,
The Left; The Left within the Congress: ment: mental law.
self-defence, intervention.
Jawaharlal Nehru, Subhas Chandra Bose, (i) Factors constraining develop- 7. Right to Information Act.
11. Fundamental principles of internat-
the Congress Socialist Party; the ment: Latin America, Africa 8. Trial by media.
ional humanitarian law – International
Communist Party of India, other left parties. 26. Unification of Europe: Literature of the following languages
conventions and contemporary
12. Politics of Separatism; the Muslim (i) Post War Foundations: NATO and developments. NOTE (i) : A candidate may be required
League; the Hindu Mahasabha; European Community to answer some or all the questions in
12. Legality of the use of nuclear weapons;
Communalism and the politics of partition; (ii) Consolidation and Expansion of ban on testing of nuclear weapons; the language concerned.
Transfer of power; Independence. European Community Nuclear – non proliferation treaty, CTBT. NOTE (ii) : In regard to the languages in-
13. Consolidation as a Nation; Nehru’s (iii) European Union. 13. International terrorism, state cluded in the Eighth Schedule to Consti-
Foreign Policy; India and her neighbours 27. Disintegration of Soviet Union and the sponsored terrorism, hijacking, tution, the scripts will be the same as
(1947-1964); The linguistic reorganisation Rise of the Unipolar World: indicated in Section-II (B) of Appendix I
international criminal court.
of States (1935-1947); Regionalism and (i) Factors leading to the collapse of relating to Main Examination.
14. New international economic order and
regional inequality; Integration of Princely Soviet communism and the So- NOTE (iii) : Candidates should note that
monetary law: WTO, TRIPS, GATT,
States; Princes in electoral politics; the viet Union, 1985-1991 the questions not required to be answered
IMF, World Bank.
Question of National Language. (ii) Political Changes in Eastern Eu- in a specific language will have to be an-
15. Protection and improvement of the
14. Caste and Ethnicity after 1947; rope 1989-2001. swered in the language medium indicated
human environment: International
Backward castes and tribes in post- (iii) End of the cold war and US as- by them for answering papers on Essay,
efforts.
colonial electoral politics; Dalit movements. cendancy in the World as the lone General Studies and Optional Subjects.
PAPER - II
15. Economic development and political superpower. ARABIC
Law of Crimes
change; Land reforms; the politics of LAW PAPER-I
planning and rural reconstruction; Ecology 1. General principles of criminal liability:
PAPER - I Mens rea and actus reus, mens rea in (Answers must be written in Arabic)
and environmental policy in post - colonial Section-A
Constitutional and Administrative Law statutory offences.
India; Progress of science.
1. Constitution and Constitutionalism: The 2. Kinds of punishment and emerging 1. (a) Origin and development of the lan-
16. Enlightenment and Modern ideas: guage-an outline.
distinctive features of the Constitution. trends as to abolition of capital
(i) Major ideas of Enlightenment: Kant,
2. Fundamental rights – Public interest punishment. (b) Significant features of the grammar
Rousseau
litigation; Legal Aid; Legal services 3. Preparation and criminal attempt. of the language, Rhetorics, Prosody.
(ii) Spread of Enlightenment in the
authority. 4. General exceptions. (c) Short Essay in Arabic.
colonies
3. Relationship between fundamental 5. Joint and constructive liability. Section-B
(iii) Rise of socialist ideas (up to Marx);
spread of Marxian Socialism. rights, directive principles and fundamental 6. Abetment. 2. Literary History and Literary Criticism :
17. Origins of Modern Politics: duties. Socio-Cultural Background, Classical lit-
7. Criminal conspiracy.
(i) European States System. 4. Constitutional position of the President erature, literary movements, modern
8. Offences against the State.
(ii) American Revolution and the Consti- and relation with the Council of Ministers. trends, origin and development of modern
9. Offences against public tranquility.
tution. 5. Governor and his powers. prose : drama, novel, short story, essay.
10. Offences against human body.
(iii) French revolution and aftermath, 1789- 6. Supreme Court and High Courts: PAPER-II
11. Offences against property.
1815. (a) Appointments and transfer. This paper will require first hand reading
12. Offences against women. of the texts prescribed and will be designed
(iv) American Civil War with reference to (b) Powers, functions and jurisdiction.
13. Defamation. to test the candidate’s critical ability. An-
Abraham Lincoln and the abolition of 7. Centre, States and local bodies:
slavery. 14. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. swers must be written in Arabic.
(a) Distribution of legislative powers
(v) British Democratic Politics, 1815- 15. Protection of Civil Rights Act 1955 and Section-A
between the Union and the States.
1850; Parliamentary Reformers, Free subsequent legislative developments. POETS :
(b) Local bodies.
Traders, Chartists. 16. Plea bargaining. 1. Imraul Qais : Qifa Nabke Min Zikra
(c) Administrative relationship among
18. Industrialization: Law of Torts Habibin Wa Manzili
Union, State and Local Bodies.
(i) English Industrial Revolution: 1. Nature and definition. (complete)
(d) Eminent domain – State property –
Causes and Impact on Society 2. Liability based upon fault and strict Al Muallaqatus Saba
common property – community
(ii) Industrialization in other countries: liability; Absolute liability. 2. Hassan : Lillahi Darru Isabatin
property.
USA, Germany, Russia, Japan 3. Vicarious liability including State
8. Legislative powers, privileges and bin Thabit Nadamtuhum (complete)
(iii) Industrialization and Globaliza- liability.
immunities. Diwan Hassan Bin Thabit
tion. 4. General defences.
9. Services under the Union and the States: 3. Jarir : Hayyu Umamata
19. Nation-State System: 5. Joint tort feasors.
(a) Recruitment and conditions of Wazkuru Ahdan Mada
(i) Rise of Nationalism in 19th cen-
services; Constitutional safeguards; 6. Remedies. To
tury
Administrative tribunals. 7. Negligence. Jalbas Sifahi Wa
(ii) Nationalism: state-building in Ger-
many and Italy (b) Union Public Service Commission and 8. Defamation. Damiatin Bikila
State Public Service Commissions – 9. Nuisance.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 47
Nukhbatul Deptt. of Arabic, A.M.U. Literary Criticism and Literary History word formations, compounds; basic sen- History of Bodo Literature
Adab : Aligarh (a) Principles of Literary criticism upto New tence patterns.) 1. General introduction of Bodo folk lit-
4. Farzdaq : Hazal Lazi Tariful Batha- criticism. Section-B erature.
o-Watatuhu (complete) (b) Different literary genres. Topics from the History of Bangla Literature. 2. Contribution of the Missionaries.
Majmuatun Minan Nazm- (c) Development of literary forms in 1. Periodization of Bangla Literature : 3. Periodization of Bodo Literature.
i-Wan Nasr, Jamia Assamese. Old Bangla and Middle Bangla. 4. Critical analysis of different genre (Po-
Salafiah, Varanasi (d) Development of literary criticism in 2. Points of difference between modern etry, Novel, Short Story and Drama)
5. Al Mutanabbi : Ya Ukhta Khair-e-Akhin Assamese. and pre-modern Bangla Literature. 5. Translation Literature.
Ya Binta Khair-e-Abin (e) Periods of the literary history of Assam 3. Roots and reasons behind the emer- Paper-II
To from the earliest beginnings, i.e. from gence of modernity in Bangla Literature. The Paper will require first-hand reading
Aqamahul Fikru Bainal Ijz- the period of the charyyageets with 4. Evolution of various Middle Bangla of the texts prescribed and will be de-
e-Wattaabi Nukhbatul their socio-cultural background : the forms : Mangal kavyas, Vaishnava lyr- signed to test the critical ability of the
Adab, Deptt. of Arabic, proto Assamese-Pre-Sankaradeva- ics, Adapted narratives (Ramayana, candidates.
A.M.U. Alig. Sankaradeva-post Sankaradeva- Mahabharata, Bhagavata) and reli- (Answers must be written in Bodo)
6. Abul Ala Ala Fi Sabil Majdi Ma Ana Modern period (from the coming of the gious biographies. Section-A
Al-Maarri : Faailu Britishers)-Post-Independence pe- 5. Secular forms in middle Bangla litera- (a) Khonthai-Methai
To riod. Special emphasis is to be given ture. (Edited by Madaram Brahma &
Wa Ya Nafsu Jiddi Inna on the Vaisnavite period, the gonaki 6. Narrative and lyric trends in the nine- Rupnath Brahma).
Dahraki Hazilu and the post-Independence period. teenth century Bangla poetry. (b) Hathorkhi-Hala
Majmuatul Minan Nazm- PAPER-II 7. Development of prose. (Edited by Pramod Chandra Brahma)
i-Wan Nasr, Jamia Salafia, This paper will require first-hand reading 8. Bangla dramatic literature (nineteenth (c) Boroni Gudi Sibsa Arw Aroz : Madaram
Varanasi of the texts prescribed and will be designed century, Tagore, Post-1944 Bangla Brahma.
7. Shauqi : Wulidal Huda Falkainatu to test the candidates’ critical ability. An- drama).
swers must be written in Assamese (d) Raja Nilambar : Dwarendra Nath
Diau 9. Tagore and post-Tagoreans. Basumatary.
To Section-A 10. Fiction, major authors : (e) Bibar (Prose section)
Makhtara Illa Dinakal Rãmãyana (Ayodhya Kãnda only)-by (Bankimchandra, Tagore,
Madhava Kandali. (Edited by Satish Chandra Basumatary)
Fuqarau Saratchandra, Bibhutibusan,
Pãrijãt-Harana-by Sankaradeva. Section-B
Salamun Neeli Ya Tarasankar, Manik).
Rãsakrïdã-by Sankaradeva (From Kirtana (a) Gibi Bithai (Aida Nwi) : Bihuram Boro
Ghandi (complete) 11. Women and Bangla literature : cre-
Ghosa). (b) Radab : Samar Brahma Chaudhury
Shauqiat ators and created.
Bargeet-by Madhavadeva (c) Okhrang Gongse Nangou : Brajendra
8. Hafiz Rajatu Linafsi Fattahamtu PAPER-II
Rãjasûya-by Madhavadeva. Kumar Brahma
Ibrahim : Hasati (complete) Prescribed texts for close study.
Kãthã-Bhãgavata (Books I and II)-by (d) Baisagu Arw Harimu : Laksheswar
Nukhbatul Adab Answers must be written in Bengali.
Baikunthanath Bhattacharyya. Brahma.
9. Ilya Abu Damatun Kharsao Section-A
Gurucarit-Kathã (Sankaradeva’s Part only)- (e) Gwdan Boro : Manoranjan Lahary
Madi : (complete) 1. Vaishnava Padavali (Calcutta Univer-
ed. by Maheswar Neog. (f) Jujaini Or : Chittaranjan Muchahary
Mukhtarat Minal Sher Al sity)
Section-B (g) Mwihoor : Dharanidhar Wary
Arabi Al Hadith, M.M. Poems of Vidyapati, Chandidas,
Mor Jeevan Soñwaran-by Lakshminath (h) Hor Badi Khwmsi : Kamal Kumar
Badwi Jnanadas, Govindadas and Balaramdas.
Bezbaroa. Brahma
Section-B 2. Chandimangal Kalketu episode by
Kripãbar Barbaruãr Kãkatar Topola-by (i) Jaolia Dewan : Mangal Singh Hozowary
(A) AUTHORS Mukunda (Sahitya Akademi).
Lakshminath Bezbaroa. (j) Hagra Guduni Mwi : Nilkamal Brahma.
Authors Books Lessons 3. Chaitanya Charitamrita Madya Lila, by
Pratimã-by Chandra Kumar Agarwalla. Krishnadas Kaviraj (Sahitya Akademi). CHINESE
1. Ibnul Muqaffa Kalilah Wa Dimnah
Al Asad Wal Thaur Gãoñburhã-by Padmanath Gohain Barua. 4. Meghnadbadh Kavya by Madhusudan PAPER-I
2. Al-Jahiz Mukhtarat Min Adabil Monamatî-by Rajanikanta Bordoloi. Dutta. This paper will require the candidates to
Arab Bakhilun Hakim Purani Asamîyã Sãhitya-by Banikanta 5. Kapalkundala by Bankimchandra have a good knowledge of standard Chi-
(complete) Kakati. Chattarjee. nese language and its characteristics so
Kãrengar Ligirî-by Jyotiprasad Agarwalla 6. Samya and Bangadesher Krishak by as to test the candidate’s organisational
Part II By : S.A. Hasan
Jeevanar Bãtat-by Bina Barwa (Birinchi Bankimchandra Chatterjee. capabilities. All the questions except the
Ali Nadwi
Kumar Barua) question on translation from Chinese to
3. Ibn Khaldun Muqaddamah 7. Sonar Tari by Rabindranath Tagore.
Mrityunjoy-by Birendrakumar English must be answered in Chinese. All
Araun Fit Talim (com- 8. Chhinnapatravali by Rabindranath
Bhattachary-ya the questions carry equal marks.
plete) Tagore.
Samrãt-by Navakanta Barua. Section-A
4. Mahmud Taimur Qalar Rawi A m Section-B
1. Essay writing in about 500 Chinese
Mutawalli (complete) BENGALI 9. Raktakarabi by Rabindranath Tagore.
characters on a topical subject.
5. Taufiqual Hakim Masrahiyat Sirrul PAPER-I 10. Nabajatak by Rabindranath Tagore. 2. Translation :
Muntahira (complete) History of Language and Literature. 11. Grihadaha by Saratchandra Chatter- a) Chinese-English
6. Abbas Mahmud Aqqad Mukhtarat Min Answers must be written in Bengali. jee. b) English-Chinese
Adabil Arab-II Section-A 12. Prabandha Samgraha Vol. 1, by 3. Syntactic and grammatical usage.
Assiddiq (complete) Topics from the History of Bangla language Pramatha Choudhuri. Section-B
(B) STUDY OF INDIAN AUTHORS 1. The chronological track from Proto 13. Aranyak by Bibhutibhusan Banerjee 1. Explanation of idioms and phrases in
1. Ghulam Ali Azad Bilgrami Indo-European to Bangla (Family tree 14. Short stories by Manik Bandyo- Chinese.
2. Shah Walullah Dehlavi with branches and approximate dates). padhyay : Atashi Mami, Pragaitihasik, 2. Development of Chinese language
3. Zulfiqar Ali Deobandl 2. Historical stages of Bangla (Old, Holud-Pora, Sarisrip, Haraner Natjamai, 3. Comprehension Precis writing.
4. Abdul Aziz Meman Middle, New) and their linguistic fea- Chhoto-Bokulpurer Jatri, Kustharogir Bou, PAPER-II
5. Syed Abul Hasan Ali Hasani Nadwi tures. Jakey Ghush Ditey Hoy. This paper will require the candidates to
ASSAMESE 3. Dialects of Bangla and their distin- 15. Shrestha Kavita by Jibanananda Das. have a good grasp of Chinese studies and
PAPER-I guishing characteristics. 16. Jagori by Satinath Bhaduri. will be designed to test the candidate’s criti-
4. Elements of Bangla Vocabulary. 17. Ebam Indrajit by Badal Sircar. cal ability. All the questions must be an-
(Answers must be written in Assamese)
5. Forms of Bangla Literary Prose-Sadhu swered in Chinese. All the questions carry
Section-A BODO
and Chalit. equal marks.
Language PAPER-I
Section-A
(a) History of the origin and development 6. Processes of language change rel- History of Bodo Language and Literature 1. Short notes on topics related to major
of the Assamese language-its position evant for Bangla. (Answers must be written in Bodo) events in modern Chinese history
among the Indo-Aryan Languages- Apinihiti (Anaptyxis), Abhishruti (um- Section-A (from 1919 till date).
periods in its history. laut), Murdhanyibhavan History of Bodo Language 2. Critical evaluation of major literary works
(b) Developments of Assamese prose. (cerebralization), Nasikyibhavan (Na-
1. Homeland, language family, its in pre-liberation period (1919-1949) :
(c) Vowels and consonants of the Assa- salization), Samibhavan (Assimila-
present status and its mutual contact a) Lao She : Four Generations,
mese languages-rules of phonetic tion), Sadrishya (Analogy),
with Assamese. Rickshaw-puller.
changes with stress on Assamese Svaragama (Vowel insertion)-Adi
2. (a) Phonemes : Vowel and Consonant b) Ba Jin : Family.
coming down from Old Indo-Aryan. Svaragama, Madhya Svaragama or
Phonemes c) Lu Xum : Medicine,
(d) Assamese vocabulary-and its Svarabhakti, Antya Svaragama,
(b) Tones. Madman’s Diary.
sources. Svarasangati (Vowel hormony), y-
3. Morphology : Gender, Case & Case The True Story of
(e) Morphology of the language-conjuga- shruti and w-shruti.
endings, Plural suffix, Definitives, Ver- Ah Q.
tion-enclitic definitives and pleonastic 7. Problems of standardization and re- d) Mao Dun : Midnight
bal suffix.
suffixes. form of alphabet and spelling, and e) Ai Quing : Coal’s Reply (Mei
those of transliteration and 4. Vocabulary and its sources.
(f) Dilectical divergences-the standard de Duihua),
Romanization. 5. Syntax : Types of sentences, Word Or-
colloquial and the Kamrupi dialect in Begger (Qigai), I
8. Phonology, Morphology and Syntax der.
particulars. Love This Land
(g) Assamese scripts-its evolution through of Modern Bangla. 6. History of Scripts used in writing Bodo
(Wo Ai Zhe Tudi),
the ages till 19th century A.D. (Sounds of Modern Bangla, Conjuncts; Language since inception.
Old Man (Laoren)
Section-B Section-B
48 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
f) Guo Moruo : The Goddesses. Almast. - The Relic; - Small-Scale Reflections on a
3. Role of Philosophy and Religion in the 2. Modern Dogri Poetry 3. John Milton : Paradise Lost, I, II, IV, IX Great House
Development of Chinese Society. Azadi Bad Di Dogri Kavita 4. Alexander Pope. The Rape of the - Obituary
Section-B The following poets : Lock. (All these poems are available in the an-
1. Socio-Economic/Political/Educational/ Kishan Smailpuri, Tara Smailpuri, 5. William Wordsworth. The following po- thology Ten Twentieth Century Indian Po-
Sports/Science and Technological Mohan Lal Sapolia, Yash Sharma, ems: ets, edited by R. Parthasarthy, published
Development since 1979. K.S. Madhukar, Padma Sachdev, - Ode on Intimations of Immortality. by Oxford University Press, New Delhi).
2. Critical appreciation of major literary Jitendra Udhampuri, Charan Singh - Tintern Abbey. Section-B
works in post-liberation period (1949 and Prakash Premi. - Three years she grew. 1. Joseph Conrad. Lord Jim
till date) : 3. Sheeraza Dogri Number 102, Ghazal - She dwelt among untrodden 2. James Joyce. Portrait of the Artist
a) Gu Hua : The Town Called Ank. ways. as a Young Man.
Hibiscus The following poets : - Michael. 3. D.H. Lawrence. Sons and Lovers.
(Furongzhen) Ram Lal Sharma, Ved Pal Deep, N.D. - Resolution and Independence. 4. E.M. Forster. A Passage to India.
b) Chen Rong : Till the Middle Age Jamwal, Shiv Ram Deep, Ashwini - The World is too much with us. 5. Virginia Woolf. Mrs Dalloway.
(Ren dao Magotra and Virendra Kesar. 6. Raja Rao. Kanthapura.
- Milton, thou shouldst be living at
Zhongnian) 4. Sheeraza Dogri Number 147, Ghazal 7. V.S. Naipal. A House for Mr. Biswas.
this hour.
c) Liu Xinwu : The Class-in- Ank - Upon Westminster Bridge. FRENCH
Charge (Ban The following poets : 6. Alfred Tennyson : In Memoriam. PAPER-I
Zhuren) R.N. Shastri, Jitendra Udhampuri, 7. Henrik Ibsen : A Doll’s House. Answers must be written in French ex-
d) Lu Yao : The Human Champa Sharma and Darshan Darshi.
Section-B cept in the case of question requiring
Existence 5. Ramayan (Epic) by Shambhu Nath
1. Jonathan Swift. Gulliver’s Travels. translation from French to English.
(Rensheng) Sharma (upto Ayodhya Kand)
2. Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice. Section-A
e) Ai Qing : Fish Fossil, The 6. Veer Gulab (Khand Kavya) by Dinoo
Mirror, The 3. Henry Fielding. Tom Jones. 1. Main trends in French Literature
Bhai Pant.
Gardener’s Dream, 4. Charles Dickens. Hard Times. a) Classicism
Section-B
The Hunter Who 5. George Eliot. The Mill on the Floss. b) Rommanticism
Prose
Drew Birds 6. Thomas Hardy. Tess of the c) Realism
1. Ajakani Dogri Kahani
f) Shu Ting : Motherland, My d’Urbervilles. 2. Art in France
The following short story writers :
Beloved Mother- 7. Mark Twain. The Adventures of Huck- a) Romanticism
Madan Mohan Sharma, Narendra
land. leberry Finn. b) Realism
Khajuria and B.P. Sathe.
DOGRI PAPER-II c) Impressionism
2. Ajakani Dogri Kahani Part-II
PAPER-I Answers must be written in English. 3. The Vth Republic
The following Short Story writters :
History of Dogri Language and Literature Texts for detailed study are listed below. (a) De Gaulle and the Vth Republique
Ved Rahi, Narsingh Dev Jamwal, Om
(Answers must be written in Dogri) Candidates will also be required to show (b) May 1968
Goswami, Chhattrapal, Lalit Magotra,
Section-A adequate knowledge of the following top- (c) Pompidou
Chaman Arora and Ratan Kesar.
History of Dogri Language ics and movements : (d) Giscard d' Estaing
3. Khatha Kunj Bhag II
1. Dogri language : Origin and develop- Modernism; Poets of the Thirties; The (e) Mitterrand
The following Story writters : stream-of-consciousness Novel; Absurd
ment through different stages. (f) Chirac
Om Vidyarthi, Champa Sharma and Drama; Colonialism and Post-Colonialism;
2. Linguistic boundaries of Dogri and its Krishan Sharma 4. Translation : French to English (2 pas-
Indian Writing in English; Marxist, Psycho-
dialects. sages of socio-politico-economic na-
4. Meel Patthar (collection of short sto- analytical and Feminist approaches to lit-
3. Characteristic features of Dogri lan- ries) by Bandhu Sharma ture of 200 words each).
erature; Post-Modernism.
guage. Section-B
5. Kaiddi (Novel) by Desh Bandhu Dogra Section-A
4. Structure of Dogri Language : Nutan 1. Main trends in French Literature
1. William Butler Yeats. The following po-
(a) Sound Structure : 6. Nanga Rukkh (Novel) by O.P. Sharma a) Symbolism
ems:
Segmental : Vowels and Consonants Sarathi. b) Surrealism
- Easter 1916
Non-Segmental : Length, Stress, Na- 7. Nayaan (Drama) by Mohan Singh. c) Theatre of the Absurd
- The Second Coming
salization, Tone and Juncture. 8. Satrang (A collection of one act plays) 2. Art in French
- A Prayer for my daughter.
(b) Morphology of Dogri : The following pay wrights : a) Surrealism
- Sailing to Byzantium.
(i) Inflection Categories : Gender, Num- Vishwa Nath Khajuria, Ram Nath b) Cubism
- The Tower.
ber, Case, Person, Tense and Voice. Shastri, Jitendra Sharma, Lalit Magotra c) Abstract Painting
- Among School Children.
(ii) Word Formation : use of prefixes, and Madan Mohan Sharma. 3. The Vth Republic
infixes and suffixes. - Leda and the Swan.
9. Dogri Lalit Nibandh a) Parts politiques en France
(iii) Vocabulary : Tatsam, tadbhav, foreign - Meru
The following authors : b) Place et rôle du Président de la Ve
and regional. - Lapis Lazuli
Vishwa Nath Khajuria, Narayan Republique
(c) Sentence Structure : Major Sentence - The Second Coming
Mishra, Balkrishan Shastri, Shiv Nath, c) Le gouvernement
- types and their constituents, agree- - Byzantium.
Shyam Lal Sharma, Lakshmi Narayan, d) Le Parlement
ment and concord in Dogri syntax. 2. T.S. Eliot. The following poems :
D.C. Prashant, Ved Ghai, Kunwar e) Le Senat
5. Dogri Language and Scripts : Dogre/ Viyogi. - The Love Song of J.Alfred
4. Translation : English to French 2 pas-
Dogra Akkhar, Devanagari and Per- Prufrock
ENGLISH sages of socio-politico-economic na-
sian. - Journey of the Magi.
The syllabus consists of two papers, de- ture of 200 words each.
Section-B signed to test a first-hand and critical read- - Burnt Norton.
PAPER-II
History of Dogri Literature : ing of texts prescribed from the following 3. W.H. Auden. The following poems :
Answers must be written in French
1. A brief account of Pre-independence periods in English Literature : Paper I : - Partition
Section-A
Dogri Literature : Poetry & Prose. 1600-1900 and Paper II : 1900-1990. - Musee des Beaux Arts
This paper will require an in-depth read-
2. Development of modern Dogri Poetry There will be two compulsory questions in - in Memory of W.B. Yeats ing of the following texts and the questions
and main trends in Dogri Poetry. each paper : a) A short-notes question re- - Lay your sleeping head, my love will be designed to test the candidate’s criti-
3. Development of Dogri short-story, lated to the topics for general study, and b) - The Unknown Citizen cal ability.
main trends & prominent short-story A critical analysis of UNSEEN passages - Consider 1. XVIIth Century
writers. both in prose and verse. - Mundus Et Infans a) Corneille : Le Cid
4. Development of Dogri Novel, main PAPER-I - The Shield of Achilles b) Racine : Andromaque
trends & contribution of Dogri Novel- Answers must be written in English. - September 1, 1939 c) Moliere : L’Avare
ists. Texts for detailed study are listed below. - Petition. 2. XVIIIth Century
5. Development of Dogri Drama & con- Candidates will also be required to show
4. John Osborne : Look Back in Anger. Beaumarchais: Le Mariage de Figaro
tribution of prominent Playwrights. adequate knowledge of the following top-
5. Samuel Beckett. Waiting for Godot. 3. XIXth Century
6. Development of Dogri Prose : Essays, ics and movements :
Memoirs & Travelogues. 6. Philip Larkin. The following poems : a) Lamartine : Le lac Le Vallon
The Renaissance : Elizabethan and Jaco-
7. An introduction to Dogri Folk literature - Next b) Victor Hugo : La Conscience. Elle
bean Drama; Metaphysical Poetry; The
- Folk songs, Folk tales & Ballads. Epic and the Mock-epic; Neo-classicism; - Please Avait Pris Ce Pli.....
Paper-II Satire; The Romantic Movement; The Rise - Deceptions Demain, Dés L' Aube
Textual Cristisim of Dogri Literature of the Novel; The Victorian Age. - Afternoons c) Victor Hugo : Hernani
Section-A - Days d) Musset : Souvenir. La Nuit de
(Answers must be written in Dogri)
1. William Shakespeare : King Lear and - Mr. Bleaney Decembre
Section-A
The Tempest. 7. A.K. Ramanujan. The following po- e) Marimee : Colomba
Poetry
2. John Donne. The following poems : ems : f) Balzac : Eugenie Grandet
1. Azadi Paihle Di Dogri Kavita.
- Canonization; - Looking for a Causim on a Swing g) Flaubert : Madame Bovary
The following poets :
- Death be not proud; - A River h) Baudelaire : L’Invitation au Voy-
Devi Ditta, Lakkhu, Ganga Ram,
- The Good Morrow; - Of Mothers, among other Things age, Recueillement.
Ramdhan, Hardutt, Pahari Gandhi
Baba Kanshi Ram & Permanand - On his Mistress going to bed; - Love Poem for a Wife 1 L’Albatros.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 49
i) Rimbaud : Le Dormeur du Val teristic features of the different genres like DHANRAM TRIPATHI Novels.
j) Verlaine : Chanson d’Automne, Roman, Novelle, Drama, Ballade, Elegie, (ix) Purvalap- 'KANT' (MANISHANKAR C. Prominent Novelists : Premchand,
Mon Reve Familier, II Marchen, Fabein, Kurzgeschichte. RATNAJI BHATT) Jainendra, Yashpal, Renu and Bhism
Pleure Dans mon Section-B (x) Raino Parvat-RAMANBHAI NEEL- Sahani.
Coeur... 1. Perceptions of Literary Interpretation. KANTH D. The origin and development of Hindi
Section-B Candidates should be aware of various Section-B short story.
4. XXth Century approaches to a critical understanding of 1. Gandhiyug & Anu Gandhiyug E. Prominent short Story Writers :
a) Appolinaire : Nuit Rhenane, Le literature. (i) Hind Swaraj-MOHANDAS KAR- Premchand, Prasad, Agyeya, Mohan
Pont Mirabeau 2. Study of Selected Texts. MACHAND GANDHI Rakesh & Krishna Shobti.
b) Jacques Prevert : Pour Faire Le a. Goethe : Die Leiden des jungen Werther. (ii) Patanni Prabhuta- KANHAIYALAL IV. Drama & Theatre
Portrait d’Un Oiseau, b. Schiller : Maria Stuart. MUNSHI A. The origin & Development of Hindi
Barbara. c. Eichendorff. Gedichte. (iii) Kavyani Shakti- RAMNARAYAN Drama.
c) Paul Eluard : Liberte d. Gottfried Keller : Kleider machen Leute. VISH-WANATH PATHAK B. Prominent Dramatists : Bharatendu,
d) Paul Valery : Les Pas, La Fileuse e. Thomas Mann : Die vertauschten Kopfe. (iv) Saurashtrani Rasdhar Part 1- ZAVER- Prasad, Jagdish Chandra Mathur, Ram
e) Andre Gide : La Symphonie f. Franz Kafka : Vor Dem Gesetz. CHAND MEGHANI Kumar Verma, Mohan Rakesh.
pastorale g. Friedrich Durrenmatt : Die Physiker. (v) Manvini Bhavai-PANNALAL PATEL C. The development of Hindi Theatre.
f) Camus : L’Etranger h. Max Frisch : Andorra. (vi) Dhvani-RAJENDRA SHAH V. Criticism
g) Sartre : Les Mains Sales i. Heinrich Boll : Die verlorence Ehre der 2. Adhunik yug A. The origin and development of Hindi
h) Lonesco : Rhinoceros Katharina Blum. (vii) Saptapadi-UMASHANKAR JOSHI criticism : Saiddhantik, Vyavharik,
Francophonie : j. Ingeborg Bachmann : Alles (aus dem (viii)Janantike- SURESH JOSHI Pragativadi, Manovishleshanvadi & Nai
a) Gerard Besette : Le Libraire Erzahlband : Alochana.
(ix) Ashwatthama- SITANSHU YASH-
b) Ananda Devi : Le Voile de Das dreBigste ASCHANDRA B. Prominent critics : Ramchandra
Draupadi Jahr) Shukla, Hajari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas
HINDI
k. Rose Auslander : Gedichte. Sharma & Nagendra.
c) Cheikh Hamidou : L’Aventure PAPER-I
Kane Ambigiüe l. Christa Wolf : Der geteilte Himmel. VI. The other forms of Hindi prose-Lalit
(Answers must be written in Hindi) Nibandh, Rekhachitra, Sansmaran, Yatra-
d) Abdellatif Laabi : Poemes en m. Gunter Grass : Zunge zeigen. Section-A vrittant.
prose GUJARATI 1. History of Hindi Language and PAPER-II
1. L’Arbre a PAPER-I Nagari Lipi.
poemes (Answers must be written in Hindi)
(Answers must be written in Gujarati) I. Grammatical and applied forms of
(L’Etreinte This paper will require first hand reading
Section-A Apbhransh, Awahatta & Arambhik
du Monde) of prescribed texts and will test the critical
Gujarati Language : Form and history Hindi.
2. Les Reves ability of the candidates.
1. History of Gujarati Language with spe- II. Development of Braj and Awadhi as
viennent Section-A
cial reference to New Indo-Aryan i.e. literary language during medieval pe-
mourir sur riod. 1. Kabir : Kabir Granthawali, Ed,
last one thousand years.
la page Shyam Sundar Das (First
2. Significant features of the Gujarati lan- III. Early form of Khari-boli in Siddha-Nath
(L’Etreinte hundred Sakhis.)
guage: Phonology, morphology and Sahitya, Khusero, Sant Sahitaya,
du Monde) 2. Surdas : Bhramar Gitsar, Ed.
syntax. Rahim etc. and Dakhni Hindi.
5. Essay of general nature on a contempo- Ramchandra Shukla (First
3. Major dialects: Surti, Pattani, charotari IV. Development of Khari-boli and Nagari
rary theme. hundred Padas)
and Saurashtri. Lipi during 19th Century.
GERMAN V. Standardisation of Hindi Bhasha & 3. Tulsidas : Ramchrit Manas (Sundar
History of Gujarati Literature
PAPER-I Nagari Lipi. Kand) Kavitawali (Uttar
Medieval :
Answers must be written in German Kand).
4. Jaina tradition VI. Development of Hindi as national Lan-
Section-A guage during freedom movement. 4. Jayasi : Padmawat Ed. Shyam
5. Bhakti tradition: Sagun and Nirgun
1. Structure of Language : VII. The development of Hindi as a Na- Sundar Das (Sinhal Dwip
(Jnanmargi)
Candidates are expected to have a thor- tional Language of Union of India. Khand & Nagmativiyog
6. Non-sectarian tradition (Laukik Khand)
ough knowledge of German grammar with parampara) VIII. Scientific & Technical development of
reference to specific aspects such as word Hindi Language. 5. Bihari : Bihari Ratnakar Ed.
Modern:
order, syntactic structures and semantics. Jagnnath Prasad
7. Sudharak yug IX. Prominent dialects of Hindi and their
2. Essay in German : inter- relationship. Ratnakar (First 100
8. Pandit yug Dohas)
Candidates are expected to demonstrate X. Salient features of Nagari Lipi and the
9. Gandhi yug 6. Maithili : Bharat Bharati
command over techniques of written ex- efforts for its reform & Standard form of
10. Anu-Gandhi yug Sharan
pression in German by writing an essay on Hindi.
a contemporary topic of a general nature. 11. Adhunik yug Gupta
XI. Grammatical structure of Standard
Section-B Section-B 7. Prasad : Kamayani (Chinta and
Hindi.
1. Translation of a text of a general na- Literary Forms : (Salient features, history Sharddha Sarg)
Section-B
ture from English into German. and development of the following literary
2. History of Hindi Literature. 8. Nirala : Rag-Virag, Ed. Ram Vilas
forms):
2.Socio-political and cultural history of I. The relevance and importance of Hindi Sharma (Ram Ki Shakti
Germany from the 18th century onwards (a) Medieval Puja & Kukurmutta).
literature and tradition of writing History of
with special reference to : 1. Narratives: Rasa, Akhyan and 9. Dinkar : Kurushetra
Hindi Literature.
a. Impact of Enlightenment on German Padyavarta
II. Literary trends of the following four peri- 10. Agyeya : Angan Ke Par Dwar
society and culture 2. Lyrical: Pada
ods of history of Hindi Literature. (Asadhya Vina)
b. The impact of Prussian culture on Ger- (b) Folk
A. Adikal-Sidh, Nath and Raso Sahitya. 11. Muktiboth: Brahma Rakshas
many. 3. Bhavai
Prominent poets-Chandvardai, 12. Nagarjun : Badal Ko Ghirte Dekha
c. Cultural debates in the Weimar Re- (c) Modern Khusaro, Hemchandra, Vidyapati. Hai, Akal Ke Bad, Harijan
public. 4. Fiction: Novel and short story Gatha.
B. Bhaktikal-Sant Kavyadhara, Sufi
d. The concept of culture under National 5. Drama Kavyadhara, Krishna Bhaktidhara and Section-B
Socialism in Germany. 6. Literary Essay Ram Bhaktidhara. 1. Bharatendu : Bharat Durdasha
e. The development of two German lit- 7. Lyrical Poetry Prominent Poets-Kabir, Jayasi, Sur & 2. Mohan Rakesh : Ashad Ka Ek Din
eratures and cultures after 1945. (d) Criticism Tulsi. 3. Ramchandra Shukla : Chintamani
f. Reunification of Germany and the 8. History of theoretical Gujarati criticism C. Ritikal-Ritikavya, Ritibaddhakavya & Riti (Part I)
problems of cultural pluralism. 9. Recent research in folk tradition. Mukta Kavya. (Kavita Kya Hai] Shraddha
g. The role and relevance of German lan- PAPER-II Prominent Poets-Keshav, Bihari, Aur Bhakti)
guage and literature in the European (Answers must be written in Gujarati) Padmakar and Ghananand. 4. Dr. Satyendra : Nibandh Nilaya-Bal
Union. The paper will require first hand reading D. Adhunik Kal Krishna Bhatt,
PAPER-II of the texts prescribed and will be designed a. Renaissance, the development of Prose, Premchand, Gulab Rai,
(Answers must be written in German) to test the critical ability of the candidate. Bharatendu Mandal. Hajari Prasad Dwivedi,
Section-A Section-A b. Prominent Writers : Bharatendu, Bal Ram Vilas Sharma,
1. Development of German literature 1. Medieval Krishna Bhatt & Pratap Narain Mishra. Agyeya, Kuber Nath Rai.
from the 19th century to the present. (i) Vasantvilas phagu-AJNATKRUT c. Prominent trends of modern Hindi Po- 5. Premchand : Godan, Premchand ki
Candidates should know the main trends, (ii) Kadambari-BHALAN etry : Chhayavad, Pragativad, Proyogvad, Sarvashreshtha
representative authors and their important (iii) Sudamacharitra-PREMANAND Nai Kavita, Navgeet and Contemporary Kahaniyan, Ed. Amrit Rai/
works. The emphasis is not on collecting poetry and Janvadi Kavita. Manjusha - Prem Chand ki
(iv) Chandrachandravatini varta-SHAMAL
information on works and authors, but the Prominent Poets : Maithili Sharan Sarvashreshtha Kahani-
(v) Akhegeeta-AKHO
candidate is expected to identify features Gupta, Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi, Dinkar, yan, Ed. Amrit Rai.
of a literary epoch on the basis of repre- 2. Sudharakyug & Pandityug
Agyeya, Muktibodh, Nagarjun. 6. Prasad : Skandgupta
sentative texts. (vi) Mari Hakikat-NARMADASHANKAR
III. Katha Sahitya 7. Yashpal : Divya
2. The Study of literary genres. DAVE
A. Upanyas & Realism 8. Phaniswar Nath Renu : Maila Anchal
Candidates must be aware of the charac- (vii) Farbasveerah- DALPATRAM
B. The origin and development of Hindi
(viii)Saraswatichandra-Part-I GOVAR-
50 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
9. Mannu Bhandari : Mahabhoj G.H. Nayak (Kannada Saahitya Deptt. of Kashmiri, University of Kash- 4. a) Demand-Drama-by Pundalik Naik
10. Rajendra Yadav : Ek Dunia Parishattu, Bangalore) mir. b) Kadambini- A miscellany of mod-
Samanantar (All Stories) 2. Novel : Bettada Jeeva-Shivarama ii) Kashur Afsana Az, published by the ern Prose-ed. by Prof. OJF Gomes &
KANNADA Karanta Madhavi-Arupama Niranjana Sahitya Akademi Smt. P.S. Tadkodkar.
PAPER-I Odalaala-Devanuru Mahadeva iii) Hamasar Kashur Afsana, published c) Ratha Tujeo Ghudieo-by Smt.
3. Short Story : Kannada Sanna by the Sahitya Akademi Jayanti Naik.
(Answers must be written in Kannada)
Kathegalu, Ed. G.H. Nayak (Sahitya The following short story writers only: Section-B
Section-A
Academy, New Delhi). Akhtar Mohi-ud-Din, Kamil, Hari Krishan Poetry
A. History of Kannada Language
4. Drama : Shudra Tapaswi-Kuvempu. Kaul, Hraday Kaul Bharti, Bansi Nirdosh, 1. a) Ev ani Mori: Poetry by Eduardo
What is Language? General
Tughlak-Girish Karnad. Gulshan Majid. Bruno de Souza.
charecteristics of Language. Dravidian
5. Vichara Saahitya : Devaru-A.N. Moorty 2. Novel in Kashmiri: b) Abravanchem Yadnyadan-by Luis
Family of Languages and its specific
Rao (Pub : D.V.K. Moorty, Mysore.) i) Mujrim by G.N. Gowhar Mascarenhas.
features, Antiquity of Kannada Lan-
B. FOLK LITERATURE : ii) Marun-Ivan Ilyichun, (Kashmiri ver- 2. a) Godde Ramayan-ed.by R.K. Rao
guage, Different Phases of its Develop-
ment. 1. Janapada Swaroopa-Dr. H.M. Nayak. sion of Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Iiyich b) Ratnahar I &II-collection of poems-
(Ta. Vem. Smaraka Grantha Male, (Published by Kashmiri Deptt). ed. R.V. Pandit.
Dialects of Kannada Language :
Mysore.) 3. Drama in Kashmiri
Regional and Social Various aspects of 3. a) Zayo Zuyo-poems-Manohar L.
development of Kannada Language : 2. Janapada Geetaanjali-Ed.D. Javare i) Natuk Kariv Band, by Hari Krishan Sardessai.
phonological and Semantic changes. Gowda. (Pub : Sahitya Academy, New Kaul b) Kanadi Mati Konkani Kavi-Anthol-
Language borrowing. Delhi.) ii) Qk Angy Natuk, ed. Motilal Keemu. ogy of Poems-ed. Pratap Naik.
B. History of Kannada Literature 3. Kannada Janapada Kathegalu-Ed. published by Sahitya Akademi. 4. a) Adrushatache Kalle-Poems by
J.S. Paramashivaiah, (Mysore Univer- iii) Razi Oedipus, tr. Naji Munawar,
Ancient Kannada literature : Influence Pandurang Bhangui.
sity.) published by Sahitya Akademi.
and Trends. Poets for study : Specified b) Yaman-Poems by Madhav Borkar
poets from Pampa to Ratnakara Varni are 4. Beedi Makkalu Beledo. Ed. 4. Kashmiri Folk Literature:
Kalegowda Nagavara (Pub : Banga-
MAITHILI
to be studied in the light of contents, form i) Kashur Luki Theatre by Mohammad
lore University.) PAPER-I
and expression : Pampa, Janna, Subhan Bhagat, published by Deptt.
5. Savirada Ogatugalu-Ed : S.G. of Kashmiri, University of Kashmir. History of Maithili Language and its
Nagachandra.
Imrapura. ii) Kashiry Luki Beeth (all volumes) pub-
Literature
Medieval Kannada literature : Influence
and Trends. KASHMIRI lished by the J & K Cultural Academy. (Answer to be written in Maithili)
Vachana literature : Basavanna, Akka PAPER-I KONKANI PART-A
Mahadevi. (Answers must be written in Kashmiri) PAPER-I History of Maithili Language
Medieval Poets : Harihara, Ragha-vanka, Section-A (Answers must be written in Konkani) 1. Place of Maithili in Indo-European lan-
Kumar-Vyasa. 1. Genealogical relationship of the guage family.
Section-A
Dasa literature : Purandra and Kanaka. Kashmiri language: various theories. 2. Origin and development of Maithili lan-
History of the Konkani Language :
Sangataya : Ratnakaravarni 2. Areas of occurrence and dialects (geo- guage. (Sanskrit, Prakrit, Avhatt,
(i) Origin and development of the language
graphical/social) Maithili)
C. Modern Kannada literature : and influences on it.
3. Phonology and grammar: 3. Periodic division of Maithili Language.
Influence, trends and idealogies, (ii) Major variants of Konkani and their lin-
Navodaya, Pragatishila, Navya, Dalita and i. Vowel and consonant system; (Beginning, Middle era, Modern era)
guistic features.
Bandaya. ii. Nouns and pronouns with various 4. Maithili and its different dialects.
(iii) Grammatical and lexicographic work
Section-B case inflections; in Konkani, including a study of cases, ad- 5. Relationship between Maithili and
A. Poetics and literary criticism : iii. Verbs: various types and tenses. verbs, indeclinables and voices. other Eastern languages (Bengali,
Assamese, Oriya).
Definition and concepts of poetry : 4. Syntactic structure: (iv) Old Standard Konkani, new Standard
Word, Meaning, Alankara, Reeti, Rasa, and standardisation problems. 6. Origin and development of Tirhuta
i. Simple , active and declarative
Dhwani, Auchitya. Script.
statments; Section-B:
Interpretations of Rasa Sutra. 7. Pronouns and Verbs in Maithili Lan-
ii. Coordination; History of Konkani literature:
guage.
Modern Trends of literary criticism : iii. Relativisation. Candidates would be expected to be well-
Formalist, Historical, Marxist, Feminist, PART-B
Section-B acquainted with Konkani literature and its
Post-colonial criticism. social and cultural background and con- History of Maithili Literature
1. Kashmiri literature in the 14th century
B. Cultural History of Karnataka (Socio-cultural and intellectual back- sider the problems and issues arising out 1. Background of Maithili Literature (Re-
Contribution of Dynasties to the culture ground with special reference to Lal of them. ligious, economic, social, cultural).
of Karnataka : Chalukyas of Badami and Dyad and Sheikhul Alam) (i) History of Konkani literature from its prob- 2. Periodic division of Maithili literature.
Kalyani, Rashtrakutas, Hoysalas, 2. Nineteenth century Kashmiri literature able source to the present times, with em- 3. Pre-Vidyapati Literature.
Vijayanagara rulers, in literary context. (development of various genres: phasis on its major works, writers and 4. Vidyapati and his tradition.
Major religions of Karnataka and their vatsun; ghazal; and mathnavi). movements. 5. Medieval Maithili Drama (Kirtaniya
cultural contributions. 3. Kashmiri literature in the first half of (ii) Social and cultural background of the Natak, Ankai Nat, Maithili dramas writ-
Arts of Karnataka : Sculpture, Architec- the twentieth century (with special ref- making of Konkani literature from time to time. ten in Nepal).
ture, Painting, Music, Dance-in the literary erence to Mahjoor and Azad; various (iii) Indian and Western influences on 6. Maithili Folk Literature (Folk Tales, Folk
context. literary influences). Konkani literature from the earliest to mod- Drama, Folk Stories, Folk Songs).
Unification of Karnataka and its impact 4. Modern Kashmiri literature (with spe- ern times. 7. Development of different literary forms
on Kannada literature. cial refernece to the development of (iv) Modern literary trends in the various in modern era.
PAPER-II the short story, drama, novel and genres and regions including a study of (a) Prabandh-kavya
(Answers must be written in Kannada) nazm). Konkani folklore. (b) Muktak-kavya
The paper will require first-hand reading PAPER-II PAPER-II (c) Novel
of the Texts prescribed and will be de- (Answers must be written in Kashmiri) (Answers must be written in Konkani) (d) Short Story
signed to test the critical ability of the can- Section-A Textual Criticism of Konkani Literature (e) Drama
didates. 1. Intensive study of Kashmiri poetry upto The paper will be designed to test the (f) Essay
Section-A the nineteenth century: canidate's critical and analytical abilities. (g) Criticism
A. OLD KANNADA LITERATURE i) Lal Dyad Candidates would be expected to be well-
(h) Memoirs
1. Vikramaarjuna Vijaya of Pampa (can- ii) Sheikhul Aalam acquainted with Konkani Literature and
(i) Translation
tos 12 & 13), (Mysore University Pub.) iii) Habba Khatoon required to have a first-hand reading of the
following texts: 8. Development of Maithili Magazines
2. Vaddaraadhane (Sukumaraswamyia 2. Kashmiri poetry: 19th Century and Journals.
Kathe, Vidyutchorana Kathe) Section-A
i) Mahmood Gami (Vatsans) PAPER-II
B. MEDIEVAL KANNADA LITERATURE : Prose
ii) Maqbool Shah (Gulrez) (Answers must be written in Maithili)
1. a) Konkani Mansagangotri (excluding
1. Vachana Kammata, Ed: K. iii) Rasool Mir (Ghazals) poetry) ed. by Prof. Olivinho Gomes The paper will require first-hand reading
Marulasiddappa K.R. Nagaraj (Ban- iv) Abdul Ahad Nadim (N'at) b) Old Konkani language and litera- of the prescribed texts and will test the criti-
galore University Pub.)
v) Krishanjoo Razdan (Shiv Lagun) ture-the Portuguese Role cal ability of the candidates.
2. Janapriya Kanakasamputa, Ed. D.
vi) Sufi Poets (Text in Sanglaab, pub- 2. a) Otmo Denvcharak-a novel by A.V PART-A
Javare Gowda (Kannada and Culture
lished by the Deptt. of Kashmiri, Uni- da Cruz. 1. Vidyapati Geet-Shati-Publisher : Sahitya
Directorate, Bangalore)
versity of Kashmir) b) Vadoll ani Varem-A novel by Anto- Akademi, New Delhi (Lyrics- 1 to 50)
3. Nambiyannana Ragale, Ed., T.N.
3. Twentieth Century Kashmiri poetry nio Pereira. 2. Govind Das Bhajanavali-Publisher :
Sreekantaiah (Ta.Vem. Smaraka
(text in Azich Kashir Shairi, published c) Devache Kurpen-a novel by V J P Maithili Academy, Patna (Lyrics - 1 to
Grantha Male, Mysore)
by the Deptt. of Kashmiri, University of Saldanha. 25).
4. Kumaravyasa Bharata : Karna Parva Kashmir) 3. a) Vajralikhani-Shenoy Goem-bab-An
(Mysore University) 3. Krishnajanm - Manbodh
4. Literary criticism and research work: anthology-ed. by Shantaram Varde
5. Bharatesha Vaibhava Sangraha Ed. Ta. 4. Mithilabhasha Ramayana - Chanda
development and various trends. Valavalikar
Su. Shama Rao (Mysore University) Jha (only Sunder-Kand)
Section-B b) Konkani Lalit Niband-Essays-ed. by
Section-B 5. Rameshwar Charit Mithila Ramayan -
1. An analytical study of the short story in Shyam Verenkar
Lal Das (only Bal-kand)
A. MODERN KANNADA LITERATURE Kashmiri. c) Teen Dasakam-An lAnthology-ed.
by Chandrakant Keni. 6. Keechak-Vadh-Tantra Nath Jha.
1. Poetry : Hosagannada Kavite, Ed : i) Afsana Majmu'a, published by the
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 51
7. Datta-Vati-Surendra Jha 'Suman' (only Bhishmaparvam. 4. M. Chandra Singh (Ed.) : B. Manisana Shastri : Phajaba
1st and 2nd Cantos). Unit 2 Panthoibi Khonggul Ch. Manihar Singh : Lai-Haraoba
8. Chitra-Yatri 2.1 Kumaran Asan-Chintavisthayaya Sita. (b) Medieval Manipuri Literature : (c) Apunba Wareng. (Pub) Manipur
9. Samakaleen Maithili Kavita - Publisher 2.2 Vailoppilli-Kutiyozhikkal. 1. M. Chandra Singh (Ed.) University, 1986
: Sahitaya Akademi, New Delhi. 2.3 G. Sankara Kurup-Perunthachan. : Samsok Ngamba (ed.)
PART-B 2.4 N.V. Krishna Variar-Tivandiyile Pattu. 2. R.K.Snahal Singh (Ed.) : Ch. Pishak Singh : Samaj Amasung,
10. Varna Ratnakar - Jyotirishwar (only Unit 3 Ramayana Adi Kanda Sanskriti
2nd Kallol) 3.1 ONV -Bhumikkoru Charamagitam 3. N. Khelchandra SIngh (Ed.) : M.K. Binodini : Thoibidu
11. Khattar Kakak Tarang - Hari Mohan 3.2 Ayyappa Panicker-Kurukshetram. Dhananjoy Laibu Ningba Warouhouida
Jha. 3.3 Akkittam-Pandatha Messanthi 4. O. Bhogeswar Singh (Ed.) : Eric Newton : Kalagi Mahousa
12. Lorik-Vijaya-Manipadma Chandrakirti Jila Changba (translated by I.R.
3.4 Attur Ravivarma-Megharupan.
13. Prithvi Putra-Lalit Section-B Babu)
Section-B
14. Bhaphait Chahak Jinagi-Sudhanshu Modern Manipuri Literature : (d) Manipuri Wareng (Pub) The Cultural
Unit 4
'Shekar' Choudhary. (a)Poetry and Epic : Forum Manipur
4.1 O. Chanthu Menon-Indulekha
15. Kirti Rajkamlak-Publisher : Maithili 1999 (ed.)
4.2 Thakazhy-Chemmin. (I) Poetry :
Academy, Patna (First Ten Stories S. Krishnamohan Singh : Lan
4.3 O V Vijayan-Khasakkinte Ithihasam. (a)Manipuri Sheireng (Pub) Manipuri
only). Sahitya Parishad, 1988 (ed.) MARATHI
Unit 5
16. Katha-Sangrah-Publisher : Maithili Kh. Chaoba Singh : Pi Thadoi, Lamgi PAPER-I
5.1 MT Vasudevan Nair-Vanaprastham
Academy, Patna. Chekla Amada, (Answers must be written in Marathi)
(Collection).
MALAYALAM Loktak Section-A
5.2 N S Madhavan-Higvitta (Collection).
PAPER-I Dr. L. Kamal Singh : Nirjanata, Nirab Language and Folk-Iore :
5.3 C J. Thomas-1128-il Crime 27.
(Answers must be written in Malayalam) Rajani (a) Nature and Functions of Language (with
Unit 6
Section-A A. Minaketan Singh : Kamalda, reference to Marathi)
6.1 Kuttikrishna Marar-Bharataparyat-
Unit 1-Early phase of Malayalam Nonggumlakkhoda Language as a signifying system : Langue
anam
Language: L. Samarendra Singh : Ingagi Nong, and Parole; Basic functions; Poetic lan-
6.2 M. K Sanu-Nakshatrangalute
1.1 Various theories: origin from proto Mamang Leikai guage; Standard Language and dialect;
snehabhajanam
Dravidian, Tamil, Sanskrit. Thambal Satle Language variations according to social
6.3 V.T. Bhattathirippad-Kannirum
1.2 Relation between Tamil and E. Nilakanta Singh : Manipur, parameters.
Kinavum.
Malayalam: Six nayas of A.R. Lamangnaba Linguistic features of Marathi in thirteenth
Rajarajavarma.
MANIPURI Shri Biren : Tangkhul Hui century and seventeenth century.
1.3 Pattu school-definition, Ramachari- PAPER-I Th. Ibopishak : Anouba Thunglaba (b) Dialects of Marathi
tam, later pattu works-Niranam works and (Answers must be written in Manipuri) Jiba Ahirani; Varhadi; Dangi
Krishnagatha. Section-A (b) Kanchi Sheireng. (Pub) Manipur (c) Marathi Grammar
Unit 2-Linguistic features of : Language : University 1998 Parts of Speech; Case-system;
2.1 Manipravalam-definition. Language of a) General characteristics of Manipuri Lan- (ed.) Prayog-vichar (Voice)
early manipravala works-Champu, guage and history of its development; its Dr. L. Kamal Singh : Biswa-Prem (d)Nature and kinds of Folk-lore
Sandesakavya, Chandrotsava, minor importance and status among the Tibeto- Shri Biren : Chaphadraba Laigi (with special reference to Marathi)
works. Later Manipravala works-medieval Burman Languages of North-East India; Yen Lok-Geet, Lok Katha, Lok Natya
Champu and Attakkatha. recent development in the study of Th. Ibopishak : Norok Patal Prithivi Section-B
2.2 Folklore-Southern and Northern bal- Manipuri language; evolution and study of
(II) Epic : History of Literature and Literary Criti-
lads, Mappila songs. old Manipuri script.
1. A. Dorendrajit Singh : Kansa Bodha cism:
2.3 Early Malayalam prose-Bhashakau- b) Significant features of Manipuri lan-
2. H. Anganghal Singh : Khamba-Thoibi (a) History of Marathi Literature
taliyam, Brahmandapuranam, Attap- guage :
Sheireng (San- 1. From beginning to 1818 AD, with special
rakaram, Kramadipika and Nambiantamil. i) Phonology-Phoneme-vowels, conso-
Senba, Lei Langba, reference to the following : The
Unit 3-Standardisation of Malayalam: nants juncture, tone, consonant cluster and
Shamu Khonggi Mahanubhava writers, the Varkari poets, the
3.1 Peculairities of the language of Pana, its occurrence, syllable-its structure, pat-
Bichar) Pandit poets, the Shahirs, Bakhar literature.
Kilippattu and Tullal. tern and types.
(III) Drama : 2. From 1850 to 1990, with special refer-
3.2 Contributions of indigenous and Eu- ii) Morphology : Word-class, root and its 1. S. Lalit Singh : Areppa Marup ence to developments in the following
ropean missionaries to Malayalam. types; affix and its types; grammatical cat- 2. G.C. Tongbra : Matric Pass
egories-gender, number, person, case, major forms : Poetry, Fiction (Novel and
3.3 Characteristics of contemporary 3. A. Samarendra : Judge Sahebki Short Story), Drama; and major literary cur-
tense and aspects, process of compound- Imung
Malayalam : Malayalam as administravie rents and movements, Romantic, Realist,
ing (samas and sandhi). (b) Novel, Short-story and Prose :
language. Language of scientific and tech- Modernist, Dalit Gramin, Feminist.
nical literature-media language. iii) Syntax : Word order : types of sentences, (I) Novel :
pharse and clause structures. (b) Literary Criticism
Section-B 1. Dr. L. Kamal Singh : Madhabi
Section-B 2. H. Anganghal Singh : Jahera 1. Nature and function of Literature;
Literary History
a) Literary History of Manipuri : 3. H. Guno Singh : Laman 2. Evaluation of Literature;
Unit-4 Ancient and Medieval Literature:
Early period (upto 17th century)-Social 4. Pacha Meetei : Imphal Amasung, 3. Nature, Objectives and Methods of Criti-
4.1 Pattu-Ramacharitam, Niranam works cism;
and cultural background; Themes, diction Magi Ishing,
and Krishnagatha.
and style of the works. Nungsitki Phibam 4. Literature, Culture and Society.
4.2 Manipravalam-early and medieval
Medieval period (18th and 19th century)- (II) Short-story : PAPER-II
manipravala works including attakkatha
Social, religious and political background; (a) Kanchi Warimacha (Pub) Manipur (Answers must be written in Marathi)
and champu.
Themes, diction and style of the works. University 1997 Textual study of prescribed literary
4.3 Folk literature. (ed.)
Modern period-Growth of major literary works
4.4 Kilippattu, Tullal and Mahakavya. R.K. Shitaljit Singh : Kamala Kamala
forms; change of Themes, diction and style. The paper will require first-hand reading
Unit 5- Modern Literature-Poerty: M.K. Binodini : Eigi Thahoudraba
b) Manipuri Folk Literature : of the texts prescribed and will be designed
5.1 Venmani poets and contemporaries. Heitup Lalu
Legend, Folktale, Folksong, Ballad, Prov- to test the candidate’s critical ability.
5.2 The advent of Romanticism-Poerty of Kh. Prakash : Wanom Shareng
erb and Riddle. Section-A
Kavitraya i.e., Asan, Ulloor and Vallathol (b) Parishadki Khangatlaba Warimacha
c) Aspects of Manipuri Culture : Prose
5.3 Poetry after Kavitraya. (Pub) Manipuri
Pre-Hindu Manipuri Faith; Advent of Hin- (1) ‘Smritishala’
5.4 Modernism in Malayalam poetry. Sahitya Parishad
duism and the process of syncreticism.
Unit 6- Modern Literature-Prose: 1994 (ed.) (2) Mahatma Jotiba Phule
Performing arts-Lai Haraoba, Maha Ras; S. Nilbir Shastri :
6.1 Drama “Shetkaryacha Asud;
Indegenous games-Sagol Kangjei, Khong Loukhatpa
6.2 Novel ‘Sarvajanik Satyadharma’
Kangjei, Kang. R.K. Elangba : Karinunggi
6.3 Short story PAPER II (3) S.V. Ketkar
(c) Anouba Manipuri Warimacha (Pub)
6.4 Biography, travelogue, essay and criti- (Answers must be written in Manipuri) ‘Brahmankanya;
The Cultural Forum
cism. This paper will require first hand reading (4) P.K. Atre
Manipur 1992 (ed.)
PAPER-II of the texts prescribed and will be designed N. Kunjamohon Singh : Ijat Tanba ‘Sashtang Namaskar’
(Answers must be written in Malayalam) to test the candidate’s critical ability to as- E. Dinamani : Nongthak (5) Sharchchandra Muktibodh
This paper will require first hand reading sess them. Khongnang ‘Jana Hey Volatu Jethe’
of the texts prescribed and is designed Section-A (III) Prose : (6) Uddhav Shelke
to test the candidate's critical ability. Old and Medieval Manipuri Literature (a) Warenggi Saklon [Due Part (Pub) The ‘Shilan’
Section-A (a) Old Manipuri Literature Cultural Forum (7) Baburao Bagul
Unit 1 1. O. Bhogeswar Singh (Ed.) : Manipur 1992 (ed.) ‘Jevha Mi Jaat Chorli Hoti’
1.1 Ramacharitam-Patalam 1. Numit Kappa Kh. Chaoba Singh : Khamba-Thoibigi
(8) Gouri Deshpande
1.2 Kannassaramayanam-Balakandam Wari Amasung
2. M. Gourachandra Singh (Ed.) : ‘Ekek Paan Galavaya’
first 25 stanzas. Mahakavya
Thawanthaba Hiran (9) P.I. Sonkamble
1.3 Unnunilisandesam-Purvabhagam 25 (b) Kanchi Wareng (Pub) Manipur
3. N. Khelchandra Singh (Ed.) : ‘Athavaninche Pakshi’
slokas including Prastavana University 1998
Naothingkhong Phambal Kaba
(ed.)
1.4 Mahabharatham Kilippattu-
52 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
Section-B 5. Balkrishna Sama-Prahlad 4. Upendra Bhanja-Lãvanyabati Milindapanha, Petakopadesa, Nettippa-
Poetry 6. Manbahadur Mukhia-Andhyaroma (Chhãndas-1 & 2) karana, Buddhadatta, Buddhaghosa and
(1) Namadevanchi Abhangawani’ Banchneharu (The following One- (Modern) Dhammapãla.
Ed: Inamdar, Relekar, Mirajkar Act plays only-‘Andhyaroma 5. Rãdhãnãth Rãy-Chandrabhãgã Section-B
Modern Book Depot, Pune Banchneharu’, ‘Suskera’). 6. Mãyãdhãr Mãnasinha-Jeevan Chitã 1. Textual questions, critical comments and
Section-B 7. Satchidãnanda Routray-Kabitã-1962 annotated translations would be asked
(2) ‘Painjan’
1. Indra Sundas-Sahara 8. Ramãkãnta Ratha-Saptama Ritu. from the following prescribed texts :-
Ed : M.N. Adwant
2. Lilbahadur Chhetri-Brahmaputrako Section-B (i) Dîghã-Nikãya (Only the Sãmaññaphala-
Sahitya Prasar Kendra, Nagpur
Chheuchhau Sutta)
(3) ‘Damayanti-Swayamvar’ Drama :
3. Rupnarayan Sinha-Katha Navaratna (ii) Sutta-nipãta (Only the Khaggavisana-
By Raghunath Pandit 9. Manoranjan Dãs-Kãtha-Ghodã
(The following stories only-Biteka Sutta and Dhaniya-Sutta)
(4) ‘Balakvinchi Kavita’ 10. Bijay Mishra-Tata Niranjanã
Kura, Jimmewari Kasko, Dhanamatiko (iii) Dhammapada (Only the first five
By Balkavi Novel :
Cinema-Swapna, Vidhwasta Jeevan). Vaggã-s)
(5) ‘Vishakha’ 11. Fakir Mohan Senãpati-Chhamãna
4. Indrabahadur Rai-Vipana Katipaya (iv) Milindapanha (Only the Lakkhana-
By Kusumagraj Ãthaguntha
(The following stories only-Raatbhari panha)
(6) ‘Mridgandh’ 12. Gopinãth Mohanty-Dãnãpãni
Huri Chalyo, Jayamaya Aphumatra (v) Mahavamsa (Only the Tatiya-Sangiti)
By Vinda Karandikar Short Story :
Lekha-pani Aipugi, Bhagi, Ghosh (vi) Abhidhammattha-sangaha (First, Sec-
(7) ‘Jahirnama’ Babu, Chhutyaiyo). 13. Surendra Mohãnty-Marãlãra Mrityu
ond and Sixth Chapters)
By Narayan Surve 5. Sanu Lama-Katha Sampad (The fol- 14. Manoj Dãs-Laxmira Abhisara
(vii) Pãli Prosody : Vuttodaya-Anutthubha,
(8) ‘Sandhyakalchya Kavita’ lowing stories only-Swasni Manchhey, Essay : Indavajirã, Upendavajirã, Vasantatilakã,
By Grace Khani Tarma Ekdin, Phurbale Gaun 15. Chittaranjan Dãs-Taranga O Tadit Mãlinî, Sikharinî, Upajati, totaka, Dodhaka,
(9) ‘Ya Sattet Jeev Ramat Nahi’ Chhadyo, Asinapo Manchhey). (First five essays). Vamsattha.
By Namdev Dhasal 6. Laxmi Prasad Devkota-Laxmi 16. Chandra Sekhar Rath-Mun Satya- (viii) Pãli Rhetoric : Subodhãlankãrã -
Nibandha Sangraha (The following dhãrma Kahuchhi (First five essays) Yamaka, Anuppãsa, Rûpaka, Upama,
NEPALI
essays only-Sri Ganeshaya Namah, PALI Atisayutti, Vyatireka, Nidassanã, Atthanta-
PAPER-I
Nepali Sahityako Itihasma PAPER-I ranyãsa, Dîpaka, Ditthanta.
(Answers must be written in Nepali) Sarvashrestha Purus, Kalpana, Kala Ra (Pãli Language) 2. Short Notes on Buddhist concepts dealt
Section-A Jeevan, Gadha Buddhiman Ki Guru). (N.B. All answers must be written in Pali within the prescribed texts.
1. History of the origin and development 7. Ramkrishna Sharma-Das Gorkha language in Devanãgarî or Roman Script) 3. Explanation of Pãli Verses from the pre-
of Nepali as one of the new Indo- (The following essays only-Kavi, Section-A scribed texts.
Aryan Languages Samaj Ra Sahitya, Sahityama
1. Origin and Homeland of Pãli and its PERSIAN
2. Fundamentals of Nepali Grammar and Sapekshata, Sahityik Ruchiko
characteristics. PAPER-I
phonology: Praudhata, Nepali Sahityako Pragati).
2. Pãli Grammar-(I) Technical Terms of There will be two questions which must be
(i) Nominal forms and categories :- ORIYA Pãli Grammar-Akkhara, Sara, answered in Persian. The remaining ques-
Gender, Number, Case, Adjectives, PAPER-I Vyañjana, Niggahîta, Nãma, tions must be answered either in Persian
Pronouns, Avyayas
(Answers must be written in Oriya) Sabbanãma, Ãkhyãta, Upasagga, or in the medium of examination opted by
(ii) Verbal forms and categories-
Section-A Nipãta, Abyaya, (II) Kãraka, (III) the candidate.
Tense, Aspects, Voice, Roots and Samãsa; (IV) Sandhi; (V) Taddhita.
History of Oriya Language Section-A
Fixes (Apaccabodhaka-and Ãdhikãrabo-
(1) Origin and development of Oriya Lan- 1. (a) Description of the origin and devel-
(iii) Nepali Swara and Vyanjana; dhaka-Paccaya); (VI) Etymological
guage-Influence of Austric, Dravidian, opment of Persian language (to be an-
3. Major Dialects of Nepali Perso-Arabic and English on Oriya derivation of the following words :- swered in Persian).
4. Standardisation and Modernisation of Language. Buddho, Bhikkhu, Sãmanero, Satthã, (b) Applied Grammar, Rhetorics, Prosody,
Nepali with special reference to lan- (2) Phonetics and Phonemics : Vowels, Dhammo, Latãyã, Purisãnam, Tumhe, Idioms and Phrases frequently used.
guage movements (viz. Halanta Consonants Principles of changes in Amhebhi, Munina, Rattîsu, Phalãya, (i) Grammar : Ism and its kinds, Zamir-e-
Bahiskar, Jharrovad etc.) Oriya sounds. Atthîsu, Raññam, Sangho. Muttasil and Munfasil, Murakkabi-Tausifi,
5. Teaching of Nepali language in India- (3) Morphology : Morphemes (free, bound 3. Translation of two Pãli unseen pas- Murakkab-i-Izafi, Ismi-Ishara, Musharun
Its history and development with spe- compound and complex), derivational sages into English. Elaih, Fel and its kinds, Tenses, Gardan,
cial reference to its socio-cultural as- and inflectional affixes, case inflection, Section-B singular and plural, Jumleh and its kinds.
pects. conjugation of verb. 4. Essays consisting of 300 words on any (ii) Rhetorics : Tajnees, Ishteqaq, Luzum-
Section-B (4) Syntax : Kinds of sentences and their one of the following : ma-la-yalzum, seyaqatul Aadad, Qalb,
1. History of Nepali literature with special transformation, structure of sentences. (a) Bhagavã Buddho, (b) Tarsee, Esteaara, Maratun Nazir, Laff-o-
reference to its development in India. (5) Semantics-Different types of change Tilakkhanam, (c) Ariyo atthañgiko Nashr, Iham, Husn-i-Taalil, Tajahuli-
2. Fundamental concepts and theories in meaning Euphemism. maggo, (d) Cattãri ariyasaccãni, (e) Aarefaneh, Talmih, Tansiqus Sifat.
of literature : (6) Common errors in spellings, gram- Kammavãdo (f) Paticcasamuppãdo, (iii) Prosody : Bahri-Muzara, Ramal,
Kavya/Sahitya, Kavya Prayojan, Liter- matical uses and construction of sen- (g) Nibbãnam paramam sukham, (h) Mutaqarib, Tawil, Hazaj, Kamil.
ary genres, Shabda Shakti, Rasa, tences. Tipitakam, (i) Dhammapadam, (j) Secton-B
Alankara, Tragedy, Comedy, Aesthet- (7) Regional variations in Oriya Lan- Majjhimã-Patipadã. 1. Short essay in Persian-250 words (to be
ics, Stylistics. guage (Western, Southern and North- 5. Summary of Pãli passages. answered in Persian).
3. Major literary trends and movements- ern Oriya) and Dialects (Bhatri and 6. Explanation of Pãli verses in Pãli. 2. History of Persian Literature in Iran and
Swachchhandatavad, Yatharthavad, Desia) 7. The meaning of following India; Literary criticism and styles; trends
Astitwavad, Ayamik Movement, Con- Section-B indeclinables (Abyaya and Nipãta) in classical and modern literature; socio-
temporary Nepali writings, and their use in candidates’ own Pãli cultural influences, development of mod-
History of Oriya Literature
Postmodernism. sentences : ern literary genres including drama, novel,
(1) Historical backgrounds (social, cultural
4. Nepali folklores (the following folk- (I) Atha, (II) Antarã, (III) Addhã, (IV) short story.
and political) of Oriya Literature of dif-
form only)- Sawai, Jhyaurey, Selo, Kadã, (V) Kittãvatã, (VI) Ahorattam, PAPER-II
ferent periods.
Sangini, Lahari. (VII) Divã, (VIII) Yathã, (IX) Ce, (X)
(2) Ancient epics, ornate kavyas and There will be two compulsory questions–
PAPER-II Seyyathîdam, (XI) Vinã, (XII) one each in textual portions of prose and
padavalis.
(Answers must be written in Nepali) Kudãcannam, (XIII) Saddhim, (XIV) poetry which are to be answered in Per-
(3) Typical structural forms of Oriya Lit-
This paper will require first hand reading Antarena, (XV) Kho, (XVI) Mã, (XVII) sian. The remaining questions are to be
erature (Koili, Chautisa, Poi,
of the texts prescribed below and ques- Evam, (XVIII) Ettha, (XIX) Kira, (XX) answered either in Persian or in the me-
Chaupadi, Champu).
tions will be designed to test the candidate’s Pana. dium of examination opted by the candi-
(4) Modern trends in poetry, drama short
critical acumen. PAPER-II date.
story, novel, essay and literary criti-
Section-A cism. (PÃLI LITERATURE) This paper will require first hand reading
1. Santa Jnandil Das-Udaya Lahari PAPER-II There will be two compulsory questions of the texts prescribed and will be designed
2. Lekhnath Poudyal-Tarun Tapasi which must be answered in Pali Languege to test the candidate’s critical ability.
(Answers must be written in Oriya)
(Vishrams III, V, VI, XII, XV, XVIII only) in Devanagari or Roman Script. The re- Section-A
Critical Study of texts -
3. Agam Singh Giri-Jaleko Pratibimba : maining questions must be attempted ei- Prose
The paper will require first hand reading of
Royeko Pratidhwani (The following ther in Pali or in the medium of examina- 1. Nizami Aroozi Samarqandi : Chahar
the text and test the critical ability of the
poems only-rasawako Chichy-ahat- tion opted by the candidate. Maqala :
candidate.
sanga Byunjheko Ek Raat, Chhorolai, Section-A (i) Dabiri
Section-A
Jaleko Pratibimba : Royeko Prati- (i) Life and teachings of Buddha from the (ii) Shaairi
Poetry :
dhwani, Hamro Akashmani Pani Pãli sources.
(Ancient) 2. Qabus.b, Washmgir : Qabus Nama :
Hunchha Ujyalo, Tihar). (ii) History of Pali Literature-Canonical and
1. Sãralã Das-Shanti Parva from (i) Dar Shinakhtan-e-Haqq-e-Pidar-
4. Haribhakta Katuwal-Yo Zindagi Khai Non-Canonical with reference to the fol-
Mãhãbharãta. wa- Madar
Ke Zindagi : (The following poems lowing books and authors:
2. Jaganãth Das-Bhãgãbate, XI (ii) Dar Bishi Justan Az Sukhandani
only - Jeevan : Ek Dristi, Yo Zindagi Mahãvagga, Cullavagga, Pãtimokkha,
Skandha-Jadu Avadhuta Sambãda. (iii) Dar Talib Ilmi Wa Faqih Wa
Khai Ke Zindagi, Akashka tara Ke Dîgha-Nikãya, Dhammapada, Jãtaka,
(Medieval) Fuqaha
Tara, Hamilai Nirdho Nasamjha, Khai Theragãthã, Therîgãthã,Dîpavamsa,
Many-ata Yahan Atmahutiko Balidan 3. Dinãkrushna Dãs-Rasakallola- 3. Sadi Shirazi : Gulistan :
Mahãvamsa, Dãthãvamsa, Sãsanavamsa,
Ko). (Chhãndas-16 & 34) (i) Dar Tasir-e-Suhbat
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 53
4. Moh. Awfi : Jawameul Hikayat : Ahluwalia, Ravinder Ravi, variations of the Russian Federation. a) Purusarthas-
(i) First Ten Hikayaat Ajaib Kamal) ii. Essay on general topics. b) Samskaras-
5. Ziauddin Burney : Tarikh-i-Firozshahi: Aesthetes (Harbhajan Singh, PAPER-II c) Varnasramavyavastha
(i) Wasaya-i-Sultan Balban Be Tara Singh) (Answers must be written in Russian ) d) Arts and fine arts
Farzand-e-Buzurg Neo-progressive (Pash. (Literature) e) Technical sciences
6. Abul Fazl Ain-e-Akbari: Jagtar, Patar) Section-A 5. Trends of Indian Philosophy
(i) Ain-Khazina-i-Abadi Origin and Development of Genres : Literary History and Literary Criticism a) Mimansa b) Vedanta
(ii) Ain-e-Shabistan-e-Iqbal (b) Folk Folk songs, Folk tales. Riddles, Literary movements, Sentimentalism, Ro- c) Nyaya d) Vaisesika
(iii) Ain-e-Manzil Dar Yurisha literature Proverbs. manticism, Naturalism, Realism, Critical e) Sankhya f) Yoga
(iv) Ain-e-Cheragh Afrozi Epic (Vir Singh, Avtar Singh, Azad Realism, Socialism, Acmeism, Symbolism, g) Bauddha h) Jaina
7. Sadiq-i-Hedayat: Mohan Singh) Futurism; Origin and development of liter- i) Carvaka
(i) Dash Akul Lyric (Gurus, Sufis and Modern Lyri- ary genres : Folk literature, Lyrics and po- 6. Short Essay in Sanskrit
(ii) Girdab cists-Mohan Singh Amrita ems-A.S. Pushkin, M.U. Lermontov,
7. Unseen passage with the questions,
Pritam, Shiv Kumar, Alexander Blok, Esenin, V. Mayakovky,
8. Mohd. Hijazi : to be answered in Sanskrit.
Harbhajan Singh) Anna Akhmatova. Epic-L.N. Tolstoy, M.
(i) Khudkushi PAPER-II
(c) Drama (I.C. Nanda, Harcharan Singh, Sholokhov, Short story, novelet, novels-
(ii) Pezeshk-e-Chashm Question from Group 4 is to be answered
Balwant Gargi, S.S.Sekhon, Pushkin, Lermontov, N.V. Gogol, S.
Section-B Shchedrin, I. Goncharov, I. Turgenev, F.M. in Sanskrit only. Question from Groups 1, 2
Charan Das Sidhu)
Poetry Dostoevsky, L.N. Tolstoy, A.P. Chekhov, and 3 are to be answered either in San-
Novel (Vir Singh, Nanak Singh,
1. Firadausi : Shahnama : M. Gorky, M. Sholokhov, I. Bunin, E. skrit or in the medium opted by the candi-
Jaswant Singh Kanwal, K.S.
(i) Rustam-o-Sohrab Zamyatin, Boris Pasternak, A. date.
Duggal, Sukhbir, Gurdial
2. Khayyam : Rubaaiyat (Radif Alif and Solzhenitsyn, M. Bulgakov, Chingiz Section-A
Singh, Dalip Kaur Tiwana,
Be) Swaran Chandan) Aitmatov, V. Rasputin, V. Shukshin, Criti- General study of the following groups:-
3. Saadi Shirazi : Bustan: Short Story (Sujan Singh, K.S. Virk. Prem cism-Belinsky, Dobrolyubov, Group 1
‘Dar Adl-u-Tadbir-u-Rai’ Parkash, Waryam Sandhu). Chernyshevsky, Pisarev, Drama-Chekhov, a) Raghuvamsam-Kalidasa
4. Amir Khusrau: Majmua-i-Diwan-e- (d) Socio- Sanskrit, Persian and Western. Gogol. Influence of socio-political move- b) Kumarasambhavam-Kalidasa
Khusrau. (Radif Dal) cultural ments on literature. c) Kiratarjuniyam-Bharavi
5. Maulana Rum: Mathnawi Maanawi Literary in- Section-B d) Sisupalavadham-Magha
(First Half of Daftar Duwwum) fluences This part will require first hand reading of e) Naisadhiyacaritam-Sriharsa
the texts prescribed and will be designed f) Kadambari-Banabhatta
6. Hafiz : (Radif Alif and Dal) Essay (Puran Singh, Teja Singh,
to test the candidates’ critical ability. g) Dasakumaracaritam -Dandin
7. Urfi Shirazi : Qasaaid : Gurbaksh Singh)
1. A.S. Pushkin Evgeny Onegin h) Sivarajyodayam-S.B. Varnekar
(i) Iqbal-e-Karam Migazad Arbabi- Literary (S.S. Sekhon, Attar Singh,
2. M.U. Lermontov Hero of our times Group 2
Himam Ra. Criticism Kishan Singh, Harbhajan
Singh, Najam Hussain 3. N.V. Gogol Revizor a) Isavasyopanisad
(ii) Har Sukhta Jane Ki Ba Kashmir
Dar Ayad. Sayyad). 4. I.S. Turgenev Fathers and sons b) Bhagavadgita
(iii) Sabah-e-Idd Ke Dar Takiyagah-e- PAPER-II 5. F.M. Dostoevsky Crime and Punishment c) Sundarakanda of Valmiki’s Ramayana
Naz-u-Naeem. (Answers must be written in Punjabi 6. L.N. Tolstoy i. War and Peace d) Arthasastra of Kautilya
8. Ghalib : Ghazaaliyat (Radif Alif) in Gurumukhi Script) ii. Resurrection Group 3
9. Bahar Mashhadi : This paper will require first-hand reading 7. A.P. Chekhov i. Toska a) Svapnavasavadattam- Bhasa
(i) Jughd-e-Jung of the texts prescribed and will be designed ii. Smert Chinovnika b) Abhijnanasakuntalam- Kalidasa
(ii) Sukoot-e-Shab to test the candidate’s critical ability. iii. Chameleon c) Mrcchakatikam-Sudraka
(iii) Damawandiye Section-A 8. A.M. Gorky Mother d) Mudraraksasam-Visakhadatta
(iv) Dukhtar-e-Basra a) Sheikh Farid The complete Bani as in- 9. A. Blok The twelve e) Uttararamacaritam- Bhavabhuti
10. Furugh-e-Farrukhzad: cluded in the Adi Granth. 10. B.B. i. Cloud in plants f) Ratnavali-Sriharshavardhana
(i) Dar Barabad-e-Khuda b) Guru Nanak Japu Ji Baramah, Asa di Mayakovsky ii. Good g) Venisamharam- Bhattanarayana
(ii) Diw-e-Shab Var 11. M. Sholokhov Fate of a man Group 4
11. Nimayushij : c) Bulleh Shah Kafian 12. B. Pasternak Doctor Zhivago Short notes in Sanskrit on the following:-
(i) Qu d) Waris Shah Heer 13. Solzhenitsyn One day in the life of a) Meghadutam-Kalidasa
(ii) Khar-Kan Section-B Ivan Danisovich
b) Nitisatakam-Bhartrhari
Note :- Textual portions of prose and po- a) Shah Jangnama (Jang 14. V. Rasputin Zhivi i Pomni
c) Panchtantra-
etry are to be explained in Persian com- Mohammad Singhan te Firangian) 15. Chingiz Aitmatov Bely Porokhod
d) Rajatarangini-Kalhana
pulsorily. Dhani Ram Chandan Vari 16. V. Shukshin Chudik
e) Harsacaritam-Banabhatta
PUNJABI Chatrik (Poet) Sufi Khana SANSKRIT f) Amarukasatakam-Amaruka
PAPER-I Nawan Jahan PAPER-I g) Gitagovindam-Jayadeva
(Answers must be written in Punjabi in b) Nanak Singh Chitta Lahu There will be three questions as indicated Section-B
Gurumukhi Script) (Novelist) Pavittar Papi in the question paper which must be an-
Questions from Groups 1 & 2 are to be
Section-A Ek Mian Do Talwaran swered in Sanskrit. The remaining ques-
answered in Sanskrit only. (Questions
(a) Origin of Punjabi language : different c) Gurbaksh Zindagi di Ras tions must be answered either in Sanskrit
from Groups 3 & 4 are to be answered in
stages of development and recent develop- Singh (Essayist) Nawan Shivala or in the medium of examination opted by
Sanskrit or in the medium opted by the
ment in Punjabi language : characteristics of Merian Abhul Yadaan. the candidate.
candidate).
Punjabi phonology and the study of its tones: Balraj Sahni Mera Roosi Safarnama Section-A
This Section will require first hand reading
classification of vowels and consonants. (Travelogue) Mera Pakistani 1. Significant features of the grammar, with of the following selected texts :-
(b) Punjabi morphology : the number-gen- Safarnama particular stress on Sanjna, Sandhi,
Group 1
der system (animate and inanimate), pre- Karaka, Samasa, Kartari and Karmani
d) Balwant Gargi Loha Kutt (a) Raghuvansam-Canto I, Verses 1 to 10
fixes, affixes and different categories of Post vacyas (voice usages) (to be answered in
(Dramatist) Dhuni-di-Agg (b) Kumarasambhavam-Canto I, Verses 1
positions: Punjabi word formation: Tatsam. Sanskrit).
Sultan Razia to 10
Tad Bhav, forms: Sentence structure, the 2. (a) Main characteristics of Vedic San-
Sant Singh Sahityarth skrit language. (c) Kiratarjuniyam-Canto I, Verses 1 to 10
notion of subject and object in Punjabi:
Sekhon (Critic) Parsidh Punjabi Kavi (b) Prominent features of classical Sanskrit Group 2
Noun and verb phrases.
Punjabi Kav Shiromani language. (a) Isavasyopanisad-verses-1, 2, 4, 6, 7,
(c) Language and dialect; the notions of
RUSSIAN (c) Contribution of Sanskrit to linguistic 15 and 18
dialect and idiolect; major dialects of
PAPER-I studies. (b) Bhagavatgita II chapter verses 13 to 25
Punjabi; Pothohari, Majhi, Doabi, Malwai,
Puadhi; the validity of speech variation on Answers must be written in Russian 3. General Knowledge of:- (c) Sundarakandam of Valmiki Canto 15,
the basis of social stratification, the distinc- except in the case of question regard- (a) Literary history of Sanskit, Verses 15 to 30 (Geeta Press Edition)
tive features of various dialects with spe- ing translation from Russian to English. (b) Principal trends of literary criticism Group 3
cial reference to tones. Language and script; (Language and Culture) (c) Ramayana, (a) Meghadutam-verses 1 to 10
origin and development of Gurmukhi; suit- Section-A (d) Mahabharata (b) Nitisatakam-Verses 1 to 10 (Edited by
ability of Gurmukhi for Punjabi. i. Modern Russian Language : (e) The origin and development of literary D.D. Kosambi Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan
(d) Classical background; Nath Jogi Sahit Phonetics, Morphology, Syntax, geners of: Publication)
Lexicology, Lexicography and Seman- Mahakavya (c) Kadambari-Sukanaso-padesa (only)
Medieval literature : Gurmat, Sufti, Kissa
tics, linguistics Rupaka (drama)
and Var Janamsakhis. Group 4
ii. Translation from Russian into English Katha
Section-B (a) Svapnavasavadattam Act VI
and vice-versa. Akhyayika
(a) Modern Mystic, romantic, progressive (b) Abhijnansakuntalam Act IV verses 15
Section-B Campu
Trends and neomystic (Vir Singh, to 30
i. Socio-political and economical devel- Khandakavya
Puran Singh, Mohan Singh, Muktaka Kavya. (M.R. Kale Edition)
opment of the Russian Federation :
Amrita Pritam, Bawa Balwant, Patriotic war of 1812, October Revolu- Section-B (c) Uttararamacharitam Act 1 verses 31 to
Pritam Singh Safeer, J.S. tion, Perestroika and Glasnost, disinte- 4. Essentials of Indian Culture with stress 47 (M.R. Kale Edition)
Neki). gration of USSR. Regional & Cultural on
Experimentalist (Jasbir Singh
54 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
SANTALI (i) Judasi Madwa Latar-Tez Narayan (“Saamoondi Sipoon” portion only) sangam literature-cultural fusion in the
PAPER-I Murmu. e. “Roshan Chhanvro” : Narayan Shyam medieval period (Jainism & Buddhism).
(Answers must be written in Santali) Section-B f. “Virhange Khanpoije Sindhi Shair jee The development of arts and architecture
Modern Literature Choond” : ed. H.I. Sadarangani Published through the ages (Pallavas, later cholas,
Section-A
Part-I : Poetry by Sahitya Akademi and Nayaks). The impact of various politi-
Part-I History of Santali Language
(a) Onorhen Baha Dhalwak-Paul Jujhar (2) Drama cal, social, religious and cultural move-
I. Main Austric Language family, popula-
Soren. g. “Behtareen Sindhi Natak” (One-act ments on Tamil Society. The role of mass
tion and distribution.
(b) Asar Binti-Narayan Soren "Tore Sutam" Plays) : Edited by M. Kamal Published by media in the cultural change of contempo-
II. Grammatical structure of Santali Lan-
Gujarat Sindhi Academy. rary Tamil society.
guage. (c) Chand Mala-Gora Chand Tudu.
h. “Kako Kaloomal” (Full-length Play) : by PAPER-II
III. Important character of Santali Language (d) Onto Baha Mala-Aditya Mitra "Santali"
: Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Seman- Madan Jumani (Answers must be written in Tamil)
(e) Tiryo Tetang-Hari Har Hansda
tics, Translation, Lexicography. Section-B The paper will require first hand reading
(f) Sisirjon Rar-Thakur Prasad Murmu.
IV. Impact of other languages on Santali. References to context and critical appre- of the Text prescribed and will be designed
Part-II : Novels
V. Standardization of Santali Language. ciation of the texts included in this section. to test the critical ability of the candidate.
(a) Harmawak Ato-R. Karstiars (Transla-
Part-II History of Santali Literature. a. ‘Pakheeara Valar Khan Vichhrya’ Section-A
tor-R.R. Kisku Rapaz).
I. Literary trends of the following four peri- (Novel) : by Gobind Malhi Part: 1 Ancient Literature
(b) Manu Mati-Chandra Mohan Hansda
ods of History of Santali Literature. b. ‘Sat Deenhan’ (Novel) : by Krishan (1) Kuruntokai (1-25 poems)
(c) Ato Orak-Doman Hansda
(a) Ancient literature before 1854. Khatwani (2) Purananurui (182-200 poems)
(b) Missionary period : Literature between (d) Ojoy Gada Dhiphre-Nathenial Murmu
c. ‘Choond Sindhi Kahanyoon’ (Short Sto- (3) Tirukkural Porutpal : Arasiyalum
1855 to 1889 AD. Part-III : Stories
ries) Vol. III. : Edited by Prem Prakash, Pub- Amaichiyalum (from Iraimatchi to
(c) Medieval period : Literature between (a) Jiyon Gada-Rup Chand Hansda and
lished by Sahitya Akademi. Avaianjamai)
1890 to 1946 AD. Jadumani Beshra.
d. ‘Bandhan’ (Short Stories) : Sundari Part : 2 Epic Literature
(d) Modern period : Literature from 1947 (b) Mayajaal-Doman Sahu, 'Samir' and
Uttamchandani (1) Silappadikaram: Madhurai Kandam
AD to till date. Padmashri Bhagwat Murmu 'Thakur'
e. ‘Behtareen Sindhi Mazmoon’ (Essays) : only.
II. Writing tradition in History of Santali Lit- Part-IV : Drama
Edited by Hiro Thakur, published by (2) Kambaramayanam: Kumbakarunan
erature. (a) Kherwar Bir-Pandit Raghunath Murmu
Gujarat Sindhi Akademi. Vadhai Padalam
Section-B (b) Juri Khatir-Dr. K.C. Tudu
f. ‘Sindhi Tanqeed’ (Criticism) : Edited by Part 3: Devotional Literature
Literary forms - Main characteristics, history (c) Birsa Bir-Ravi Lal Tudu Harish Vaswani : Published by Sahitya (1) Tiruvasagam: Neetthal Vinnappam
and development of following literary forms. Part-V : Biography Akademi. (2) Tiruppavai: (Full Text)
Part-I : Folk Literature in Santali-folk song, Santal Ko Ren Mayam Gohako-Dr. g. ‘Mumhinjee Hayati-a ja Sona Ropa Section-B
folk tale, phrase, idioms, puzzles and Kudum. Biswanath Hansda. varqa’ (Autobiography) : by Popati Modern Literature
Part-II : Modern literature in Santali SINDHI Hiranandani
Part:1 Poetry
(a) Development of poetry and prominent PAPER-I h. “Dr. Choithram Gidwani” (Biography) :
poets. (1) Bharathiar: Kannan Pattu
(Answers must be written in Sindhi) by Vishnu Sharma
(b) Development of prose and prominent (2) Bharathidasan: Kudumba Vilakku
(Arabic or Devanagari script) TAMIL
writers. (3) Naa. Kamarasan: Karuppu Malarkal
Section-A PAPER-I
(i) Novels and prominent Novelists. Prose
1. (a) Origin and evolution of Sindhi lan- (Answers must be written in Tamil)
(ii) Stories and prominent story writers. (1) Mu. Varadharajanar. Aramum
guage-views of different scholars. Section-A
(iii) Drama and prominent Dramatist. Arasiyalum
(b) Significant linguistic features of Sindhi Part: 1 History of Tamil Language
(iv) Criticism and prominent critics. (2) C N Annadurai: Ye! Thazhntha
language, including those pertaining to its Major Indian Language Families-The
(v) Essay, sketches, memoirs, travelogues Tamilagame.
phonology, morphology and syntax. place of Tamil among Indian languages in
and prominent writers. (c) Major dialects of the Sindhi language. Part : 2 Novel, Short story and Drama
general and Dravidian in particular-Enu-
Santali writers : (d) Sindhi vocabularly-stages of its growth, (1) Akilon: Chittirappavai
meration and Distribution of Dravidian lan-
Shyam Sunder Hembram, Pandit including those in the pre-partition and (2) Jayakanthan: Gurupeedam
guages.
Raghunath Murmu, Barha Beshra, Sadhu post-partition periods. (3) Cho: Yarukkum Vetkamillai
The language of Sangam literature-The
Ramchand Murmu, Narayan Soren (e) Historical study of various Writing Sys- language of medieval Tamil: Pallava pe- Part: 3 Folk Literature
'Toresutam', Sarada Prasad Kisku, tems (Scripts) of Sindhi. riod only-Historical study of Nouns, Verbs, (1) Muthuppattan Kathai Edited by Na.
Raghunath Tudu, Kalipada Soren, Sakla (f) Changes in the structure of Sindhi lan- adjectives, adverbs Tense markers and Vanamamalai, (Publication: Madurai
Soren, Digambar Hansda, Aditya Mitra guage in India, after partition, due to influ- case markers in Tamil. Kamaraj University)
'Santali', Babulal Murmu 'Adivasi', ence of other languages and social condi- (2) Malaiyaruvi, Edited by Ki. Va
Borrowing of words from other languages
Jadumani Beshra, Arjun Hembram, tions. Jagannathan (Publication: Sara-
into Tamil-Regional and social dialects-dif-
Krishna Chandra Tudu, Rupchand swathi, Mahal, Thanjavur)
Section-B ference between literary and spoken Tamil.
Hansda, Kalendra Nath Mandi, Mahadev
2. Sindhi literature through the ages in con- Part: 2 History of Tamil Literature TELUGU
Hansda, Gour Chandra Murmu, Thakur
text of socio-cultural conditions in the re- Tolkappiyam-Sangam Literatue-The divi- PAPER-I
Prasad Murmu, Hara Prasad Murmu, Uday
spective periods : sion of Akam and puram-The secular char- (Answers must be written in Telugu)
Nath Majhi, Parimal Hembram, Dhirendra
a. Early medieval literature upto 1350 A.D. acteristics of Sangam Literature-The de- Section-A
Nath Baske, Shyam Charan Hembram,
including folk literature. velopment of Ethical literature-
Damayanti Beshra, T.K. Rapaj, Boyha Language
Biswanath Tudu. b. Late medicval period from 1350 A.D. to Silappadikaram and Manimekalai.
1. Place of Telugu among Dravidian lan-
1850 A.D. Part: 3 Devotional literature (Alwars and
Part-III : Cultural Heritage of Santali tradi- guages and its antiquity-Etymological
tion, customs, festival and rituals (birth, c. Renaissance period from 1850 A.D. to Nayanmars) The bridal mysticism in Alwar
history of Telugu, Tenugu and Andhra.
marriage and death). 1947 A.D. hymns-Minor literary forms (Tutu, Ula,
2. Major linguistic changes in phonologi-
d. Modern period from 1947 and onwards. Parani, Kuravanji)
PAPER-II cal, morphological, grammatical and
(Literary genres in Modern Sindhi litera- Social factors for the development of Mod-
(Answers must be written in Santali) syntactical levels, from Proto-
ture and experiments in poetry, drama, ern Tamil literature: Novel, Short story and
Section-A Dravidian to old Telugu and from old
novel, short story, essay, literary criticism, New Poetry-The impact of various political
This paper will require in-depth reading of Telugu to Modern Telugu.
biography, autobiography, memoirs, and ideologies on modern writings.
the following texts and the questions will 3. Evolution of spoken Telugu when
travelogues.) Section-B
be designed to test the candidates' criticial compared to classical Telugu-Formal
PAPER-II Part:1 Recent trends in Tamil Studies
ability. and functional view of Telugu lan-
(Answers must be written in Sindhi) Approaches to criticism: Social, psychologi-
Ancient Literature : guage.
(Arabic or Devanagari script). cal, historical and moralistic-the use of criti-
Prose 4. Influence of other languages and its
This paper will require the first-hand read- cism-the various techniques in literature:
(a) Kherwal Bonso Dhorom Puthi-Majhi impact on Telugu.
ing of the texts prescribed and will be de- Ullurai, Iraicchi, Thonmam (Myth)
Ramdas Tudu "Rasika". Otturuvagam (allegory), Angadam (Satire), 5. Modernization of Telugu language.
signed to test the candidates’ critical abil-
(b) Mare Hapramko Reyak Katha-L.O. Meyppadu, Padimam(image), Kuriyeedu (a) Linguistic and literary movements
ity.
Scrafsrud. (Symbol), Irunmai (ambiguity)-The concept and their role in modernization of
Section-A
(c) Jomsim Binti Lita-Mangal Chandra of comparative literature-the principle of Telugu.
References to context and critical appre-
Turkulumang Soren. comparative literature. (b) Role of media in modernization of
ciation of the texts included in this section.
(d) Marang Buru Binti-Kanailal Tudu. Part: 2 Folk literature in Tamil: Ballads, Telugu (Newspapers, Radio, TV etc.)
(1) Poetry
Poetry Songs, proverbs and riddles-Sociological (c) Problems of terminology and
a. “Shah Jo Choond Shair” : ed. H.I.
(a) Karam Sereng-Nunku Soren. study of Tamil folklore. Uses of translation- mechanisms in coining new terms in
Sadarangani, Published by Sahitya
(b) Devi Dasain Sereng-Manindra Hansda. Translation of Tamil works into other lan- Telugu in various discourses includ-
Akademi (First 100 pages)
(c) Horh Sereng-W.G. Archer. guages-Development of journalism in ing scientific and technical.
b. “Sachal Jo Choond Kalam” : ed. Kalyan
(d) Baha Sereng-Balaram Tudu Tamil. 6. Dialects of Telugu-Regional and so-
B. Advani Published by Sahitya Akademi
(e) Dong Sereng-Padmashri Bhagwat Part: 3 Cultural Heritage of the Tamils cial variations and problems of stan-
(Kafis only)
Murmu 'Thakur' Concept of Love and War-Concept of Aram- dardization.
c. “Sami-a-ja Choond Sloka” : ed. B.H.
(f) Hor Sereng-Raghunath Murmu. the ethical codes adopted by the ancient 7. Syntax-Major divisions of Telugu sen-
Nagrani Published by Sahitya Akademi
(g) Soros Sereng-Babulal Murmu "Adivasi" Tamils in their warfare-customs, beliefs, tences-simple, complex and com-
(First 100 pages)
rituals, modes of worship in the five Thinais. pound sentences-Noun and verb
(h) More Sin More Nida-Rup Chand d. “Shair-e-Bewas” : by Kishinchand
The cultural changes as revealed in post predications-Processes of
Hansda Bewas
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 55
nominlization and relativization-Direct URDU tion, leadership process and styles, com- rem, hypothesis testing for differences be-
and indirect reporting-conversion pro- PAPER-I munication; The Organizational Processes tween means and proportions, inference
cesses. - decision making, job design; Classical, about population variances, Chi-square
(Answers must be written in Urdu)
8. Translation-Problems of translation, Neoclassical and Contingency ap- and ANOVA, simple correlation and regres-
Section-A
cultural, social and idiomatic-Methods proaches to organizational design; Orga- sion, time series and forecasting, decision
Development of Urdu Language
of translation-Approaches to transla- nizational theory and design - organiza- theory, index numbers; Linear program-
a) Development of Indo-Aryan (i) Old Indo- ming – problem formulation, simplex
tion-Literary and other kinds of trans- tional culture, managing cultural diversity,
Aryan (ii) Middle Indo Aryan (iii) New Indo method and graphical solution, sensitivity
lation-various uses of translation. learning organization; organizational
Aryan analysis.
Section-B change and development; Knowledge
b) Western Hindi and its dialects Brij Based Enterprise – systems and pro- 2. Production and Operations Manage-
Literature Bhasha Khadi Boli, Haryanavi Kannauji, cesses; Networked and virtual organiza- ment:
1. Literature in Pre-Nannaya Period- Bundeli-Theories about the origin of Urdu tions. Fundamentals of operations management;
Marga and Desi poetry. Language
3. Human Resource Management: Organizing for production; Aggregate pro-
2. Nannaya Period-Historical and liter- c) Dakhani Urdu-Origin and development,
HR challenges; HRM functions; The future duction planning, capacity planning, plant
ary background of Andhra its significant linguistic features.
challenges of HRM; Strategic Management design: process planning, plant size and
Mahabharata. d) Social and Cultural roots of Urdu lan- of human resources; Human resource plan- scale of operations, Management of facili-
3. Saiva poets and their contribution- guage-and its distinctive features. ning; Job analysis; Job evaluation; Recruit- ties; Line balancing; Equipment replace-
Dwipada, Sataka, Ragada, Script, Phonology, Morphology, Vocabu- ment and selection; Training and develop- ment and maintenance; Production con-
Udaharana.
lary. ment; Promotion and transfer; Performance trol; Supply chain management - vendor
4. Tikkana and his place in Telugu lit- Section-B management; Compensation management evaluation and audit; Quality management;
erature.
a) Genres and their development : (i) Po- and benefits; Employee morale and pro- Statistical process control, Six Sigma; Flex-
5. Errana and his literary works-Nachana etry : Ghazal, Masnavi, Qasida, Marsia, ibility and agility in manufacturing systems;
ductivity; Management of organizational
Somana and his new approach to po- World class manufacturing; Project man-
Rubai, Jadid Nazm, climate and Industrial relations; Human
etry. agement concepts, R&D management,
(ii) Prose : Novel, Short Story, Dastan, resources accounting and audit; Human
6. Srinatha and Potana-Their woks and resource information system; International Management of service operations; Role
Drama, Inshaiya, Khutoot, Biography.
contribution. human resource management. and importance of materials management,
b) Significant features of : (i) Deccani, Delhi
7. Bhakti poets in Telugu literature- 4. Accounting for Managers: value analysis, make or buy decision; In-
and Lucknow schools (ii) Sir Syed move-
Tallapaka Annamayya, Ramadasu, ventory control, MRP; Waste management.
ment, Romantic movement, Progressive Financial accounting – concept, impor-
Tyagayya. 3. Management Information System:
movement, Modernism. tance and scope, generally accepted ac-
8. Evolution of prabandhas-Kavya and counting principles, preparation of finan- Conceptual foundations of information sys-
c) Literary Criticism and its development
prabandha. cial statements with special reference to tems; Information theory; Information re-
with reference to Hali, Shibli, Kaleemuddin
9. Southern school of Telugu literature- Ahmad, Ehtisham Hussain, Ale-Ahmad analysis of a balance sheet and measure- source management; Types of information
Raghunatha Nayaka, Chemakura Suroor. ment of business income, inventory valua- systems; Systems development - Overview
Vankatakavi and women poets-Liter- tion and depreciation, financial statement of systems and design; System develop-
d) Essay writing (covering literary and
ary forms like yakshagana, prose and imaginative topics) analysis, fund flow analysis, the statement ment management life-cycle, Designing for
padakavita. of cash flows; Management accounting – online and distributed environments; Imple-
PAPER-II
10. Modern Telugu Literature and literary concept, need, importance and scope; mentation and control of project; Trends in
(Answers must be written in Urdu)
forms-Novel, Short Story, Drama, Play- Cost accounting – records and processes, information technology; Managing data
let and poetic forms. This paper will require first hand reading
cost ledger and control accounts, recon- resources - Organising data; DSS and
of the texts prescribed and will be designed
11. Literary Movements : Reformation, ciliation and integration between financial RDBMS; Enterprise Resource Planning
to test the candidate's critical ability.
Nationalism, Neo-classicism, Roman- and cost accounts; Overhead cost and con- (ERP), Expert systems, e-Business archi-
ticism and Progressive, Revolutionary Section-A tecture, e-Governance; Information sys-
trol, Job and process costing, Budget and
movements. 1. Mir Amman Bagho-Babar budgetary control, Performance budgeting, tems planning, Flexibility in information
12. Digambarakavulu, Feminist and Dalit 2. Ghalib Intikhab-e-Khutoot-e Zero-base budgeting, relevant costing and systems; User involvement; Evaluation of
Literature. Ghalib costing for decision-making, standard cost- information systems.
13. Main divisions of folk literature-Per- 3. Mohd. Husain Nairang-e-Khayal ing and variance analysis, marginal cost- 4. Government Business Interface:
forming folk arts. Azad ing and absorption costing. State participation in business, Interaction
PAPER-II 4. Prem Chand Godan 5. Financial Management: between Government, Business and dif-
(Answers must be written in Telugu) 5. Rajendra Singh Apne Dukh Mujhe Goals of finance function; Concepts of ferent Chambers of Commerce and Indus-
This paper will require first hand reading Bedi Dedo value and return; Valuation of bonds and try in India; Government’s policy with re-
of the prescribed texts and will be designed 6. Abul Kalam Azad Ghubar-e-Khatir shares; Management of working capital: gard to Small Scale Industries; Government
to test the candidate's critical ability, which Section-B Estimation and financing; Management of clearances for establishing a new enter-
will be in relation to the following ap- 1. Mir Intikhab-e-Kalam-e-Mir cash, receivables, inventory and current prise; Public Distribution System; Govern-
proaches. liabilities; Cost of capital; Capital budget- ment control over price and distribution;
(Ed. Abdul Haq.)
i) Aesthetic approach-Rasa, Dhwani, ing; Financial and operating leverage; Consumer Protection Act (CPA) and The
2. Mir Hasan Sahrul Bayan
Vakroti and Auchitya-Formal and Struc- Design of capital structure: theories and Role of voluntary organizations in protect-
3. Ghalib Diwan-e-Ghalib
tural-Imagery and Symbolism. practices; Shareholder value creation: divi- ing consumers’ rights; New Industrial Policy
4. Iqbal Bal-e-Jibrail of the Government: liberalization, deregu-
ii) Sociological, Historical, Ideological, Psy- dend policy, corporate financial policy and
5. Firaq Gul-e-Naghma strategy, management of corporate dis- lation and privatisation; Indian planning
chological approaches.
6. Faiz Dast-e-Saba tress and restructuring strategy; Capital system; Government policy concerning de-
Section-A
7. Akhtruliman Bint-e-Lamhat and money markets: institutions and instru- velopment of Backward areas/regions; The
1. Nannaya-Dushyanta Charitra
(Adiparva 4th Canto verses 5-109) MANAGEMENT ments; Leasing, hire purchase and ven- Responsibilities of the business as well as
The candidate should make a study of the ture capital; Regulation of capital market; the Government to protect the environment;
2. Tikkana-Sri Krishna Rayabaramu
concept and development of management Risk and return: portfolio theory; CAPM; Corporate Governance; Cyber Laws.
(Udyoga parva -3rd Canto verses 1-
144) as science and art drawing upon the con- APT; Financial derivatives: option, futures, 5. Strategic Management:
3. Srinatha-Guna Nidhi Katha (Kasi- tributions of leading thinkers of manage- swap; Recent reforms in financial sector. Business policy as a field of study; Nature
khandam, 4th Canto, verses 76-133) ment and apply the concepts to the real life 6. Marketing Management: and scope of strategic management, Stra-
4. Pingali Surana-Sugatri Salinulakatha of government and business decision mak- Concept, evolution and scope; Marketing tegic intent, vision, objectives and policies;
(Kalapurnodayamu 4 Canto verses, ing keeping in view the changes in the stra- strategy formulation and components of Process of strategic planning and imple-
60-142) tegic and operative environment. marketing plan; Segmenting and targeting mentation; Environmental analysis and in-
5. Molla-Ramayanamu (Balakanda in- PAPER – I the market; Positioning and differentiating ternal analysis; SWOT analysis; Tools and
cluding avatarika) 1. Managerial Function and Process: the market offering; Analyzing competition; techniques for strategic analysis - Impact
Concept and Foundations of Management, Analyzing consumer markets; Industrial matrix: The experience curve, BCG matrix,
6. Kasula Purushothama Kavi-Andhra
Evolution of Management Thoughts; buyer behaviour; Market research; Prod- GEC mode, Industry analysis, Concept of
Nayaka Satakamu
Managerial Functions – Planning, Orga- uct strategy; Pricing strategies; Designing value chain; Strategic profile of a firm;
Section-B
nizing, Controlling; Decision making; Role and managing Marketing channels; Inte- Framework for analysing competition;
7. Gurajada Appa Rao-Animutyalu
of Manager, Managerial skills; Entrepre- grated marketing communications; Build- Competitive advantage of a firm; Generic
(Short stories)
neurship; Management of innovation; ing customer satisfaction, Value and re- competitive strategies; Growth strategies
8. Viswanatha Satyanarayana-Andhra
Managing in a global environment, Flex- tention; Services and non-profit marketing; – expansion, integration and diversifica-
prasasti
ible Systems Management; Social respon- Ethics in marketing; Consumer protection; tion; Concept of core competence, Strate-
9. Devulapalli Krishna Sastry- gic flexibility; Reinventing strategy; Strat-
sibility and managerial ethics; Process and Internet marketing; Retail management;
Krishnapaksham (excluding Urvasi egy and structure; Chief Executive and
customer orientation; Managerial pro- Customer relationship management; Con-
and Pravasam)
cesses on direct and indirect value chain. cept of holistic marketing. Board; Turnaround management; Manage-
10. Sri Sri-Maha prastanam. ment of strategic change; Strategic alli-
2. Organisational Behaviour and Design: PAPER – II
11. Jashuva-Gabbilam (Part I) ances, Mergers and Acquisitions; Strat-
Conceptual model of organization 1. Quantitative Techniques in Decision
12. C. Narayana Reddy-Karpuravasanta egy and corporate evolution in the Indian
behaviour; The individual processes – per- Making:
rayalu. context.
sonality, values and attitude, perception, Descriptive statistics – tabular, graphical
13. Kanuparti Varalakshmamma-Sarada 6. International Business:
motivation, learning and reinforcement, and numerical methods, introduction to
lekhalu (Part I) International Business Environment:
work stress and stress management; The probability, discrete and continuous prob-
14. Atreya-N.G.O. Changing composition of trade in goods
dynamics of organization behaviour – ability distributions, inferential statistics-
15. Racha konda Visswanatha Sastry- sampling distributions, central limit theo- and services; India’s Foreign Trade: Policy
power and politics, conflict and negotia-
Alpajaeevi.
56 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
and trends; Financing of International trade; (6) Vector Analysis: signed integers and reals, double preci- resources, organizations and risks in
Regional Economic Cooperation; FTAs; Scalar and vector fields, differentiation of sion reals and long integers. projects.
Internationalisation of service firms; Inter- vector field of a scalar variable; Gradient, Algorithms and flow charts for solving nu- System improvement: Implementation of
national production; Operation Manage- divergence and curl in cartesian and cylin- merical analysis problems. systems, such as total quality management,
ment in International companies; Interna- drical coordinates; Higher order deriva- (7) Mechanics and Fluid Dynamics: developing and managing flexible, lean
tional Taxation; Global competitiveness tives; Vector identities and vector equa- Generalized coordinates; D’ Alembert’s and agile organizations.
and technological developments; Global tions. principle and Lagrange’s equations; PAPER - II
e-Business; Designing global organisa- Application to geometry: Curves in space, Hamilton equations; Moment of inertia; 1. Thermodynamics, Gas Dynamics and
tional structure and control; Multicultural Curvature and torsion; Serret-Frenet’s for- Motion of rigid bodies in two dimensions. Turbine:
management; Global business strategy; mulae. Equation of continuity; Euler’s equation of 1.1 Basic concept of First –law and second
Global marketing strategies; Export Man- Gauss and Stokes’ theorems, Green’s iden- motion for inviscid flow; Stream-lines, path law of Thermodynamics; concept of entropy
agement; Export- Import procedures; Joint tities. of a particle; Potential flow; Two-dimen- and reversibility; availability and unavail-
Ventures; Foreign Investment: Foreign di- PAPER - II sional and axisymmetric motion; Sources ability and irreversibility.
rect investment and foreign portfolio invest- and sinks, vortex motion; Navier-Stokes
(1) Algebra: 1.2 Classification and properties of fluids;
ment; Cross-border Mergers and Acquisi- equation for a viscous fluid.
Groups, subgroups, cyclic groups, cosets, incompressible and compressible fluids
tions; Foreign Exchange Risk Exposure
Lagrange’s Theorem, normal subgroups, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING flows; effect of Mach number and compress-
Management; World Financial Markets and
quotient groups, homomorphism of PAPER - I ibility; continuity momentum and energy
International Banking; External Debt Man-
groups, basic isomorphism theorems, per- 1. Mechanics: equations; normal and oblique shocks; one
agement; Country Risk Analysis.
mutation groups, Cayley’s theorem. 1.1 Mechanics of rigid bodies: dimensional isentropic flow; flow or fluids in
MATHEMATICS duct with frictions that transfer.
Rings, subrings and ideals, homomor- Equations of equilibrium in space and its
PAPER - I phisms of rings; Integral domains, princi- 1.3 Flow through fans, blowers and com-
application; first and second moments of
(1) Linear Algebra: pal ideal domains, Euclidean domains and pressors; axial and centrifugal flow con-
area; simple problems on friction; kinemat-
Vector spaces over R and C, linear depen- unique factorization domains; Fields, quo- figuration; design of fans and compressors;
ics of particles for plane motion; elemen-
dence and independence, subspaces, tient fields. single problems compresses and turbine
tary particle dynamics.
bases, dimension; Linear transformations, (2) Real Analysis: cascade; open and closed cycle gas tur-
1.2 Mechanics of deformable bodies:
rank and nullity, matrix of a linear transfor- Real number system as an ordered field bines; work done in the gas turbine; reheat
mation. Generalized Hooke’s law and its applica-
with least upper bound property; Se- and regenerators.
tion; design problems on axial stress, shear
Algebra of Matrices; Row and column re- quences, limit of a sequence, Cauchy se- 2. Heat Transfer:
stress and bearing stress; material proper-
duction, Echelon form, congruence’s and quence, completeness of real line; Series 2.1 Conduction heat transfer- general con-
ties for dynamic loading; bending shear
similarity; Rank of a matrix; Inverse of a and its convergence, absolute and condi- duction equation - Laplace, Poisson and
and stresses in beams;. determination of
matrix; Solution of system of linear equa- tional convergence of series of real and Fourier equations; Fourier law of conduc-
principle stresses and strains - analytical
tions; Eigenvalues and eigenvectors, char- complex terms, rearrangement of series. tion; one dimensional steady state heat
and graphical; compound and combined
acteristic polynomial, Cayley-Hamilton Continuity and uniform continuity of func- conduction applied to simple wall, solid and
stresses; bi-axial stresses - thin walled
theorem, Symmetric, skew-symmetric, Her- tions, properties of continuous functions on hollow cylinder & spheres.
pressure vessel; material behaviour and
mitian, skew-Hermitian, orthogonal and compact sets. 2.2 Convection heat transfer- Newton’s law
design factors for dynamic load; design of
unitary matrices and their eigenvalues. of convection; free and forces convection;
Riemann integral, improper integrals; Fun- circular shafts for bending and torsional
(2) Calculus: damental theorems of integral calculus. heat transfer during laminar and turbulent
load only; deflection of beam for statically
Real numbers, functions of a real variable, Uniform convergence, continuity, differen- determinate problems; theories of failure. flow of an incompressible fluid over a flat
limits, continuity, differentiability, mean- tiability and integrability for sequences and plate; concepts of Nusselt number, hydro-
2. Engineering Materials:
value theorem, Taylor’s theorem with re- series of functions; Partial derivatives of dynamic and thermal boundary layer their
Basic concepts on structure of solids; com-
mainders, indeterminate forms, maxima functions of several (two or three) variables, thickness; Prandtl number; analogy be-
mon ferrous and non-ferrous materials and
and minima, asymptotes; Curve tracing; maxima and minima. tween heat and momentum transfer-
their applications; heat-treatment of steels;
Functions of two or three variables: limits, Reynolds, Colbum, Prandtl analogies; heat
(3) Complex Analysis: non-metals- plastics, ceramics, composite
continuity, partial derivatives, maxima and transfer during laminar and turbulent flow
Analytic functions, Cauchy-Riemann equa- materials and nano-materials.
minima, Lagrange’s method of multipliers, through horizontal tubes; free convection
tions, Cauchy’s theorem, Cauchy’s integral 3. Theory of Machines:
Jacobian. from horizontal and vertical plates.
formula, power series representation of an Kinematic and dynamic analysis of plane
Riemann’s definition of definite integrals; 2.3 Black body radiation - basic radiation
analytic function, Taylor’s series; mechanisms. Cams, Gears and epicyclic
Indefinite integrals; Infinite and improper laws such as Stefan-Boltzman, Planck dis-
Singularities; Laurent’s series; Cauchy’s gear trains, flywheels, governors, balanc-
integrals; Double and triple integrals (evalu- tribution, Wein’s displacement etc.
residue theorem; Contour integration. ing of rigid rotors, balancing of single and
ation techniques only); Areas, surface and 2.4 Basic heat exchanger analysis; classi-
(4) Linear Programming: multicylinder engines, linear vibration
volumes. fication of heat exchangers.
Linear programming problems, basic so- analysis of mechanical systems (single
(3) Analytic Geometry: 3. I .C. Engines:
lution, basic feasible solution and optimal degree of freedom), Critical speeds and
Cartesian and polar coordinates in three 3.1 Classification, thermodynamic cycles
solution; Graphical method and simplex whirling of shafts.
dimensions, second degree equations in of operation; determination of break power,
method of solutions; Duality. 4. Manufacturing Science:
three variables, reduction to canonical indicated power, mechanical efficiency,
Transportation and assignment problems. 4.1 Manufacturing Process:
forms, straight lines, shortest distance be- heat balance sheet, interpretation of per-
(5) Partial differential equations: Machine tool engineering – Merchant’s
tween two skew lines; Plane, sphere, cone, formance characteristics, petrol, gas and
cylinder, paraboloid, ellipsoid, hyperboloid Family of surfaces in three dimensions and force analysis; Taylor’s tool life equation;
diesel engines.
of one and two sheets and their properties. formulation of partial differential equations; conventional machining; NC and CNC
3.2 Combustion in SI and CI engines, nor-
Solution of quasilinear partial differential machining process; jigs and fixtures.
(4) Ordinary Differential Equations: mal and abnormal combustion; effect of
equations of the first order, Cauchy’s Non-conventional machining – EDM, ECM,
Formulation of differential equations; Equa- working parameters on knocking, reduc-
method of characteristics; Linear partial ultrasonic, water jet machining etc; appli-
tions of first order and first degree, inte- tion of knocking; Forms of combustion
differential equations of the second order cation of lasers and plasmas; energy rate
grating factor; Orthogonal trajectory; Equa- chamber for SI and CI engines; rating of
with constant coefficients, canonical form; calculations.
tions of first order but not of first degree, fuels; additives; emission.
Equation of a vibrating string, heat equa- Forming and welding processes- standard
Clairaut’s equation, singular solution. 3.3 Different systems of IC engines- fuels;
tion, Laplace equation and their solutions. processes.
Second and higher order linear equations lubricating; cooling and transmission sys-
(6) Numerical Analysis and Computer Metrology - concept of fits and tolerances;
with constant coefficients, complementary tems. Alternate fuels in IC engines.
programming: tools and gauges; comparators; inspection
function, particular integral and general 4. Steam Engineering:
Numerical methods: Solution of algebraic of length; position; profile and surface finish.
solution. 4.1 Steam generation- modified Rankine
and transcendental equations of one vari- 4.2. Manufacturing Management:
Second order linear equations with vari- cycle analysis; Modern steam boilers;
able by bisection, Regula-Falsi and New- System design: factory location- simple OR
able coefficients, Euler-Cauchy equation; steam at critical and supercritical pressures;
ton-Raphson methods; solution of system models; plant layout - methods based; ap-
Determination of complete solution when draught equipment; natural and artificial
of linear equations by Gaussian elimina- plications of engineering economic analy-
one solution is known using method of draught; boiler fuels solid, liquid and gas-
tion and Gauss-Jordan (direct), Gauss- sis and break- even analysis for product
variation of parameters. eous fuels. Steam turbines - principle;
Seidel(iterative) methods. Newton’s (for- selection, process selection and capacity
Laplace and Inverse Laplace transforms types; compounding; impulse and reaction
ward and backward) interpolation, planning; predetermined time standards.
and their properties; Laplace transforms of turbines; axial thrust.
Lagrange’s interpolation. System planning; forecasting methods
elementary functions. Application to initial 4.2 Steam nozzles- flow of steam in con-
Numerical integration: Trapezoidal rule, based on regression and decomposition,
value problems for 2nd order linear equa- vergent and divergent nozzle; pressure at
Simpson’s rules, Gaussian quadrature for- design and balancing of multi model and
tions with constant coefficients. throat for maximum discharge with differ-
mula. stochastic assembly lines; inventory man-
(5) Dynamics & Statics: ent initial steam conditions such as wet,
Numerical solution of ordinary differential agement – probabilistic inventory models
Rectilinear motion, simple harmonic mo- saturated and superheated, effect of varia-
equations: Euler and Runga Kutta-methods. for order time and order quantity determi-
tion, motion in a plane, projectiles; con- tion of back pressure; supersaturated flow
Computer Programming: Binary system; nation; JIT systems; strategic sourcing;
strained motion; Work and energy, conser- of steam in nozzles, Wilson line.
Arithmetic and logical operations on num- managing inter plant logistics.
vation of energy; Kepler’s laws, orbits un- 4.3 Rankine cycle with internal and exter-
bers; Octal and Hexadecimal systems; System operations and control: Schedul-
der central forces. nal irreversibility; reheat factor; reheating
Conversion to and from decimal systems; ing algorithms for job shops; applications
Equilibrium of a system of particles; Work and regeneration, methods of governing;
Algebra of binary numbers. of statistical methods for product and pro-
and potential energy, friction; common cat- back pressure and pass out turbines.
Elements of computer systems and con- cess quality control - applications of con-
enary; Principle of virtual work; Stability of 4.4 Steam power plants - combined cycle
cept of memory; Basic logic gates and truth trol charts for mean, range, percent defec-
equilibrium, equilibrium of forces in three power generation; heat recovery steam
tables, Boolean algebra, normal forms. tive, number of defectives and defects per
dimensions. generators (HRSG) fired and unfired, co-
Representation of unsigned integers, unit; quality cost systems; management of
generation plants.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 57
5. Refrigeration and air-conditioning: the following drugs Intra-uterine devices, pills, tubectomy and 19. Schools of Vedânta: Brahman; Îúvara;
5.1 Vapour compression refrigeration cycle l Antipyretics and analgesics, Antibiotics, vasectomy. Medical termination of preg- Âtman; Jiva; Jagat; Mâyâ; Avidyâ; Adhyâsa;
- cycle on p-H & T-s diagrams; eco-friendly Antimalaria; Antikala-azar,Antidiabetics nancy including legal aspects. Moksa; Aprthaksiddhi; Pancavidhabheda
refrigerants - R134a,123; Systems like l Antihypertensive, Antidiuretics, General Cancer cervix. 20. Aurobindo: Evolution, Involution; Inte-
evaporators, condensers, compressor, ex- and cardiac vasodilators, Antiviral, An- Leucorrhoea, pelvic pain, infertility, dys- gral Yoga.
pansion devices. Simple vapour absorp- tiparasitic, Antifungal, Immunosuppres- functional uterine bleeding (DUB), amen- PAPER – II
tion systems. sants orrhoea, Fibroid and prolapse of uterus. Socio-Political Philosophy
5.2 Psychrometry - properties; processes; l Anticancer 6. Community Medicine (Preventive and 1. Social and Political Ideals: Equality, Jus-
charts; sensible heating and cooling; hu- 7. Forensic Medicine and Toxicology: Social Medicine): tice, Liberty.
midification and dehumidification effective Forensic examination of injuries and Principles, methods, approach and mea- 2. Sovereignty: Austin, Bodin, Laski,
temperature; air-conditioning load calcu- wounds; Examination of blood and semi- surements of Epidemiology Kautilya.
lation; simple duct design. nal stains; poisoning, sedative overdose, Nutrition, nutritional diseases / disorders & 3. Individual and State: Rights; Duties and
MEDICAL SCIENCE hanging, drowning, burns, DNA and finger Nutrition Programmes. Accountability
PAPER - I print study. Health information Collection, Analysis and 4. Forms of Government: Monarchy; The-
1. Human Anatomy: PAPER - II Presentation. ocracy and Democracy.
Applied anatomy including blood and 1. General Medicine: Objectives, components and critical analy- 5. Political Ideologies: Anarchism; Marx-
nerve supply of upper and lower limbs and Etiology, clinical features, diagnosis and sis of National programmes for control/ ism and Socialism
joints of shoulder, hip and knee. principles of management (including pre- eradication of: 6. Humanism; Secularism; Multiculturalism.
Gross anatomy, blood supply and lym- vention) of: - Tetanus, Rabies, AIDS, Den- Malaria, Kala-azar, Filaria and Tuberculo- 7. Crime and Punishment: Corruption,
phatic drainage of tongue, thyroid, mam- gue, Kala-azar, Japanese Encephalitis. sis, Mass Violence, Genocide, Capital P u n -
mary gland, stomach, liver, prostate, go- Etiology, clinical features, diagnosis and HIV/AIDS, STDs and Dengue ishment.
nads and uterus. principles of management of: Critical appraisal of Health care delivery 8. Development and Social Progress.
Applied anatomy of diaphragm, perineum Ischaemic heart disease, pulmonary em- system. 9. Gender Discrimination: Female Foeti-
and inguinal region. bolism. Health management and administration: cide, Land and Property Rights;
Clinical anatomy of kidney, urinary blad- Bronchial asthma. Techniques, Tools, Programme Implemen- Empowernment.
der, uterine tubes, vas deferens. Pleural effusion, tuberculosis, Malabsorp- tation and Evaluation. 10. Caste Discrimination: Gandhi and
Embryology: Placenta and placental bar- tion syndromes, acid peptic diseases, Vi- Objective, Component, Goals and Status Ambedkar
rier. Development of heart, gut, kidney, ral hepatitis and cirrhosis of liver. of Reproductive and Child Health, National Philosophy of Religion:
uterus, ovary, testis and their common con- Glomerulonerphritis and pyelonephritis, Rural Health Mission and Millennium De- 1. Notions of God: Attributes; Relation to
genital abnormalities. renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, renovas- velopment Goals Man and the World. (Indian and Western).
Central and peripheral autonomic ner- cular hypertension, complications of dia- Management of hospital and industrial 2. Proofs for the Existence of God and their
vous system : Gross and clinical anatomy betes mellitus, coagulation disorders, leu- waste. Critique (Indian and Western).
of ventricles of brain, circulation of cere- kemia, Hypo and hyper thyrodism, menin- PHILOSOPHY 3. Problem of Evil.
brospinal fluid; Neural pathways and le- gitis and encephalitis. PAPER - I 4. Soul: Immortality; Rebirth and Libera-
sions of cutaneous sensations, hearing and Imaging in medical problems, ultrasound, History and Problems of Philosophy: tion.
vision; Cranial nerves, distribution and echocardiogram, CT scan, MRI. 1. Plato and Aristotle: Ideas; Substance; 5. Reason, Revelation and Faith.
clinical significance; Components of auto- Anxiety and Depressive Psychosis and Form and Matter; Causation; Actuality and 6. Religious Experience: Nature and Ob-
nomic nervous system. schizophrenia and ECT. Potentiality. ject (Indian and Western).
2. Human Physiology: 2. Pediatrics: 2. Rationalism (Descartes, Spinoza, 7. Religion without God.
Conduction and transmission of impulse, Immunization, Baby friendly hospital, con- Leibniz): Cartesian Method and Certain 8. Religion and Morality.
mechanism of contraction, neuromuscular genital cyanotic heart disease, respiratory Knowledge; Substance; God; Mind-Body 9. Religious Pluralism and the Problem of
transmission, reflexes, control of equilib- distress syndrome, broncho - pneumonias, Dualism; Determinism and Freedom. Absolute Truth.
rium, posture and muscle tone, descend- kernicterus. IMNCI classification and man- 3. Empiricism (Locke, Berkeley, Hume): 10. Nature of Religious Language: Ana-
ing pathways, functions of cerebellum, agement, PEM grading and management. Theory of Knowledge; Substance and logical and Symbolic; Cognitivist and Non-
basal ganglia, Physiology of sleep and ARI and Diarrhea of under five and their Qualities; Self and God; Scepticism. cognitive.
consciousness. management. 4. Kant: Possibility of Synthetic a priori
Endocrine system: Mechanism of action 3. Dermatology: PHYSICS
Judgments; Space and Time; Categories;
of hormones, formation, secretion, trans- Psoriasis, Allergic dermatitis, scabies, ec- PAPER - I
Ideas of Reason; Antinomies; Critique of
port, metabolism, function and regulation zema, vitiligo, Stevan Johnson’s syndrome, 1. (a) Mechanics of Particles:
Proofs for the Existence of God
of secretion of pancreas and pituitary gland. Lichen Planus. Laws of motion; conservation of energy and
5. Hegel: Dialectical Method; Absolute Ide-
Physiology of reproductive system: Men- 4. General Surgery: momentum, applications to rotating frames,
alism
strual cycle, lactation, pregnancy. centripetal and Coriolis accelerations;
Clinical features, causes, diagnosis and 6. Moore, Russell and Early Wittgenstein:
Blood: Development, regulation and fate principles of management of cleft palate, Motion under a central force; Conserva-
Defence of Commonsense; Refutation of
of blood cells. harelip. tion of angular momentum, Kepler’s laws;
Idealism; Logical Atomism; Logical Con-
Cardio-vascular, cardiac output, blood Laryngeal tumor, oral and esophageal Fields and potentials; Gravitational field
structions; Incomplete Symbols; Picture
pressure, regulation of cardiovascular tumors. and potential due to spherical bodies,
Theory of Meaning; Saying and Showing.
functions; Gauss and Poisson equations, gravita-
Peripheral arterial diseases, varicose 7. Logical Positivism: Verification Theory
3. Biochemistry: tional self-energy; Two-body problem; Re-
veins, coarctation of aorta of Meaning; Rejection of Metaphysics; Lin-
Organ function tests-liver, kidney, thyroid duced mass; Rutherford scattering; Cen-
Tumors of Thyroid, Adrenal Glands guistic Theory of Necessary Propositions.
Protein synthesis. tre of mass and laboratory reference
Abscess, cancer, fibroadenoma and 8. Later Wittgenstein: Meaning and Use; Lan- frames.
Vitamins and minerals. adenosis of breast. guage-games; Critique of Private Language.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (b) Mechanics of Rigid Bodies:
Bleeding peptic ulcer, tuberculosis of 9. Phenomenology (Husserl): Method;
(RFLP). System of particles; Centre of mass, angu-
bowel, ulcerative colitis, cancer stomach. Theory of Essences; Avoidance of
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR). lar momentum, equations of motion; Con-
Renal mass,cancer Prostate.. Psychologism.
servation theorems for energy, momentum
Radio - immunoassays (RIA). Haemothorax, stones of Gall bladder, Kid- 10. Existentialism (Kierkegaard, Sartre, and angular momentum; Elastic and in-
4. Pathology: ney, Ureter and Urinary Bladder. Heidegger): Existence and Essence; elastic collisions; Rigid body; Degrees of
Inflammation and repair, disturbances of Management of surgical conditions of Rec- Choice, Responsibility and Authentic Ex- freedom, Euler’s theorem, angular veloc-
growth and cancer, Pathogenesis and his- tum, Anus and Anal canal, Gall bladder istence; Being-in-the –world and Tempo- ity, angular momentum, moments of iner-
topathology of rheumatic and ischemic and Bile ducts rality. tia, theorems of parallel and perpendicu-
heart disease and diabetes mellitus. Dif- Splenomegaly, cholecystitis, portal hyper- 11. Quine and Strawson: Critique of Em- lar axes, equation of motion for rotation;
ferentiation between benign, malignant, tension, liver abscess, peritonitis, carci- piricism; Theory of Basic Particulars and Molecular rotations (as rigid bodies); Di
primary and metastatic malignancies, noma head of pancreas. Persons. and tri-atomic molecules; Precessional
Pathogenesis and histopathology of bron- Fractures of spine, Colles’ fracture and 12. Cârvâka : Theory of Knowledge; Re- motion; top, gyroscope.
chogenic carcinoma, carcinoma breast, bone tumors. jection of Transcendent Entities. (c) Mechanics of Continuous Media:
oral cancer, cancer cervix, leukemia, Etiol- 13. Jainism: Theory of Reality;
Endoscopy Elasticity, Hooke’s law and elastic con-
ogy, pathogenesis and histopathology of - Saptabhaòginaya; Bondage and Liberation.
Laprascopic Surgery. stants of isotropic solids and their inter-re-
cirrhosis liver, glomerulonephritis, tuber- 14. Schools of Buddhism:
5. Obstetrics and Gynaecology includ- lation; Streamline (Laminar) flow, viscos-
culosis, acute osteomyelitis. Pratîtyasamutpâda; Ksanikavada,
ing Family Planning: ity, Poiseuille’s equation, Bernoulli’s equa-
5. Microbiology: Nairâtmyavâda
Diagnosis of pregnancy. tion, Stokes’ law and applications.
Humoral and cell mediated immunity 15. Nyâya- Vaiúesika: Theory of Catego-
Labour management, complications of 3rd (d) Special Relativity:
Diseases caused by and laboratory diag- ries; Theory of Appearance; Theory of
stage, Antepartum and postpartum hem- Michelson-Morley experiment and its im-
nosis of- Pramâna; Self, Liberation; God; Proofs for
orrhage, resuscitation of the newborn, plications; Lorentz transformations-length
l Meningococcus, Salmonella the Existence of God; Theory of Causa- contraction, time dilation, addition of rela-
Management of abnormal lie and difficult
l Shigella, Herpes, Dengue, Polio labour, Management of small for date or tion; Atomistic Theory of Creation. tivistic velocities, aberration and Doppler
l HIV/AIDS, Malaria, E. Histolytica, Giar- premature newborn. 16. Sâmkhya: Prakrti; Purusa; Causation; effect, mass-energy relation, simple appli-
dia Diagnosis and management of anemia. Liberation cations to a decay process; Four dimen-
l Candida, Cryptococcus, Aspergillus Preeclampsia and Toxaemias of preg- 17. Yoga: Citta; Cittavrtti; Klesas; Samadhi; sional momentum vector; Covariance of
6. Pharmacology: nancy, Management of Post menopausal Kaivalya. equations of physics.
Mechanism of action and side effects of Syndrome. 18. Mimâmsâ: Theory of Knowledge 2. Waves and Optics:
58 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
(a) Waves: (b) Statistical Physics: and its communitarian critiques. the comparative method.
Simple harmonic motion, damped oscilla- Macro and micro states, statistical distribu- 4. Equality: Social, political and economic; 2. State in comparative perspective: Char-
tion, forced oscillation and resonance; tions, Maxwell-Boltzmann, Bose-Einstein relationship between equality and free- acteristics and changing nature of the State
Beats; Stationary waves in a string; Pulses and Fermi-Dirac distributions, applications dom; Affirmative action. in capitalist and socialist economies, and,
and wave packets; Phase and group ve- to specific heat of gases and blackbody 5. Rights: Meaning and theories; different advanced industrial and developing soci-
locities; Reflection and Refraction from radiation; Concept of negative tempera- kinds of rights; concept of Human Rights. eties.
Huygens’ principle. tures. 6. Democracy: Classical and contempo- 3. Politics of Representation and Partici-
(b) Geometrical Optics: PAPER - II rary theories; different models of democ- pation: Political parties, pressure groups
Laws of reflection and refraction from 1. Quantum Mechanics: racy – representative, participatory and and social movements in advanced indus-
Fermat’s principle; Matrix method in Wave-particle dualitiy; Schroedinger equa- deliberative. trial and developing societies.
paraxial optics-thin lens formula, nodal tion and expectation values; Uncertainty 7. Concept of power, hegemony, ideology 4. Globalisation: Responses from devel-
planes, system of two thin lenses, chro- principle; Solutions of the one-dimensional and legitimacy. oped and developing societies.
matic and spherical aberrations. Schroedinger equation for a free particle 8. Political Ideologies: Liberalism, Social- 5. Approaches to the Study of International
(c) Interference: (Gaussian wave-packet), particle in a box, ism, Marxism, Fascism, Gandhism and Relations: Idealist, Realist, Marxist, Func-
Interference of light-Young’s experiment, particle in a finite well, linear harmonic os- Feminism. tionalist and Systems theory.
Newton’s rings, interference by thin films, cillator; Reflection and transmission by a 9. Indian Political Thought : Dharam- 6. Key concepts in International Relations:
Michelson interferometer; Multiple beam step potential and by a rectangular barrier; shastra, Arthashastra and Buddhist tradi- National interest, Security and power; Bal-
interference and Fabry-Perot interferom- Particle in a three dimensional box, den- tions; Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Sri ance of power and deterrence; Transnational
eter. sity of states, free electron theory of met- Aurobindo, M.K. Gandhi, B.R. Ambedkar, actors and collective security; World capital-
(d) Diffraction: als; Angular momentum; Hydrogen atom; M.N. Roy . ist economy and globalisation.
Fraunhofer diffraction-single slit, double Spin half particles, properties of Pauli spin 10. Western Political Thought: Plato, 7. Changing International Political Order:
slit, diffraction grating, resolving power; Dif- matrices. Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, John (a) Rise of super powers; strategic and
fraction by a circular aperture and the Airy 2. Atomic and Molecular Physics: S. Mill, Marx, Gramsci, Hannah Arendt. ideological Bipolarity, arms race and Cold
pattern; Fresnel diffraction: half-period Stern-Gerlach experiment, electron spin, Indian Government and Politics: War; nuclear threat;
zones and zone plates, circular aperture. fine structure of hydrogen atom; L-S cou- 1. Indian Nationalism: (b) Non-aligned movement: Aims and
(e) Polarization and Modern Optics: pling, J-J coupling; Spectroscopic notation (a) Political Strategies of India’s Freedom achievements;
Production and detection of linearly and of atomic states; Zeeman effect; Frank- Struggle: Constitutionalism to mass (c) Collapse of the Soviet Union; Unipolar-
circularly polarized light; Double refraction, Condon principle and applications; El- Satyagraha, Non-cooperation, Civil Dis- ity and American hegemony; relevance of
quarter wave plate; Optical activity; Prin- ementary theory of rotational, vibratonal obedience; Militant and revolutionary non-alignment in the contemporary world.
ciples of fibre optics, attenuation; Pulse and electronic spectra of diatomic mol- movements, Peasant and workers’ move- 8. Evolution of the International Economic
dispersion in step index and parabolic in- ecules; Raman effect and molecular struc- ments. System: From Brettonwoods to WTO; So-
dex fibres; Material dispersion, single ture; Laser Raman spectroscopy; Impor- cialist economies and the CMEA (Council
(b) Perspectives on Indian National Move-
mode fibres; Lasers-Einstein A and B co- tance of neutral hydrogen atom, molecular for Mutual Economic Assistance); Third
ment: Liberal, Socialist and Marxist; Radi-
efficients; Ruby and He-Ne lasers; Char- hydrogen and molecular hydrogen ion in World demand for new international eco-
cal humanist and Dalit.
acteristics of laser light-spatial and tempo- astronomy; Fluorescence and Phosphores- nomic order; Globalisation of the world
2. Making of the Indian Constitution: Lega-
ral coherence; Focusing of laser beams; cence; Elementary theory and applications economy.
cies of the British rule; different social and
Three-level scheme for laser operation; of NMR and EPR; Elementary ideas about
political perspectives. 9. United Nations: Envisaged role and ac-
Holography and simple applications. Lamb shift and its significance.
3. Salient Features of the Indian Constitu- tual record; specialized UN agencies-aims
3. Electricity and Magnetism: 3. Nuclear and Particle Physics: and functioning; need for UN reforms.
tion: The Preamble, Fundamental Rights
(a) Electrostatics and Magnetostatics: Basic nuclear properties-size, binding en- 10. Regionalisation of World Politics: EU,
and Duties, Directive Principles; Parlia-
Laplace and Poisson equations in electro- ergy, angular momentum, parity, magnetic ASEAN, APEC, SAARC, NAFTA.
mentary System and Amendment Proce-
statics and their applications; Energy of a moment; Semi-empirical mass formula and
dures; Judicial Review and Basic Struc- 11. Contemporary Global Concerns: De-
system of charges, multipole expansion of applications, mass parabolas; Ground
ture doctrine. mocracy, human rights, environment, gen-
scalar potential; Method of images and its state of deuteron, magnetic moment and
4. (a) Principal Organs of the Union Gov- der justice, terrorism, nuclear proliferation.
applications; Potential and field due to a non-central forces; Meson theory of nuclear
ernment: Envisaged role and actual work- India and the World:
dipole, force and torque on a dipole in an forces; Salient features of nuclear forces;
ing of the Executive, Legislature and Su- 1. Indian Foreign Policy: Determinants of
external field; Dielectrics, polarization; So- Shell model of the nucleus - successes and
preme Court. foreign policy; institutions of policy-mak-
lutions to boundary-value problems-con- limitations; Violation of parity in beta de-
cay; Gamma decay and internal conver- (b) Principal Organs of the State Govern- ing; continuity and change.
ducting and dielectric spheres in a uniform ment: Envisaged role and actual working 2. India’s Contribution to the Non-Alignment
electric field; Magnetic shell, uniformly sion; Elementary ideas about Mossbauer
spectroscopy; Q-value of nuclear reactions; of the Executive, Legislature and High Movement: Different phases; current role.
magnetized sphere; Ferromagnetic mate- Courts.
Nuclear fission and fusion, energy produc- 3. India and South Asia:
rials, hysteresis, energy loss. 5. Grassroots Democracy: Panchayati Raj
tion in stars; Nuclear reactors. (a) Regional Co-operation: SAARC – past
(b) Current Electricity: and Municipal Government; significance
Classification of elementary particles and performance and future prospects.
Kirchhoff’s laws and their applications; of 73rd and 74th Amendments; Grassroot
their interactions; Conservation laws; (b) South Asia as a Free Trade Area.
Biot-Savart law, Ampere’s law, Faraday’s movements.
Quark structure of hadrons; Field quanta (c) India’s “Look East” policy.
law, Lenz’ law; Self-and mutual-induc- 6. Statutory Institutions/Commissions:
of electroweak and strong interactions; El- (d) Impediments to regional co-operation:
tances; Mean and r m s values in AC cir- Election Commission, Comptroller and
ementary ideas about unification of forces; river water disputes; illegal cross-border
cuits; DC and AC circuits with R, L and C Auditor General, Finance Commission,
Physics of neutrinos. migration; ethnic conflicts and insurgen-
components; Series and parallel reso- Union Public Service Commission, Na-
nances; Quality factor; Principle of trans- 4. Solid State Physics, Devices and Elec- cies; border disputes.
tronics: tional Commission for Scheduled Castes,
former. 4. India and the Global South: Relations
National Commission for Scheduled
Crystalline and amorphous structure of with Africa and Latin America; leadership
(c) Electromagnetic Waves and Black- Tribes, National Commission for Women;
matter; Different crystal systems, space role in the demand for NIEO and WTO ne-
body Radiation: National Human Rights Commission, Na-
groups; Methods of determination of crys- gotiations.
Displacement current and Maxwell’s equa- tional Commission for Minorities, National
tal structure; X-ray diffraction, scanning and 5. India and the Global Centres of Power:
tions; Wave equations in vacuum, Poynting Backward Classes Commission.
transmission electron microscopies; Band USA, EU, Japan, China and Russia.
theorem; Vector and scalar potentials; Elec- 7. Federalism: Constitutional provisions;
theory of solids - conductors, insulators and 6. India and the UN System: Role in UN
tromagnetic field tensor, covariance of changing nature of centre-state relations;
semiconductors; Thermal properties of sol- Peace-keeping; demand for Permanent
Maxwell’s equations; Wave equations in integrationist tendencies and regional as-
ids, specific heat, Debye theory; Magne- Seat in the Security Council.
isotropic dielectrics, reflection and refrac- pirations; inter-state disputes.
tism: dia, para and ferromagnetism; Ele- 7. India and the Nuclear Question: Chang-
tion at the boundary of two dielectrics; 8. Planning and Economic Development :
ments of superconductivity, Meissner ef- ing perceptions and policy.
Fresnel’s relations; Total internal reflection; Nehruvian and Gandhian perspectives; role
fect, Josephson junctions and applications; 8. Recent developments in Indian Foreign
Normal and anomalous dispersion; of planning and public sector; Green Revo-
Elementary ideas about high temperature policy: India’s position on the recent crisis
Rayleigh scattering; Blackbody radiation lution, land reforms and agrarian relations;
superconductivity. in Afghanistan, Iraq and West Asia, grow-
and Planck’s radiation law, Stefan- liberalilzation and economic reforms.
Boltzmann law, Wien’s displacement law Intrinsic and extrinsic semiconductors; p- ing relations with US and Israel; vision of a
n-p and n-p-n transistors; Amplifiers and 9. Caste, Religion and Ethnicity in Indian
and Rayleigh-Jeans’ law. new world order.
oscillators; Op-amps; FET, JFET and Politics.
4. Thermal and Statistical Physics: 10. Party System: National and regional
PSYCHOLOGY
MOSFET; Digital electronics-Boolean iden-
(a) Thermodynamics: political parties, ideological and social PAPER - I
tities, De Morgan’s laws, logic gates and
Laws of thermodynamics, reversible and truth tables; Simple logic circuits; Ther- bases of parties; patterns of coalition poli- Foundations of Psychology
irreversible processes, entropy; Isothermal, mistors, solar cells; Fundamentals of mi- tics; Pressure groups, trends in electoral 1. Introduction:
adiabatic, isobaric, isochoric processes and croprocessors and digital computers. behaviour; changing socio- economic pro- Definition of Psychology; Historical ante-
entropy changes; Otto and Diesel engines, file of Legislators. cedents of Psychology and trends in the
POLITICAL SCIENCE AND
Gibbs’ phase rule and chemical potential; 11. Social Movements: Civil liberties and 21st century; Psychology and scientific
van der Waals equation of state of a real INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
human rights movements; women’s move- methods; Psychology in relation to other
gas, critical constants; Maxwell-Boltzman PAPER - I
ments; environmentalist movements. social sciences and natural sciences; Ap-
distribution of molecular velocities, trans- Political Theory and Indian Politics: plication of Psychology to societal prob-
PAPER – II
port phenomena, equipartition and virial 1. Political Theory: meaning and ap- lems.
Comparative Politics and International
theorems; Dulong-Petit, Einstein, and proaches. 2. Methods of Psychology:
Relations
Debye’s theories of specific heat of solids; 2. Theories of the State: Liberal, Neo- Types of research: Descriptive, evaluative,
Comparative Political Analysis and In-
Maxwell relations and applications; liberal, Marxist, Pluralist, Post-colonial and diagnostic and prognostic; Methods of
ternational Politics:
Clausius- Clapeyron equation; Adiabatic feminist. Research: Survey, observation, case-study
1. Comparative Politics: Nature and major
demagnetisation, Joule-Kelvin effect and 3. Justice: Conceptions of justice with spe- and experiments; Characteristics of experi-
approaches; political economy and politi-
liquefaction of gases. cial reference to Rawl’s theory of justice mental design and non-experimental de-
cal sociology perspectives; limitations of
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 59
sign, Quasi-experimental designs; Fo- proaches like big 5 factor theory; The no- lenged persons including old persons, Human Relations School (Elton Mayo and
cussed group discussions, brain storming, tion of self in different traditions. Rehabilitation of persons suffering from others); Functions of the Executive (C.I.
grounded theory approach. 12. Attitudes, Values and Interests: substance abuse, juvenile delinquency, Barnard); Simon’s decision-making theory;
3. Research Methods: Definition of attitudes, values and interests; criminal behaviour; Rehabilitation of vic- Participative Management (R. Likert, C.
Major steps in Psychological research Components of attitudes; Formation and tims of violence, Rehabilitation of HIV/AIDS Argyris, D. McGregor).
(problem statement, hypothesis formula- maintenance of attitudes; Measurement of victims, the role of social agencies. 3. Administrative Behaviour:
tion, research designs, sampling, tools of attitudes, values and interests; Theories of 8. Application of Psychology to disadvan- Process and techniques of decision-mak-
data collection, analysis and interpretation attitude change; Strategies for fostering taged groups: ing; Communication; Morale; Motivation
and report writing) Fundamental versus values; Formation of stereotypes and preju- The concepts of disadvantaged, depriva- Theories – content, process and contem-
applied research; Methods of data collec- dices; Changing others behaviour; Theo- tion; Social, physical, cultural and economic porary; Theories of Leadership: Traditional
tion (interview, observation, question- ries of attribution; Recent trends. consequences of disadvantaged and de- and Modern.
naire); Research designs (ex-post facto 13. Language and Communication: prived groups; Educating and motivating the 4. Organisations:
and experimental); Application of statisti- Human language - Properties, structure disadvantaged towards development; Rela- Theories – systems, contingency; Structure
cal technique (t - test, two way ANOVA cor- and linguistic hierarchy, Language acqui- tive and prolonged deprivation. and forms: Ministries and Departments,
relation, regression and factor analysis); sition-predisposition, critical period hypoth- 9. Psychological problems of social inte- Corporations, Companies, Boards and
Item response theory. esis; Theories of language development - gration: Commissions; Ad hoc and advisory bod-
4. Development of Human Behaviour: Skinner and Chomsky; Process and types The concept of social integration; The prob- ies; Headquarters and Field relationships;
Growth and development; Principles of of communication - effective communica- lem of caste, class, religion and language Regulatory Authorities; Public - Private
development, Role of genetic and environ- tion training. conflicts and prejudice; Nature and mani- Partnerships.
mental factors in determining human 14. Issues and Perspectives in Modern festation of prejudice between the in-group 5. Accountability and control:
behaviour; Influence of cultural factors in Contemporary Psychology: and out-group; Causal factors of social Concepts of accountability and control;
socialization; Life span development - Computer application in the psychological conflicts and prejudices; Psychological Legislative, Executive and Judicial control
Characteristics, development tasks, pro- laboratory and psychological testing; Arti- strategies for handling the conflicts and over administration; Citizen and Adminis-
moting psychological well-being across ficial intelligence; Psychocybernetics; prejudices; Measures to achieve social in- tration; Role of media, interest groups, vol-
major stages of the life span. Study of consciousness-sleep-wake tegration. untary organizations; Civil society;
5. Sensation, Attention and Perception: schedules; dreams, stimulus deprivation, 10. Application of Psychology in Infor- Citizen’s Charters; Right to Information;
Sensation: concepts of threshold, absolute meditation, hypnotic/drug induced states; mation Technology and Mass Media: Social audit.
and difference thresholds, signal-detection Extrasensory perception; Intersensory per- The present scenario of information tech- 6. Administrative Law:
and vigilance; Factors influencing atten- ception Simulation studies. nology and the mass media boom and the Meaning, scope and significance; Dicey
tion including set and characteristics of PAPER - II role of psychologists; Selection and train- on Administrative law; Delegated legisla-
stimulus; Definition and concept of percep- Psychology: Issues and Applications ing of psychology professionals to work in tion; Administrative Tribunals.
tion, biological factors in perception; Per- 1. Psychological Measurement of Indi- the field of IT and mass media; Distance 7. Comparative Public Administration:
ceptual organization-influence of past ex- vidual Differences: learning through IT and mass media; En- Historical and sociological factors affect-
periences, perceptual defence-factors in- The nature of individual differences; Char- trepreneurship through e-commerce; Mul- ing administrative systems; Administration
fluencing space and depth perception, size acteristics and construction of standardized tilevel marketing; Impact of TV and foster- and politics in different countries; Current
estimation and perceptual readiness; The psychological tests; Types of psychologi- ing value through IT and mass media; Psy- status of Comparative Public Administra-
plasticity of perception; Extrasensory per- cal tests; Use, misuse and limitation of psy- chological consequences of recent devel- tion; Ecology and administration; Riggsian
ception; Culture and perception, Sublimi- chological tests; hical issues in the use of opments in Information Technology. models and their critique.
nal perception. psychological tests. 11. Psychology and Economic develop- 8. Development Dynamics:
6. Learning: 2. Psychological well being and Mental ment: Concept of development; Changing pro-
Concept and theories of learning (Behavi- Disorders: Achievement motivation and economic file of development administration; ‘Anti-
ourists, Gestaltalist and Information pro- Concept of health-ill health; Positive health, development; Characteristics of entrepre- development thesis’; Bureaucracy and
cessing models); The Processes of extinc- well being; Causal factors in mental disor- neurial behaviour; Motivating and training development; Strong state versus the mar-
tion, discrimination and generalization; ders (Anxiety disorders, mood disorders, people for entrepreneurship and economic ket debate; Impact of liberalisation on ad-
Programmed learning, probability learning, schizophrenia and delusional disorders; development; Consumer rights and con- ministration in developing countries;
self-instructional learning, concepts; Types personality disorders, substance abuse sumer awareness, Government policies for Women and development - the self-help
and the schedules of reinforcement, es- disorders); Factors influencing positive promotion of entrepreneurship among group movement.
cape, avoidance and punishment, model- health, well being, life style and quality of youth including women entrepreneurs. 9. Personnel Administration:
ing and social learning. life; Happiness disposition. 12. Application of psychology to environ- Importance of human resource develop-
7. Memory: 3. Therapeutic Approaches: ment and related fields: ment; Recruitment, training, career ad-
Encoding and remembering; Short term Psychodynamic therapies; Behaviour Environmental psychology-effects of noise, vancement, position classification, disci-
memory, Long term memory, Sensory therapies; Client centered therapy; Cogni- pollution and crowding; Population psy- pline, performance appraisal, promotion,
memory, Iconic memory, Echoic memory: tive therapies; Indigenous therapies (Yoga, chology: psychological consequences of pay and service conditions; employer-em-
The Multistore model, levels of process- Meditation); Bio-feedback therapy; Preven- population explosion and high population ployee relations, grievance redressal
ing; Organization and Mnemonic tech- tion and rehabilitation of the mentally ill; density; Motivating for small family norm; mechanism; Code of conduct; Administra-
niques to improve memory; Theories of for- Fostering mental health. Impact of rapid scientific and technologi- tive ethics.
getting: decay, interference and retrieval 4. Work Psychology and Organisational cal growth on degradation of environment. 10. Public Policy:
failure: Metamemory; Amnesia: Antero- Behaviour: 13. Application of psychology in other Models of policy-making and their critique;
grade and retrograde. Personnel selection and training; Use of fields: Processes of conceptualisation, planning,
8. Thinking and Problem Solving: psychological tests in the industry; Train- (a) Military Psychology implementation, monitoring, evaluation
Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; ing and human resource development; Devising psychological tests for defence and review and their limitations; State theo-
Concept formation processes; Information Theories of work motivation – Herzberg, personnel for use in selection, Training, ries and public policy formulation.
processing, Reasoning and problem solv- Maslow, Adam Equity theory, Porter and counseling; training psychologists to work 11. Techniques of Administrative Im-
ing, Facilitating and hindering factors in Lawler, Vroom; Leadership and participa- with defence personnel in promoting posi- provement:
problem solving, Methods of problem solv- tory management; Advertising and mar- tive health; Human engineering in defence. Organisation and methods, Work study and
ing: Creative thinking and fostering creativ- keting; Stress and its management; Ergo- (b) Sports Psychology work management; e-governance and in-
ity; Factors influencing decision making and nomics; consumer psychology; Manage- Psychological interventions in improving formation technology; Management aid
judgment; Recent trends. rial effectiveness; Transformational lead- performance of athletes and sports. Per- tools like network analysis, MIS, PERT, CPM.
9. Motivation and Emotion: ership; Sensitivity training; Power and poli- sons participating in Individual and Team 12. Financial Administration:
Psychological and physiological basis of tics in organizations. Games. Monetary and fiscal policies; Public bor-
motivation and emotion; Measurement of 5. Application of Psychology to Educa- (c) Media influences on pro and antisocial rowings and public debt Budgets - types
motivation and emotion; Effects of motiva- tional Field: behaviour. and forms; Budgetary process; Financial
tion and emotion on behaviour; Extrinsic Psychological principles underlying effec- (d) Psychology of terrorism. accountability; Accounts and audit.
and intrinsic motivation; Factors influenc- tive teaching-learning process; Learning 14. Psychology of Gender: PAPER - II
ing intrinsic motivation; Emotional compe- styles; Gifted, retarded, learning disabled Issues of discrimination, Management of Indian Administration
tence and the related issues. and their training; Training for improving diversity; Glass ceiling effect, Self fulfilling 1. Evolution of Indian Administration:
10. Intelligence and Aptitude: memory and better academic achievement; prophesy, Women and Indian society. Kautilya’s Arthashastra; Mughal adminis-
Concept of intelligence and aptitude, Na- Personality development and value edu- PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION tration; Legacy of British rule in politics and
ture and theories of intelligence - cation, Educational, vocational guidance PAPER – I administration - Indianization of public ser-
Spearman, Thurstone, Gullford Vernon, and career counseling; Use of psychologi- Administrative Theory vices, revenue administration, district ad-
Sternberg and J.P; Das; Emotional Intelli- cal tests in educational institutions; Effec- 1. Introduction: ministration, local self-government.
gence, Social intelligence, measurement tive strategies in guidance programmes. Meaning, scope and significance of Public 2. Philosophical and Constitutional frame-
of intelligence and aptitudes, concept of 6. Community Psychology: Administration; Wilson’s vision of Public work of government:
IQ, deviation IQ, constancy of IQ; Measure- Definition and concept of community psy- Administration; Evolution of the discipline Salient features and value premises; Con-
ment of multiple intelligence; Fluid intelli- chology; Use of small groups in social ac- and its present status; New Public Admin- stitutionalism; Political culture; Bureau-
gence and crystallized intelligence. tion; Arousing community consciousness istration; Public Choice approach; Chal- cracy and democracy; Bureaucracy and
11. Personality: and action for handling social problems; lenges of liberalization, Privatisation, development.
Definition and concept of personality; Theo- Group decision making and leadership for Globalisation; Good Governance: concept 3. Public Sector Undertakings:
ries of personality (psychoanalytical, socio- social change; Effective strategies for so- and application; New Public Management. Public sector in modern India; Forms of
cultural, interpersonal, developmental, cial change. 2. Administrative Thought: Public Sector Undertakings; Problems of
humanistic, behaviouristic, trait and type 7. Rehabilitation Psychology: Scientific Management and Scientific Man- autonomy, accountability and control; Im-
approaches); Measurement of personality Primary, secondary and tertiary prevention agement movement; Classical Theory; pact of liberalization and privatization.
(projective tests, pencil-paper test); The programmes-role of psychologists; Weber’s bureaucratic model – its critique 4. Union Government and Administra-
Indian approach to personality; Training Organising of services for rehabilitation of and post-Weberian Developments; Dy- tion:
for personality development; Latest ap- physically, mentally and socially chal- namic Administration (Mary Parker Follett); Executive, Parliament, Judiciary - structure,
60 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
functions, work processes; Recent trends; (a) Qualitative and quantitative methods. (b) Features of caste system. expectation, convergence of a sequence
Intragovernmental relations; Cabinet Sec- (b) Techniques of data collection. (c) Untouchability - forms and perspec- of random variable in distribution, in prob-
retariat; Prime Minister’s Office; Central (c) Variables, sampling, hypothesis, reli- tives. ability, in p-th mean and almost every-
Secretariat; Ministries and Departments; ability and validity. (iii) Tribal communities in India: where, their criteria and inter-relations,
Boards; Commissions; Attached offices; 4. Sociological Thinkers: (a) Definitional problems. Chebyshev’s inequality and Khintchine‘s
Field organizations. (a) Karl Marx- Historical materialism, (b) Geographical spread. weak law of large numbers, strong law of
5. Plans and Priorities: mode of production, alienation, class (c) Colonial policies and tribes. large numbers and Kolmogoroff’s theo-
Machinery of planning; Role, composition struggle. (d) Issues of integration and autonomy. rems, probability generating function, mo-
and functions of the Planning Commission (b) Emile Durkheim- Division of labour, so- (iv) Social Classes in India: ment generating function, characteristic
and the National Development Council; cial fact, suicide, religion and society. (a) Agrarian class structure. function, inversion theorem, Linderberg
‘Indicative’ planning; Process of plan for- (c) Max Weber- Social action, ideal types, (b) Industrial class structure. and Levy forms of central limit theorem,
mulation at Union and State levels; Con- authority, bureaucracy, protestant (c) Middle classes in India. standard discrete and continuous probabil-
stitutional Amendments (1992) and decen- ethic and the spirit of capitalism. (v) Systems of Kinship in India: ity distributions.
tralized planning for economic develop- (d) Talcolt Parsons- Social system, pat- (a) Lineage and descent in India. 2. Statistical Inference:
ment and social justice. tern variables. (b) Types of kinship systems. Consistency, unbiasedness, efficiency,
6. State Government and Administration: (e) Robert K. Merton- Latent and mani- (c) Family and marriage in India. sufficiency, completeness, ancillary statis-
Union-State administrative, legislative and fest functions, conformity and devi- (d) Household dimensions of the family. tics, factorization theorem, exponential
financial relations; Role of the Finance ance, reference groups. (e) Patriarchy, entitlements and sexual family of distribution and its properties,
Commission; Governor; Chief Minister; (f) Mead - Self and identity. division of labour. uniformly minimum variance unbiased
Council of Ministers; Chief Secretary; State 5. Stratification and Mobility: (vi) Religion and Society: (UMVU) estimation, Rao-Blackwell and
Secretariat; Directorates. (a) Concepts- equality, inequality, hierar- (a) Religious communities in India. Lehmann-Scheffe theorems, Cramer-Rao
7. District Administration since Indepen- chy, exclusion, poverty and deprivation. (b) Problems of religious minorities. inequality for single parameter. Estimation
dence: (b) Theories of social stratification- Struc- C. Social Changes in India: by methods of moments, maximum likeli-
Changing role of the Collector; Union- tural functionalist theory, Marxist (i) Visions of Social Change in India: hood, least squares, minimum chi-square
state-local relations; Imperatives of de- theory, Weberian theory. (a) Idea of development planning and and modified minimum chi-square, prop-
velopment management and law and or- (c) Dimensions – Social stratification of mixed economy. erties of maximum likelihood and other
der administration; District administration class, status groups, gender, ethnicity (b) Constitution, law and social change. estimators, asymptotic efficiency, prior and
and democratic decentralization. and race. (c) Education and social change. posterior distributions, loss function, risk
8. Civil Services: (d) Social mobility- open and closed sys- (ii) Rural and Agrarian transformation function, and minimax estimator. Bayes
Constitutional position; Structure, recruit- tems, types of mobility, sources and in India: estimators.
ment, training and capacity-building; Good causes of mobility. (a) Programmes of rural development, Non-randomised and randomised tests,
governance initiatives; Code of conduct and 6. Works and Economic Life: Community Development Progra- critical function, MP tests, Neyman-Pearson
discipline; Staff associations; Political rights; (a) Social organization of work in different mme, cooperatives, poverty alleviation lemma, UMP tests, monotone likelihood ra-
Grievance redressal mechanism; Civil ser- types of society- slave society, feudal schemes. tio, similar and unbiased tests, UMPU tests
vice neutrality; Civil service activism. society, industrial /capitalist society. (b) Green revolution and social change. for single parameter likelihood ratio test
9. Financial Management: (b) Formal and informal organization of (c) Changing modes of production in In- and its asymptotic distribution. Confidence
Budget as a political instrument; Parlia- work. dian agriculture . bounds and its relation with tests.
mentary control of public expenditure; Role (c) Labour and society. (d) Problems of rural labour, bondage, Kolmogoroff’s test for goodness of fit and
of finance ministry in monetary and fiscal 7. Politics and Society: migration. its consistency, sign test and its optimality.
area; Accounting techniques; Audit; Role (a) Sociological theories of power. (iii) Industrialization and Urbanisation in Wilcoxon signed-ranks test and its consis-
of Controller General of Accounts and (b) Power elite, bureaucracy, pressure India: tency, Kolmogorov-Smirnov two-sample
Comptroller and Auditor General of India. groups, and political parties. (a) Evolution of modern industry in India. test, run test, Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test
10. Administrative Reforms since Inde- (c) Nation, state, citizenship, democracy, (b) Growth of urban settlements in India. and median test, their consistency and as-
pendence: civil society, ideology. (c) Working class: structure, growth, class ymptotic normality.
Major concerns; Important Committees and (d) Protest, agitation, social movements, mobilization. Wald’s SPRT and its properties, OC and
Commissions; Reforms in financial man- collective action, revolution. (d) Informal sector, child labour. ASN functions for tests regarding param-
agement and human resource develop- 8. Religion and Society: (e) Slums and deprivation in urban areas. eters for Bernoulli, Poisson, normal and
ment; Problems of implementation. (a) Sociological theories of religion. (iv) Politics and Society: exponential distributions. Wald’s funda-
11. Rural Development: (b) Types of religious practices: animism, (a) Nation, democracy and citizenship. mental identity.
Institutions and agencies since indepen- monism, pluralism, sects, cults. (b) Political parties, pressure groups , so- 3. Linear Inference and Multivariate
dence; Rural development programmes: (c) Religion in modern society: religion cial and political elite. Analysis:
foci and strategies; Decentralization and and science, secularization, religious (c) Regionalism and decentralization of Linear statistical models’, theory of least
Panchayati Raj; 73rd Constitutional revivalism, fundamentalism. power. squares and analysis of variance, Gauss-
amendment. 9. Systems of Kinship: (d) Secularization Markoff theory, normal equations, least
12. Urban Local Government: (a) Family, household, marriage. (v) Social Movements in Modern India: squares estimates and their precision, test
Municipal governance: main features, (b) Types and forms of family. (a) Peasants and farmers movements. of significance and interval estimates
structures, finance and problem areas; (c) Lineage and descent. (b) Women’s movement. based on least squares theory in one-way,
74th Constitutional Amendment; Global- (d) Patriarchy and sexual division of (c) Backward classes & Dalit movement. two-way and three-way classified data, re-
local debate; New localism; Development labour. (d) Environmental movements. gression analysis, linear regression, cur-
dynamics, politics and administration with (e) Contemporary trends. (e) Ethnicity and Identity movements. vilinear regression and orthogonal poly-
special reference to city management. 10. Social Change in Modern Society: (vi) Population Dynamics: nomials, multiple regression, multiple and
13. Law and Order Administration: (a) Sociological theories of social change. (a) Population size, growth, composition partial correlations, estimation of variance
British legacy; National Police Commission; (b) Development and dependency. and distribution. and covariance components, multivariate
Investigative agencies; Role of central and (c) Agents of social change. (b) Components of population growth: normal distribution, Mahalanobis-D2 and
state agencies including paramilitary forces (d) Education and social change. birth, death, migration. Hotelling’s T2 statistics and their applica-
in maintenance of law and order and coun- (e) Science, technology and social (c) Population policy and family planning. tions and properties, discriminant analy-
tering insurgency and terrorism; Criminali- change. (d) Emerging issues: ageing, sex ratios, sis, canonical correlations, principal com-
sation of politics and administration; Po- PAPER - II child and infant mortality, reproductive ponent analysis.
lice-public relations; Reforms in Police. INDIAN SOCIETY : STRUCTURE health. 4. Sampling Theory and Design of Ex-
14. Significant issues in Indian Adminis- AND CHANGE (vii) Challenges of Social Transforma- periments:
tration: A. Introducing Indian Society: tion: An outline of fixed-population and super-
Values in public service; Regulatory Com- (i) Perspectives on the study of Indian (a) Crisis of development: displacement, population approaches, distinctive features
missions; National Human Rights Commis- society: environmental problems and sustain- of finite population sampling, probability
sion; Problems of administration in coali- (a) Indology (GS. Ghurye). ability. sampling designs, simple random sampling
tion regimes; Citizen-administration inter- (b) Structural functionalism (M N Srinivas). (b) Poverty, deprivation and inequalities. with and without replacement, stratified
face; Corruption and administration; Disas- (c) Marxist sociology (A R Desai). (c) Violence against women. random sampling, systematic sampling
ter management. (ii) Impact of colonial rule on Indian so- (d) Caste conflicts. and its efficacy , cluster sampling, two-
SOCIOLOGY ciety : (e) Ethnic conflicts, communalism, reli- stage and multi-stage sampling, ratio and
PAPER - I (a) Social background of Indian national- gious revivalism. regression methods of estimation involv-
FUNDAMENTALS OF SOCIOLOGY ism. (f) Illiteracy and disparities in education. ing one or more auxiliary variables, two-
1. Sociology - The Discipline: (b) Modernization of Indian tradition. STATISTICS phase sampling, probability proportional
(a) Modernity and social changes in Eu- (c) Protests and movements during the PAPER - I to size sampling with and without replace-
rope and emergence of sociology. colonial period. 1. Probability: ment, the Hansen-Hurwitz and the Horvitz-
(b) Scope of the subject and comparison (d) Social reforms. Sample space and events, probability Thompson estimators, non-negative vari-
with other social sciences. B. Social Structure: measure and probability space, random ance estimation with reference to the
(c) Sociology and common sense. (i) Rural and Agrarian Social Structure: variable as a measurable function, distri- Horvitz-Thompson estimator, non-sam-
2. Sociology as Science: (a) The idea of Indian village and village bution function of a random variable, dis- pling errors.
(a) Science, scientific method and critique. studies. crete and continuous-type random vari- Fixed effects model (two-way classification)
(b) Major theoretical strands of research (b) Agrarian social structure - evolution of able, probability mass function, probability random and mixed effects models (two-way
methodology. land tenure system, land reforms. density function, vector-valued random classification with equal observation per
(c) Positivism and its critique. (ii) Caste System: variable, marginal and conditional distri- cell), CRD, RBD, LSD and their analyses,
(d) Fact value and objectivity. (a) Perspectives on the study of caste sys- butions, stochastic independence of events incomplete block designs, concepts of or-
(e) Non- positivist methodologies. tems: GS Ghurye, M N Srinivas, Louis and of random variables, expectation and thogonality and balance, BIBD, missing plot
3. Research Methods and Analysis: Dumont, Andre Beteille. moments of a random variable, conditional technique, factorial experiments and 2n
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 61
and 32, confounding in factorial experi- tion, NSS other surveys, their limitations and 2. Ecology: (d) Mutations and mutagenesis.
ments, split-plot and simple lattice designs, uses, definition, construction and uses of (a) Biosphere: Concept of biosphere; (e) Recombinant DNA technology; plas-
transformation of data Duncan’s multiple vital rates and ratios, measures of fertility, biomes, Biogeochemical cycles, Hu- mid, cosmid, artificial chromosomes as
range test. reproduction rates, morbidity rate, standard- man induced changes in atmosphere vectors, transgenic, DNA cloning and
PAPER - II ized death rate, complete and abridged life including green house effect, ecologi- whole animal cloning (principles and
1. Industrial Statistics: tables, construction of life tables from vital cal succession, biomes and ecotones, methods).
Process and product control, general statistics and census returns, uses of life community ecology. (f) Gene regulation and expression in
theory of control charts, different types of tables, logistic and other population growth (b) Concept of ecosystem; structure and prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
control charts for variables and attributes, curves, fitting a logistic curve, population function of ecosystem, types of eco- (g) Signal molecules, cell death, defects
X, R, s, p, np and c charts, cumulative sum projection, stable population, quasi-stable system, ecological succession, eco- in signaling pathway and conse-
chart. Single, double, multiple and sequen- population, techniques in estimation of de- logical adaptation. quences.
tial sampling plans for attributes, OC, ASN, mographic parameters, standard classifica- (c) Population; characteristics, population (h) RFLP, RAPD and AFLP and applica-
AOQ and ATI curves, concepts of tion by cause of death, health surveys and dynamics, population stabilization. tion of RFLP in DNA finger printing,
producer’s and consumer’s risks, AQL, use of hospital statistics. (d) Biodiversity and diversity conservation ribozyme technologies, human ge-
LTPD and AOQL, Sampling plans for vari- Methods of standardisation of scales and of natural resources. nome project, genomics and
ables, Use of Dodge-Roming tables. tests, Z-scores, standard scores, T-scores, (e) Wildlife of India. protomics.
Concept of reliability, failure rate and reli- percentile scores, intelligence quotient and (f) Remote sensing for sustainable de- 3. Evolution:
(a) Theories of origin of life.
ability functions, reliability of series and its measurement and uses, validity and velopment.
(b) Theories of evolution; Natural selec-
parallel systems and other simple configu- reliability of test scores and its determina- (g) Environmental biodegradation, pollu-
tion, role of mutations in evolution, evo-
rations, renewal density and renewal func- tion, use of factor analysis and path analy- tion and its impact on biosphere and
lutionary patterns, molecular drive,
tion, Failure models: exponential, Weibull, sis in psychometry. its prevention.
mimicry, variation, isolation and spe-
normal, lognormal. ZOOLOGY 3. Ethology:
ciation.
Problems in life testing, censored and trun- PAPER – I (a) Behaviour: Sensory filtering, (c) Evolution of horse, elephant and man
cated experiments for exponential models. 1. Non-chordata and Chordata: reponsive-ness, sign stimuli, learning using fossil data.
2. Optimization Techniques: (a) Classification and relationship of vari- and memory, instinct, habituation, (d) Hardy-Weinberg Law.
Different types of models in Operations Re- ous phyla up to subclasses: Acoelo- conditioning, imprinting. (e) Continental drift and distribution of ani-
search, their construction and general meth- mate and Coelomate, Protostomes (b) Role of hormones in drive; role of mals.
ods of solution, simulation and Monte-Carlo and Deuterostomes, Bilateria and Ra- pheromones in alarm spreading; 4. Systematics:
methods formulation of linear programming diata; Status of Protista, Parazoa, crypsis, predator detection, predator Zoological nomenclature, international
(LP) problem, simple LP model and its Onychophora and Hemichordata; tactics, social hierarchies in primates, code, cladistics, molecular taxonomy and
graphical solution, the simplex procedure, Symmetry. social organization in insects. biodiversity.
the two-phase method and the M-technique (b) Protozoa: Locomotion, nutrition, repro- (c) Orientation, navigation, homing, bio- 5. Biochemistry:
with artificial variables, the duality theory of duction, sex; General features and life logical rhythms, biological clock, tidal, (a) Structure and role of carbohydrates,
LP and its economic interpretation, sensi- history of Paramaecium, Monocystis, seasonal and circadian rhythms. fats, fatty acids and cholesterol, pro-
tivity analysis, transportation and assign- Plasmodium and Leishmania. (d) Methods of studying animal behaviour teins and amino-acids, nucleic acids.
ment problems, rectangular games, two- (c) Porifera: Skeleton, canal system and including sexual conflict, selfishness, Bioenergetics.
person zero-sum games, methods of solu- reproduction. kinship and altruism. b) Glycolysis and Kreb cycle, oxidation
tion (graphical and algebraic). (d) Cnidaria: Polymorphism, defensive 4. Economic Zoology: and reduction, oxidative phosphory-
Replacement of failing or deteriorating structures and their mechanism; coral (a) Apiculture, sericulture, lac culture, carp lation, energy conservation and re-
items, group and individual replacement reefs and their formation; metagen- culture, pearl culture, prawn culture, lease, ATP cycle, cyclic AMP – its struc-
policies, concept of scientific inventory esis; general features and life history vermiculture. ture and role.
management and analytical structure of (b) Major infectious and communicable (c) Hormone classification (steroid and
of Obelia and Aurelia.
inventory problems, simple models with diseases (malaria, filaria, tuberculo- peptide hormones), biosynthesis and
(e) Platyhelminthes: Parasitic adaptation;
deterministic and stochastic demand with sis, cholera and AIDS) their vectors, functions.
general features and life history of
(d) Enzymes: types and mechanisms of
and without lead time, storage models with Fasciola and Taenia and their patho- pathogens and prevention.
action.
particular reference to dam type. genic symptoms. (c) Cattle and livestock diseases, their
(e) Vitamins and co-enzymes
Homogeneous discrete-time Markov (f) Nemathelminthes: General features, pathogen (helminthes) and vectors
(f) Immunoglobulin and immunity.
chains, transition probability matrix, clas- life history, parasitic adaptation of As- (ticks, mites, Tabanus, Stomoxys).
6. Physiology (with special reference to
sification of states and ergodic theorems, caris and Wuchereria. (d) Pests of sugar cane (Pyrilla mammals):
homogeneous continuous-time Markov (g) Annelida: Coelom and metamerism; perpusiella) oil seed (Achaea janata) (a) Composition and constituents of
chains, Poisson process, elements of queu- modes of life in polychaetes; general and rice (Sitophilus oryzae). blood; blood groups and Rh factor in
ing theory, M/M/1, M/M/K, G/M/1 and M/G/1 features and life history of Nereis, (e) Transgenic animals. man, factors and mechanism of coagu-
queues. earthworm and leach. (f) Medical biotechnology, human ge- lation, iron metabolism, acid-base bal-
Solution of statistical problems on comput- (h) Arthropoda: Larval forms and parasit- netic disease and genetic counselling, ance, thermo-regulation, anticoagu-
ers using well-known statistical software ism in Crustacea; vision and respira- gene therapy. lants.
packages like SPSS. tion in arthropods (Prawn, cockroach (g) Forensic biotechnology. (b) Haemoglobin: Composition, types
3. Quantitative Economics and Official and scorpion); modification of mouth 5. Biostatistics: and role in transport of oxygen and
Statistics: parts in insects (cockroach, mosquito, Designing of experiments; null hypothesis; carbon dioxide.
Determination of trend, seasonal and cy- housefly, honey bee and butterfly); correlation, regression, distribution and (c) Digestion and absorption: Role of sali-
clical components, Box-Jenkins method, metamorphosis in insect and its hor- measure of central tendency, chi square, vary glands, liver, pancreas and in-
tests for stationary series, ARIMA models monal regulation, social behaviour of student-test, F-test (one-way & two-way F- testinal glands.
and determination of orders of Apis and termites. test). (d) Excretion: nephron and regulation of
autoregressive and moving average com- (i) Mollusca: Feeding, respiration, loco- 6. Instrumentation Methods: urine formation; osmo-regulation and
ponents, forecasting. motion, general features and life his- (a) Spectrophotometer, phase contrast excretory product
Commonly used index numbers- tory of Lamellidens, Pila and Sepia, and fluorescence microscopy, radio- (e) Muscles: Types, mechanism of con-
Laspeyre’s, Paasche’s and Fisher’s ideal torsion and detorsion in gastropods. active tracer, ultra centrifuge, gel elec- traction of skeletal muscles, effects of
index numbers, chain-base index number, (j) Echinodermata: Feeding, respiration, trophoresis, PCR, ELISA, FISH and exercise on muscles.
uses and limitations of index numbers, in- locomotion, larval forms, general fea- chromosome painting. (f) Neuron: nerve impulse – its conduc-
dex number of wholesale prices, consumer (b) Electron microscopy (TEM, SEM). tion and synaptic transmission, neu-
tures and life history of Asterias.
prices, agricultural production and indus- PAPER - II rotransmitters.
(k) Protochordata: Origin of chordates;
trial production, test for index numbers - 1. Cell Biology: (g) Vision, hearing and olfaction in man.
general features and life history of
(h) Physiology of reproduction, puberty
proportionality, time-reversal, factor-rever- Branchiostoma and Herdmania. (a) Structure and function of cell and its
and menopause in human.
sal and circular . (l) Pisces: Respiration, locomotion and organelles (nucleus, plasma mem-
7. Developmental Biology:
General linear model, ordinary least migration. brane, mitochondria, Golgi bodies, en-
(a) Gametogenesis; spermatogenesis,
square and generalized least squares (m) Amphibia: Origin of tetrapods, paren- doplasmic reticulum, ribosomes, and
composition of semen, in vitro and in
methods of estimation, problem of tal care, paedomorphosis. lysosomes), cell division (mitosis and vivo capacitation of mammalian sperm,
multicollinearity, consequences and solu- (n) Reptilia: Origin of reptiles, skull types, meiosis), mitotic spindle and mitotic ap- Oogenesis, totipotency; fertilization,
tions of multicollinearity, autocorrelation status of Sphenodon and crocodiles. paratus, chromosome movements, morphogenesis and morphogen, blas-
and its consequences, heteroscedasticity (o) Aves: Origin of birds, flight adapta- chromosome type polytene and togenesis, establishment of body axes
of disturbances and its testing, test for in- tion, migration. lambrush, organization of chromatin, formation, fate map, gestulation in frog
dependence of disturbances, concept of (p) Mammalia: Origin of mammals, denti- heterochromatin, Cell cycle regulation. and chick; genes in development in
structure and model for simultaneous tion, general features of egg laying (b) Nucleic acid topology, DNA motif, DNA chick, homeotic genes, development of
equations, problem of identification-rank mammals, pouched-mammals, replication, transcription, RNA pro- eye and heart, placenta in mammals.
and order conditions of identifiability, two- aquatic mammals and primates, en- cessing, translation, protein foldings (b) Cell lineage, cell-to cell interaction,
stage least square method of estimation. docrine glands (pituitary, thyroid, par- and transport. Genetic and induced teratogenesis,
Present official statistical system in India athyroid, adrenal, pancreas, gonads) 2. Genetics: role of thyroxine in control of metamor-
relating to population, agriculture, indus- and their interrelationships. (a) Modern concept of gene, split gene, phosis in amphibia, paedogenesis
trial production, trade and prices, methods (q) Comparative functional anatomy of genetic regulation, genetic code. and neoteny, cell death, aging.
of collection of official statistics, their reli- various systems of vertebrates (integu- (b) Sex chromosomes and their evolution, (c) Developmental genes in man, in vitro
ability and limitations, principal publications ment and its derivatives, endoskeleton, sex determination in Drosophila and fertilization and embryo transfer, clon-
containing such statistics, various official locomotory organs, digestive system, man. ing.
agencies responsible for data collection respiratory system, circulatory system (c) Mendel’s laws of inheritance, recom- (d) Stem cells: Sources, types and their
and their main functions. including heart and aortic arches, bination, linkage, multiple alleles, ge- use in human welfare.
4. Demography and Psychometry: urino-genital system, brain and sense netics of blood groups, pedigree (e) Biogenetic law.
Demographic data from census, registra- organs (eye and ear). analysis, hereditary diseases in man.
62 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011

APPENDIX-II (A)
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CANDIDATES FOR FILLING ONLINE APPLICATIONS

Candidates may apply Online using the website http://www.upsconline.nic.in/ are exempted from payment of fee) either by remitting the money in any branch
Salient features of the system of Online Application Form are given hereunder : of SBI by cash, or by using net banking facility of SBI or by using any Visa/
o Detailed instructions for filling up online applications are available on the Master Credit/Debit Card.
above mentioned website. o Before starting filling up of online application, a candidate must have his
o Candidates will be required to complete the Online Application Form photograph and signature duly scanned in the .png or .jpg format in such a
containing two stages viz. Part-I and Part-II as per the instructions available manner that each file size should not exceed 40KB each.
in the above mentioned site through drop down menus. o The Online applications (Part I and II) can be filled from 19th February 2011 to
o The candidates applying Online are required to pay a reduced fee of 21st March, 2011 till 11.59 p.m. after which link will be disabled.
Rs. 50/- (Rupees Fifty only) (excepting Female/SC/ST/PH candidates who o Candidates wanting to apply online are strongly advised to do so well in
time without waiting for last date for submission of online application.

APPENDIX – II (B)
General Instructions: Column 4: Gender
1. Candidates must use only the new Common Application Form (Form-E) for Darken appropriate circle applicable in your case.
UPSC examinations (cost Rs. 30/-) based on OMR entries supplied with the Column 5: Nationality
information Brochure purchased from any of the designated Head Post Offices/ Darken appropriate circle applicable in your case.
Post Offices listed in Appendix III. They should in no case use photocopy/ Column 6: Marital Status
reproduction/ unauthorised printed copy of the Form. The form will NOT be Darken appropriate circle applicable in your case.
supplied by the Commission’s office. Column 7: Central Recruitment Fee Stamp
2. The application form must be filled in by the candidates in their own handwriting. Fee to be paid for the Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination 2011 is Rs.100/- (Rupees
Since this form will be processed on computerised machines, candidates should One Hundred only). Female/SC/ST/PH candidates are not required to pay any fee.
exercise due care in handling and filling up the application form. They should Fee is payable only through Central Recruitment Fee Stamp (Not postage stamps).
use black ball point pen only to darken the circles. For writing also, they No other mode of payment is acceptable. Obtain only one single CRF Stamp of
should use black ball point pen only. requisite denomination from the post office and paste it firmly within the box. After
Since the entries made by the candidates by darkening the circle only will be pasting the CRF Stamp on the form, get it cancelled from the post office of purchase in
taken into account while processing the applications on computerised machines, the space provided. Do not staple the CRF Stamp.
they should make these entries very carefully and accurately. Column 8: Father’s Name
3. Candidates should ensure that the signatures appended by them in all the places Write your father’s name (in English capital letters). Write a single letter in each box,
viz. in their application form, Attendance List etc. and in all the correspondence Leave a box blank between any two parts of the name. Do not use any prefix such as
with the Commission, should be identical and there should be no variation of any Mr, Shri, Dr. etc.
kind. If any variation is found in the signatures appended by him at different Column 9: Mother’s Name
places, his candidature will be liable to be cancelled by the Commission. Write your mother’s name (in English capital letters). Write a single letter in each box,
4. No change in the entries made in original application form will be allowed under Leave a box blank between any two parts of the name. Do not use any prefix such as
any circumstances. Mrs, Smt, Dr. etc.
5. The candidates are advised in their own interest to ensure that the applications Column 10: Examination Centre Codes
reach the Commission’s Office on or before the closing date. Applications Choose the appropriate Examination Centre code from the list given below where you
received in the Commission’s Office after the closing date will not be considered. wish to appear in Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination 2011. Then darken the
6. While filling in his/her application form, the candidate should carefully decide appropriate circles.
about his/her choice for the centre of the examination(s). List of Centres for Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination and their codes
7. On the Acknowledgement Card, the candidates should write their application Centre Code Centre Code Centre Code
form No. (as printed below the bar code on the form) and the name of AGARTALA 45 DISPUR 09 NAGPUR 13
examination viz. “Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination 2011” They should
AHMEDABAD 01 GANGTOK 42 PANAJI (GOA) 36
also write clearly and legibly their mailing address on the Acknowledgement
Card and postage stamp of Rs.6/- should be affixed on the card. The AIZAWL 47 HYDERABAD 10 PATNA 15
Acknowledgement Card should not be stapled or pinned or tagged or pasted ALIGARH 21 IMPHAL 44 PUDUCHERRY 20
with the Application Form. ALLAHABAD 02 ITANAGAR 48 PORT BLAIR 37
Eligibility Conditions (in brief) AURANGABAD 38 JAIPUR 11 RAIPUR 49
(i) Age limits : BANGALORE 03 JAMMU 34 RANCHI 41
Prescribed age-limits are 21-30 years as on 1st August, 2011 for all the services/posts BAREILLY 54 JODHPUR 22 SAMBALPUR 53
{Upper age limit relaxable for SCs/STs, OBCs and certain other categories as specified BHOPAL 04 JORHAT 46 SHILLONG 16
in Para 3(ii) of Notice}.
CHANDIGARH 35 KOCHI 24 SHIMLA 17
(ii) Educational Qualifications :
CHENNAI 12 KOHIMA 43 SRINAGAR 18
Degree of a recognised University or equivalent. {Para 3(iii) of Notice}.
(iii) No. of permissible attempts : CUTTACK 07 KOLKATA 06 THIRUVANANTHAPURAM 19
Four (Seven attempts for OBCs and P.H. Candidates belonging to General Category) DEHRADUN 14 LUCKNOW 26 TIRUPATI 50
and no limit for SCs/STs {Para 3 (iv) of Notice}. DELHI 08 MADURAI 40 UDAIPUR 52
(iv) Fee : DHARWAD 39 MUMBAI 05 VISHAKHAPATNAM 51
Rs. 100/- (Rupees hundred only) (No fee for Females/SCs/STs/Physically disabled)
Column 11: Educational Qualification Codes
only.
Choose the appropriate Educational Qualification code given below and then darken
Instructions to candidates for filing up the Application Form (Form-E) for the appropriate circles applicable in your case.
the Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination 2011. Code Educational qualification
Important: Only black ball-point pen shall be used for filling up this form. 1 If you have already passed the degree or equivalent Examination.
Side 1 of Application Form 2 If you have appeared/appearing at the degree or equivalent Examination.
Column 1: Examination for which applying (if eligible) Column 12: Age Relaxation Code
Write the name of Examination as CIVIL SERVICES (PRELIMINARY) EXAMINATION (i) If claiming age relaxation, choose the appropriate category code from the table
(in English capital letters only). given below and darken the appropriate circles applicable in your case.
Write the year of Exam as 2011
Code Category Extent of Age
Darken the circles 04 for examination code
No. Relaxation
Column 2: Name of the candidate
Permissible
For filing up this column, first write in the boxes your full name (in English capital
letters) exactly as recorded in your Matriculation/High School/ Secondary or equivalent 01 SC and ST 5 years
examination certificate. Write a single letter in a box. Leave a box blank between any 02 OBC 3 years
two parts of the name. Then darken the corresponding circle below each letter. Do not 03 Blind, deaf-mute and Orthopaedically handicapped persons. 10 years
darken a circle below a blank box. Do not use any prefix such as Shri, Kum., Dr. etc 04 Blind, deaf-mute and Orthopaedically handicapped
with your name. persons+ SC/ST 15 years
Column 3: Date of Birth 05 Blind, deaf-mute and Orthopaedically handicapped
Darken the appropriate circles for the day, month and the last two digits of the year of persons+ OBC 13 years
your birth as recorded in your Matriculation/High School/ Secondary or equivalent
06 Defence Services Personnel disabled in operations during 3 years
examination certificate.
hostilities with any foreign country or in a disturbed area
and released as a consequence thereof.
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 63
Code Category Extent of Age your Name and Date of Birth printed on it. Do not staple the photograph. Photograph
No. Relaxation should neither be signed by you nor should it be got attested. Also append your
Permissible signature in black ball point pen within the box provided below space for photograph.
07 Defence Services Personnel 8 years Side 2 of Application form
(as against Code No. 06) + SC/ST Column 20: No. of attempts already made
08 Defence Services Personnel 6 years Darken the appropriate circles for the number of attempts already made by you in Civil
(as against Code No. 06) + OBC Services (Preliminary) Examination. For eg. If you have taken one attempt, please
09 Ex-Servicemen including Commissioned Officers and 5 years darken 0 1. If you have not appeared earlier in the Civil Services (Preliminary)
ECOs/ SSCOs who have rendered at least five years Examination, please darken 0 0.
Military Service as on 1st August, 2011 and have Column 21: For Civil Services (Main) Examination
been released (i) on completion of assignment 21(I) If you are claiming exemption from appearing in Indian language paper, darken
(including those whose assignment is due to be the appropriate circle, “Yes” or “No” as the case may be.
completed within one year from 1st August, 2011) 21(II) Codes for Indian languages
otherwise than by way of dismissal or discharge on If you have darkened ‘No’ in Column 21(I) above, choose the correct code from the
account of misconduct or inefficiency; or (ii) on account table given below and darken appropriate circles for the Indian language chosen by
of physical disability attributable to Military Service; or you.
(iii) on invalidment. Code Description Code Description Code Description
01 ASSAMESE 09 ORIYA 17 KONKANI
10 Ex-Servicemen including Commissioned officers and 10 years
ECOs/SSCOs(as against Code No. 09) + SC/ST 02 BENGALI 10 PUNJABI 18 MANIPURI
03 GUJARATI 11 SANSKRIT 19 NEPALI
11 Ex-Servicemen including Commissioned officers and 8 years
04 HINDI 12 SINDHI(DEVANAGARI SCRIPT) 91 BODO
ECOs/SSCOs(as against Code No. 09) + OBC
05 KANNADA 13 SINDHI (ARABIC SCRIPT) 92 DOGRI
12 ECOs/SSCOs who have completed an initial period of 5 years
06 KASHMIRI 14 TAMIL 93 MAITHILI
assignment of five years of Military Service as on
07 MALAYALAM 15 TELUGU 94 SANTALI
1st August, 2011 and whose assignment has been extended
(DEVANAGARI
beyond five years and in whose case the Ministry of Defence
SCRIPT)
issues a certificate that they can apply for civil employment
08 MARATHI 16 URDU 95 SANTALI (OLCHIKI
and that they will be released on three months notice on
SCRIPT)
selection from the date of receipt of offer of appointment.
21(III) Codes for optional subjects for Civil Services (Main) Examination
13 ECOs/SSCOs (as against Code No. 12) + SC/ST 10 years
Choose the correct code from the table given below and darken the appropriate circles
14 ECOs/SSCOs (as against Code No. 12) + OBC 8 years for both the optional subjects.
15 Candidates who had ordinarily been domiciled in the State 5 years Code Description
of Jammu & Kashmir during the period from
21 AGRICULTURE
1st January, 1980 to 31st December, 1989.
22 BOTANY
16 Candidates who had ordinarily been domiciled in the State 10 years
23 CHEMISTRY
of J & K (as against Code No. 15) + SC/ST
24 CIVIL ENGINEERING
17 Candidates who had ordinarily been domiciled in the State 8 years
of J & K (as against Code No. 15) + OBC 25 COMMERCE & ACCOUNTANCY
Column 13: Remote Area/Abroad Code 26 ECONOMICS
If you are posting your Application from remote areas or abroad, choose the relevant 27 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
code from the table given below and darken the appropriate circles. 28 GEOGRAPHY
AREA CODE FOR REMOTE AREAS AND ABROAD 29 GEOLOGY
Area Code Area Code 30 HISTORY
Assam 01 Jammu & Kashmir 09 31 LAW
Meghalaya 02 Lahaul and Spiti District and Pangi 32 MANAGEMENT
Arunachal Pradesh 03 Sub Division of Chamba District 33 MATHEMATICS
Mizoram 04 of Himachal Pradesh 10 34 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Manipur 05 35 PHILOSOPHY
Nagaland 06 Andaman & Nicobar Islands 11 36 PHYSICS
Tripura 07 Lakshadweep 12 37 POLITICAL SCIENCE & INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Sikkim 08 Abroad 13 38 PSYCHOLOGY
N.B.: Candidates residing in a remote area/abroad specified in the Notice of the 39 SOCIOLOGY
Examination are entitled to one week’s additional time for submission of application
40 ZOOLOGY
form by post only.
41 STATISTICS
Column 14: Amount of Fee paid
If you have paid the requisite fee, darken circle against the relevant denomination; or 42 ANIMAL HUSBANDRY & VETERINARY SCIENCE
If you have not paid the fee and are claiming fee exemption as female, SC, ST or 43 ANTHROPOLOGY
Physically Challenged, darken circle against ‘Fee exempted’. 44 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
N.B.: Fee is payable only in the form of Central Recruitment Fee Stamp, as per 45 MEDICAL SCIENCE
instructions against Column 7.
51 LITERATURE OF ASSAMESE LANGUAGE
Column 15: Community
52 LITERATURE OF BENGALI LANGUAGE
Darken the appropriate circle against the community to which you belong.
Note 1: Candidates belonging to OBCs but coming in the Creamy Layer and thus not 53 LITERATURE OF GUJARATI LANGUAGE
being entitled to OBC reservation should indicate their community as General Category. 54 LITERATURE OF HINDI LANGUAGE
Note 2: Candidates not belonging to SC, ST, OBC communities should darken circle 55 LITERATURE OF KANNADA LANGUAGE
against (General Category) and not leave it blank. 56 LITERATURE OF KASHMIRI LANGUAGE
Note 3: No change in the community status indicated by a candidate in his/her 57 LITERATURE OF MARATHI LANGUAGE
application form for the examination will ordinarily be allowed by the Commission at a
58 LITERATURE OF MALAYALAM LANGUAGE
subsequent stage.
Column 16: Minority status 59 LITERATURE OF ORIYA LANGUAGE
If you belong to any of the specified minorities (Muslim /Christian / Sikh /Buddhist / 60 LITERATURE OF PUNJABI LANGUAGE
Zoroastrian), darken the appropriate circle applicable in your case. 61 LITERATURE OF SANSKRIT LANGUAGE
Column 17: Physically Challenged 62 LITERATURE OF SINDHI (DEVANAGRI) LANGUAGE
If you belong to any of the specified PH category (Orthopaedically Challenged / Visually 63 LITERATURE OF SINDHI (ARABIC) LANGUAGE
Impaired / Hearing Impaired), darken the appropriate circle.
64 LITERATURE OF TAMIL LANGUAGE
Column 18: Address
65 LITERATURE OF TELUGU LANGUAGE
Write your complete mailing address including your name in English capital letters
within the box provided for the purpose. Also write the PIN Code in the box provided. 66 LITERATURE OF URDU LANGUAGE
Write with black ball point pen only. Do not write outside the box. Please note that this 67 LITERATURE OF ARABIC LANGUAGE
address will be photocopied as such, in all letters to be sent to you and therefore, it 68 LITERATURE OF PERSIAN LANGUAGE
should be very clearly and legibly written. 69 LITERATURE OF GERMAN LANGUAGE
Column 19: Photograph and signature
70 LITERATURE OF FRENCH LANGUAGE
Paste firmly in the space provided your recent photograph of 3.5 cm. x 4.5 cm. size with
64 UPSC Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011
71 LITERATURE OF RUSSIAN LANGUAGE Code Description Code Description Code Description
01 ASSAMESE 09 ORIYA 17 KONKANI
72 LITERATURE OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE
02 BENGALI 10 PUNJABI 18 MANIPURI
73 LITERATURE OF CHINESE LANGUAGE 03 GUJARATI 11 SANSKRIT 19 NEPALI
74 LITERATURE OF PALI LANGUAGE 04 HINDI 12 SINDHI(DEVANAGRI SCRIPT) 91 BODO
75 LITERATURE OF KONKANI LANGUAGE 05 KANNADA 13 SINDHI(ARABIC SCRIPT) 92 DOGRI
06 KASHMIRI 14 TAMIL 93 MAITHILI
76 LITERATURE OF MANIPURI LANGUAGE
07 MALAYALAM 15 TELUGU 94 SANTHALI
77 LITERATURE OF NEPALI LANGUAGE (DEVANAGARI
78 LITERATURE OF BODO LANGUAGE SCRIPT)
08 MARATHI 16 URDU 95 SANTHALI
79 LITERATURE OF DOGRI LANGUAGE
(OLCHIKI SCRIPT)
80 LITERATURE OF MAITHILI LANGUAGE 22 to 27: Candidates applying for the Civil Services Examination are not required to fill
81 LITERATURE OF SANTALI LANGUAGE any of these columns. They should, therefore, leave these columns blank.
Note (i) Candidates will not be allowed to offer the following combinations of subjects :– Column 28: Declaration
The candidate must read the declaration carefully before signing.
(a) Political Science & International Relations and Public Administration;
Column 29: Write your name in English Capital letters in the box provided for the
(b) Commerce & Accountancy and Management; purpose.
(c) Anthropology and Sociology; Column 30: Signature of candidate
(d) Mathematics and Statistics; Make your usual signature in black ball point pen within the box provided. Your
(e) Agriculture and Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science. signature must not overflow or touch the border of the box provided. Do not merely
(f) Management and Public Administration; write your name in capital letters in place of signature. Unsigned applications will be
(g) Of the Engineering subjects, viz., Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering and summarily rejected.
Also write the place and date of signing the form in the space provided for these
Mechanical Engineering–not more than one subject.
purposes.
(h) Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science and Medical Science. Column 31: Write your telephone number with STD code in the box provided.
[Note: This column, i.e. 21(III) is optional and is only for statistical purposes. Column 32: Write your mobile number in the box provided.
Candidates who qualify the Civil Services (Preliminary) examination 2011 will be Column 33: Write your e-mail ID in the box provided.
required to provide this information at the time of filling up of the Detailed Application
Form (DAF) for the Civil Services (Main) Examination 2011]. VERIFY THE FOLLOWING BEFORE MAILING THE APPLICATION
21(IV) Examination Centre codes for Civil Services (Main) Examination 1. That you have used the new Common Application form for UPSC Examinations
Choose the correct code given below and darken the appropriate circles for the centre (Form-E) purchased from the designated Head Post Offices/Post Offices only
chosen by you for the Civil Services (Main) Examination. costing Rs. 30/-.
2. That you have filled in all the relevant columns of the application form by blackening
Code Centre Code Centre the appropriate circles.(1to 21 and 28 to 33)
01 AHMEDABAD 11 JAIPUR 3. That you have affixed your recent photograph with your name and date of birth
02 ALLAHABAD 12 CHENNAI printed on it (unsigned and unattested) in column 19 of the application form.
4. That in case you are required to pay fee, you have pasted a Central Recruitment
03 BANGALORE 15 PATNA Fee Stamp of requisite denomination in column 7 of the application form and
04 BHOPAL 16 SHILLONG have got it cancelled from the Post Office of issue.
05 MUMBAI 17 SHIMLA 5. That you have signed in box provided below column 19 and in the space provided
in column 30 of the application form.
06 KOLKATA 19 THIRUVANATHAPURAM 6. That you have filled the Acknowledgement Card i.e. written your application form
07 CUTTACK 26 LUCKNOW number in the space provided and written your address legibly.
08 DELHI 34 JAMMU 7. That you have affixed a Rs. 6/- (Rupees six only) postage stamp on the
Acknowledgement card.
09 DISPUR (GUWAHATI) 35 CHANDIGARH 8. That only one application form and one acknowledgement card is being mailed
10 HYDERABAD in the envelope supplied to you with the Brochure and no other enclosure is
21(V) Codes for medium of written Examination of Civil Services (Main) Examination attached therewith.
9. That you have written the name of the examination viz., “Civil Services
Choose the correct code given in the notice and darken the appropriate circles for the
(Preliminary) Examination 2011” on the envelope meant for despatch of
medium of written exam chosen by you. application form and acknowledgement card.

APPENDIX-III
LIST OF HEAD POST OFFICES/POST OFFICES WHERE UPSC APPLICATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE
Andhra Pradesh Circle : Hyderabad GPO, Hyderabad Jubilee, Kachiguda Stn., Girgaon, Kalbadevi, Mahim, Mandvi, Mumbai Central, Ahmednagar, Akola, Alibag,
Khairatabad, Secunderabad, Trimulgherry, Adilabad, Anantapur, Arundelpet (Guntur), Amravati, Aurangabad, Beed, Bhandara, Buldhana, Chandrapur, Dhule, Jalagaon,
Chittoor, Cuddapah, Eluru, Kakinada, Karimnagar, Khammam, Kurnool, Machilipatnam, Jalna, Karad, Kolhapur, Latur, Nagpur GPO, Nanded, Nasik, Osmanbad, Parbhani,
Mahboobnagar, Medak, Nalgonda, Nellore, Nizamabad, Ongole, Srikakulam, Pune, Ratnagiri, Sangli, Satara, Sawantwadi, Solapur, Thane, Wardha, Yeotmal,
Vizianagaram, Vijayawada, Vikarabad, Visakhapatnam, Warangal. Margaon (Goa), Panaji (Goa).
Assam Circle : Guwahati, Barpeta, Dhubri, Dibrugarh, Diphu, Golaghat, Hailakandi, North East Circle : Agartala, Aizawl, Dharmanagar, Imphal, Itanagar, Kohima,
Jorhat, Karimganj, Kokrajhar, Mangaldoi, Nagaon, Nalbari, North Lakhimpur, Sibsagar, Radhakishorepur, Shillong, Tura.
Silchar, Tezpur, Tinsukia. Orissa Circle : Bhubaneswar GPO, Angul, Bolangir, Balasore, Bargarh, Baripada,
Bihar Circle : Patna GPO, Bankipur, Arrah, Aurangabad, B. Deoghar, Bokaro Steel Berhamapur, Bhadrak, Bhawanipatna, Cuttack GPO, Dhenkanal, Jagatsinghpur, Jajpur,
City, Banka, Battiah, Begusarai, Bhagalpur, Biharsharif, Buxar, Chaibasa, Chapra, Jeypore (K), Jharsuguda, Kendrapara, Keonhargarh, Koraput, Nayagarh,
Daltonganj, Darbhanga, Dhanbad, Dumka, Gaya, Giridih, Gopalganj, Gumla, Hajipur, Parlakhemundi, Phulbani, Puri, Rayagada, Sambalpur, Sundargarh.
Hazaribagh, Jamshedpur, Katihar, Madhubani, Motihari, Munger, Muzaffarpur, Punjab Circle : Amritsar, Bhatinda, Faridkot, Ferozepur, Gurdaspur, Hoshiarpur,
Nawada, Purnea, Ranchi, Saharsa, Samastipur, Sasaram, Sitamarhi, Siwan. Jalandhar City, Kapurthala, Ludhiana, Moga, Patiala, Ropar, Sangrur, Chandigarh.
Delhi Circle : Delhi GPO, New Delhi, Indra Prastha, Ramesh Nagar, Sarojini Nagar, Rajasthan Circle : Jaipur GPO, Jawahar Nagar, Shastri Nagar, Ajmer, Alwar, Banswara,
Lodi Road, Krishna Nagar, Ashok Vihar, Parliament Street, UPSC PO. Baran, Barmer, Bharatpur, Bhilwara, Bikaner, Bundi, Chittorgarh, Churu, Dausa,
Gujarat Circle : Gandhinagar, Ahmedabad, Amreli, Anand, Bharuch, Bhavnagar, Bhuj, Dholpur, Dungarpur, Hanumangarh, Hindaun, Jaisalmer, Jalore, Jhalawar, Jhunjhunu,
Dahod, Godhra, Himatnagar, Jamnagar, Junagadh, Kheda, Mehesana, Navrangpura, Jodhpur, Kankroli, Kota, Nagaur, Pali Marwar, Sawaimadhopur, Shastri Circle Udaipur,
Navsari, Palanpur, Patan, Porbandar, Rajkot, Revdi Bazar, Surat, Surendranagar, Sikar, Sirohi, Sriganganagar, Tonk.
Valsad, Vadodara. Tamil Nadu Circle : Chennai GPO, Anna Road, St. Thomas Mount, T. Nagar,
Haryana Circle : Ambala GPO, Ambala City, Bahadurgarh, Bhiwani, Faridabad, Bodinayakanur, Chengalpattu, Chidambaram, Coimbatore, Cuddalore, Dharmapuri,
Gurgaon, Hissar, Jind, Karnal, Kurukshetra, Narnaul, Panipat, Rohtak, Sirsa, Sonepat. Dindigul, Erode, Kanchipuram, Karur, Madurai, Nagapattinam, Nagercoil, Namakkal,
Himachal Pradesh Circle : Shimla, Bilaspur, Chamba, Hamirpur, Kangra, Keylong, Pudukottai, Ramanathapuram, Salem, Sivagangai, Tambaram, Thanjavur,
Kulu, Mandi, Nahan, Recong, Peo, Solan, Una. Thiruvannamalai, Tiruchirapalli, Tirunelveli, Tiruvallur, Tiruvayur, Turaiyur, Tuticorin,
Jammu & Kashmir Circle : Srinagar, Anantnag, Baramulla, Jammu, Kathua, Leh, Udhagamandalam, Vellore, Villupuram, Virudhunagar, Puducherry.
Rajouri, Udhampur, Gandhi Nagar H.Q., Janipur, Jammu Cantt., Samba. Uttar Pradesh Circle : Lucknow, Lucknow Chowk, Agra, Akbarpur, Aligarh, Allahabad,
Karnataka Circle : Bangalore GPO, Bangalore City, Basavangudi, HAL II Stage, Allahabad Katchery, Almora, Auraiya, Azamgarh, Bahraich, Ballia, Balrampur, Banda,
Jayanagar, R.T. Nagar, Bagalkot, Raichur, Rajajinagar, Belgaum Bellary, Bidar, Bijapur, Bansi, Barabanki, Bareilly, Basti, Bijnor, Budaun, Bulandshahr, Dehradun, Deoria,
Chikmagalur, Chitradurga, Devengere, Dharwad, Gadag, Gulbarga, Hassan, Haveri, Dhampur, Etah, Etawah, Faizabad, Fatehgarh, Fatehpur, Firozabad, Ghaziabad,
Hubli, Karwar, Kolar, Madikere, Mandya, Mangalore, Manipal, Mysore, Nanjagud, Ghazipur, Gonda, Gopeshwar, Gorakhpur, Haldwani, Hamirpur,Hardoi, Jaunpur,
Shimoga, Sirsi, Tumkur, Udupi. Jhansi, Kanpur, Kheri, Lalitpur, Mainpuri, Mathura, Mau, Meerut, Mirzapur, Moradabad,
Kerala Circle : Trivandrum, Alleppey (Alappuzha), Calicut, Cannanore, Ernakulam, Muzaffarnagar, Nainital, Orai, Pauri, Padrauna, Pilibhit, Pithoragarh, Pratapgarh, Rai
Kalpetta, Kasargod, Kattappana, Kottayam, Malappuram, Palghat, Pathanamthitta, Bareli, Rampur, Roorkee, Saharanpur, Shahajahanpur, Sitapur, Sultanpur, Tehri,
Quilon, Trichur, Kavaratti (Lakshadweep). Unnao, Varanasi.
Madhya Pradesh Circle : Bhopal GPO, Bilaspur, Ambikapur, Balaghat, Betul, Bhind, West Bengal Circle : Calcutta GPO, Alipore, Barabazar, Beleghata, Belghoria,
Chhatarpur, Chhindwara, Damoh, Dewas, Dhar, Durg, Guna, Hoshangabad, Indore, Cassipore, Park Street, Tollygunge, Balurghat, Bankura, Barasat, Berhampore,
Jabalpur, Jagdalpur, Jhabua, Khandwa, Khargone, Lashkar, Mandla, Mandsaur, Burdwan, Chinsurah, Cooch Behar, Darjeeling, Howrah, Jalpaiguri, Krishnagar, Malda,
Morena, Narsinghpur, Neemuch, Raigarh, Raipur, Raisen, Rajgarh (Biora), Midnapore, Purulia, Suri, Siliguri, Port Blair (Andaman & Nicobar Islands), Gangtok
Rajnandgaon, Ratlam, Rewa, Sagar Cantt., Satna, Sehore, Seoni, Shahdol, Shajapur, (Sikkim).
Shivpuri, Sidhi, Tikamgarh, Ujjain, Vidisha. Selected Field Post Offices through 1 Central Base Post Office (CBPO), 56 APO; 2
Maharashtra Circle : Mumbai GPO, Andheri, Borivili, Chembur, Chinehbunder, Dadar, CBPO (99 APO).
Employment News 19 - 25 February 2011 UPSC 65

APPENDIX-IV
Special Instructions to Candidates for objective type tests
1. Articles permitted inside Examination Hall In the Answer Sheet, Serial Nos. from 1 to 160 are printed. Against each
Clip board or hard board (on which nothing is written), a good quality H.B. numbers, there are circles marked (a), (b), (c) and (d). After you have read
pencil for making responses on the Answer Sheet, eraser, pencil sharpener each item in the Test Booklet and decided which one of the given responses
and a pen containing blue or black ink. Answer Sheet and sheet for rough is correct or the best, you have to mark your response by completely blackening
work will be supplied by the Invigilator. with pencil to indicate your response. Ink should not be used for blackening
2. Articles not permitted inside Examination Hall the circle on the Answer Sheet.
Do not bring into the Examination Hall any article other than those specified For example, if the correct answer to item 1 is (b), then the circle containing
above, e.g., books, notes, loose sheets, electronic or any other type of the letter (b) is to be completely blackened with pencil as shown below :-
calculators, mathematical and drawing instruments, Log Tables, stencils of Example : (a) (c) (d)
maps, slide rules, Test Booklets and rough sheets pertaining to earlier To change a wrong marking, erase it completely and re-mark the new choice.
session(s), etc. 11. Signature on Attendance List
Mobile phones, pagers or any other communication devices are not allowed You are required to write the serial number of the Answer Sheet and Test
inside the premises where the examination is being conducted. Any Booklet and Series of Test Booklet issued to you on the Attendance List and to
infringement of these instructions should entail disciplinary action including sign in appropriate column against your name. Any change or correction in
ban from future examination. these particulars should be authenticated by the candidate by putting his
Candidates are advised in their own interest not to bring any of the banned signatures.
item including mobile phones /pagers to the venue of the examination, as 12. Please read and abide by the instructions on the cover of Test Booklet. If any
arrangements for safekeeping cannot be assured. candidate indulges in disorderly or improper conduct, he will render himself
3. PENALTY FOR WRONG ANSWERS liable for disciplinary action and/or imposition of a penalty as the Commission
THERE WILL BE PENALTY (NEGATIVE MARKING) FOR WRONG ANSWERS may deem fit.
MARKED BY A CANDIDATE IN THE OBJECTIVE TYPE QUESTION PAPERS Annexure
EXCEPT SOME OF THE QUESTIONS WHERE THE NEGATIVE MARKING How to fill in the Answer Sheet of objective type tests in the Examination Hall
WILL BE IN BUILT IN THE FORM OF DIFFERENT MARKS BEING AWARDED Please follow these instructions very carefully. You may note that since the answer
TO MOST APPROPRIATE AND NOT SO APPROPRIATE ANSWER FOR sheets are to be evaluated on machine, any violation of these instructions may result in
SUCH QUESTIONS. reduction of your score for which you would yourself be responsible.
(i) There are four alternatives for the answers to every question. For each Before you mark your responses on the Answer Sheet, you will have to fill in various
question for which a wrong answer has been given by the candidate, one particulars in it.
third (0.33) of the marks assigned to that question will be deducted as penalty. As soon as the candidates receives the Answer Sheet, he/she should check that it is
(ii) If a candidate gives more than one answer, it will be treated as a wrong numbered at the bottom. If it is found un-numbered he should at once get it replaced by
answer even if one of the given answers happens to be correct and there will a numbered one.
be same penalty as above for that question. You will see from the Answer Sheet that you will have to fill in the top line, which reads
(iii) If a question is left blank i.e. no answer is given by the candidate, there will be thus:
no penalty for that question. Write in Ink
4. Unfair means strictly prohibited
No candidates shall copy from the papers of any other candidate nor permit Centre Subject S. Code Roll Number
his papers to be copied nor give nor attempt to give nor obtain nor attempt to
obtain irregular assistance of any description. If you are, say, appearing for the examination in Delhi Centre for the Paper I and your
5. Conduct in Examination Hall Roll No. is 081276, and your test booklet series is ‘A’ , you should fill in thus, using ink
No candidates should misbehave in any manner or create disorderly scene in or ball point pen.
the Examination Hall or harass the staff employed by the Commission for the *This is just illustrative and may not be relevant to the Examination concerned.
conduct of the examination. Any such misconduct will be severely penalised. Write in Ink
6. Answer Sheet particulars
(i) Write in ink or ball point pen your Centre and subject followed by test booklet Centre Delhi Subject Paper I (A) S. Code 0 1 Roll Number 0 8 1 2 7 6
series (in bracket), subject code and roll number at the appropriate space
provided on the answer sheet at the top. Also encode (in pencil) your booklet You should write in ink or ball point pen the name of the centre and subject in English
series (A, B, C or D, as the case may be), subject code and roll number in the or Hindi.
circles provided for the purpose in the answer sheet. The guidelines for writing The test Booklet Series is indicated by Alphabets A, B, C, or D at the top right hand
the above particulars and for encoding the above particulars are given in corner of the Booklet.
Annexure. In case the booklet series is not printed on the test booklet or Write your Roll Numbers exactly as it is in your Admission Certificate in ink in the boxes
answer sheet is un-numbered, please report immediately to the Invigilator provided for this purpose. Do not omit any zero(s) which may be there.
and get the test booklet/answer sheet replaced. The next step is to find out the appropriate subject code from the Time Table. Now
(ii) All corrections and changes in writing the roll number must be initialed by the encode the Test Booklet Series, Subject Code and the Roll Number in the circles
candidates as well as by the Invigilator and countersigned by the Supervisor. provided for this purpose. Do the encoding with H.B. Pencil. The name of the Centre
(iii) Immediately after commencement of the examination please check that the need not be encoded.
test booklet supplied to you does not have any unprinted or torn or missing Writing and encoding of Test Booklet Series is to be done after receiving the Test
pages or items etc. If so, get it replaced by a complete test booklet of the same Booklet and confirming the Booklet Series from the same.
series and subject. For General Studies subject paper I of 'A' Test Booklet Series you have to encode the
7. Do not write your name or anything other than the specific items of information subject code, which is 01. Do it thus,
asked for, on the answer sheet/test booklet/sheet for rough work.
8. Do not fold or mutilate or damage or put any extraneous marking in the Answer iqfLrdk Øe (,) fo"k; 0 1
Sheet. Do not write anything on the reverse of the answer sheet. Booklet Series (A) Subject 0 1
9. Use HB pencil to mark answer l € €
Since the answer sheets will be evaluated on computerised machines, B À À
C Á Á
candidates should exercise due care in handling and feeling up the answer
D Â Â
sheets. They should use HB pencil only to darken the circles. For writing in à Ã
boxes, they should use blue or black pen. Since the entries made by the Ä Ä
candidates by darkening the circles will be taken into account while evaluating Å Å
Æ Æ
the answer sheets on computerised machines, they should make these entries Ç Ç
very carefully. È È
10. Method of marking answers
All that is required is to blacken completely the circle
vuqØekad
In the “Objective Type” of examination, you do not write the answers. For each
Roll Numbers
question (hereinafter referred to as “Item”) several suggested answers marked 'A' below the Booklet Series and below the sub-
ject code blacken completely the Circles for "0" (in the first 0 8 1 2 7 6
(hereinafter referred to as “Responses”) are given. You have to choose one
vertical column) and "1" (in the second verticle column). l € € € € €
response to each item. You should then encode the Roll No. 081276. Do it thus À À l À À À
The question paper will be in the Form of Test Booklet. The booklet will contain similarly : Á Á Á l Á Á
     Â
item bearing numbers 1, 2, 3 ............ etc. Under each item, Responses marked Important : Please ensure that you have carefully en- Ã Ã Ã Ã Ã Ã
Ä Ä Ä Ä Ä Ä
(a), (b), (c), (d) will be given. Your task will be to choose the correct response. coded your subject. Test Booklet Series and Roll Num- Å Å Å Å Å l
If you think there is more than one correct response, then choose what you ber. If you make any mistake, erase it completely and Æ Æ Æ Æ l Æ
Ç l Ç Ç Ç Ç
consider the best response. remark correctly. È È È È È È
In any case, for each item you are to select only one response. If you select *This is just illustrative and may not be relevant to your Examination.
more than one response, your response will be considered wrong. davp 55104/14/0058/1011 EN 47/106

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