Category: Defence and Security
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About C-130J Super Hercules Aircraft:
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Category: Government Schemes
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About National Mission on Edible Oils (NMEO):
About National Mission on Edible Oils-Oil Palm:
About National Mission on Edible Oils- Oilseeds:
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Category: Environment and Ecology
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About Senna Spectabilis:
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Category: Economy
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About Unified Payments Interface (UPI):
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Category: International Organisations
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About United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA):
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(UPSC GS Paper II – Governance, Health, Social Justice; GS Paper III – Inclusive Growth & Human Development)
Context (Introduction)
Amid persistent inequities and commercialisation in India’s health sector, the 2025 National Convention on Health Rights seeks to realign public health policy toward universal access, stronger public systems, and legal recognition of health as a fundamental right, drawing lessons from COVID-19 and global best practices.
Main Arguments
Challenges / Structural Barriers
Way Forward
Conclusion
India’s right-to-health agenda requires a decisive shift from fragmented, market-driven approaches toward equitable, well-funded public systems anchored in accountability and inclusion. The 2025 convention offers a timely opportunity to rebuild health governance around justice, dignity and universal care.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper II – Election Commission, Electoral Reforms, Constitutional Provisions, Governance)
Context (Introduction)
India’s electoral rolls have increasingly suffered from duplicates, outdated entries and inaccuracies due to rapid migration and urbanisation. The Election Commission’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) 2025 seeks to rebuild accuracy and trust in electoral rolls amid constitutional, administrative and political scrutiny.
Main Arguments (Need for SIR)
Challenges / Criticisms
Way Forward
Conclusion
Electoral roll revision is indispensable to ensure the integrity of India’s democratic process. SIR 2025 represents an ambitious yet constitutionally grounded effort to restore accuracy, provided transparency, public engagement and safeguards against exclusion remain central to its implementation.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper III – Inclusive Growth, Employment, MSME Sector, Industrial Policy, Economic Development)
Context (Introduction)
India’s employment challenge is less about job creation in large industries and more about uplifting millions of low-productivity, self-employed micro enterprises. ASUSE 2023–24 data shows 12+ crore workers depend on 7.3 crore unincorporated enterprises whose growth is severely constrained.
Main Arguments: Why Small Enterprises Matter
Challenges / Criticisms
Way Forward: Productivity-Led Employment Strategy
Conclusion
India’s employment future will be shaped not by a few large factories but by millions of micro and small enterprises that form its economic backbone. Raising their productivity through credit access, digital adoption, market linkages, and supportive regulation can transform self-employment from subsistence activity into sustained job creation.
UPSC Mains Question
Source: Indian Express