SPEAK TO MENTOR - CALL NOW!
SUBSCRIBE
Home
TLP
Daily Free Initiatives
Daily News & Analysis
Daily Current Affairs Quiz
Monthly Magazines
English Magazines
Hindi Magazines
Yojana & Kurukshetra Gist
60 Day – Rapid Revision (RaRe) Series – 2025
IMP
TRP for UPSC Personality Test
Courses
Integrated Learning Program (ILP) – 2026
Think Learn Perform (TLP) Connect for UPSC 2026
Baba’s Gurukul Course – 2026
Gurukul Foundation
Gurukul Foundation – Delhi
Gurukul Advanced
UPSC 2025 Mains
Mains Exclusive Programme (MEP) – 2025
3 Full-Length Mocks (GS + ESSAY) Test Series
SANKALP – 60 Days’ TLP (OFFLINE) Daily Answer Writing Challenge
Optionals
Sociology
Sociology Foundation Course – 2025
Sociology Test Series – 2024 (Coming Soon!)
Public Administration
Public Administration FC – 2024
Anthropology
Anthropology Foundation Course
Anthropology Optional Test Series (Coming Soon!)
Geography
Geography Optional Foundation Course
Geography Optional Test Series – Coming Soon!
PSIR
PSIR Foundation Course
PSIR Test Series – Coming Soon
KPSC / KAS
Industrial Extension Officer (IEO) Test Series
KPSC – Mains Crash Course
KPSC – Mains Test Series
‘Mission ಸಂಕಲ್ಪ’ – KPSC Foundation Course
हिंदी
लक्ष्य – 2026: UPSC हिंदी अभ्यर्थियों के लिए एक गेम चेंजर
All India Prelims Test Series – 2025
Daily News & Analysis हिन्दी
Monthly Magazine
Toppers
Centres
Bangalore
Delhi
Lucknow
Bhopal
Contact Us
Day:
January 29, 2021
Showing 21-26 out of 26
Troubling trends: On widening inequality
IASbaba
January 29, 2021
UPSC Articles
Republic Day Violence
IASbaba
UPSC Articles
Place in news: Sigur Plateau
IASbaba
UPSC Articles
Future Investment Initiative Forum
IASbaba
UPSC Articles
CCEA gives its approval for MSP of copra for year 2021
IASbaba
UPSC Articles
World Economic Forum’s Davos Dialogue
IASbaba
UPSC Articles
Posts navigation
Previous
1
2
Next
TLP
ILP 2026
FLM Test Series
Gurukul Advanced
TLP Connect
Mains Exclusive Programme
Sankalp – 2025
लक्ष्य – 2026
Gurukul Foundation
Recent Posts
Day 33 – Q. 3. Mr. Raghav Verma, an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer, has recently been posted as the District Collector of Lakshmipur, a backward but ecologically sensitive district in central India. A powerful conglomerate has proposed setting up a large cement manufacturing unit in the region. The proposed project promises to generate over 4,000 jobs and improve local infrastructure, and has received political backing at the state level. However, environmental assessments conducted by a neutral research body raise serious concerns. The region falls within an elephant corridor and includes tribal villages dependent on forest-based livelihoods. The plant’s operations may lead to irreversible groundwater depletion and air pollution. Raghav receives unofficial calls from state-level officials urging him to push through the final clearance. Simultaneously, he is visited by tribal elders and local activists who plead with him to protect their land and forests. Raghav is caught between the lure of rapid development, intense political pressure, and the ethical responsibility to safeguard the environment and the rights of vulnerable communities. Questions What are the different options available to Raghav in this situation? What are the ethical implications of each option? In your opinion, what should Raghav do? Justify your answer with suitable ethical reasoning. How can public servants ethically balance economic development with sustainable governance in such high-pressure roles? (250 words, 20 marks)
Day 33 – Q. 2. A massive fire at the official residence of a sitting High Court judge uncovers bundles of charred currency notes amounting to several crores. Preliminary investigations suggest a serious case of financial misconduct, triggering nationwide outrage. A Supreme Court-appointed panel recommends initiating impeachment proceedings, putting the spotlight squarely on the integrity of the higher judiciary. This incident has sparked a fierce debate. While the legal community defends the sanctity and independence of the judiciary as essential to democracy, civil society, media, and common citizens demand immediate action and structural reforms to prevent such breaches of public trust. Many view this as a symptom of a deeper systemic issue, not merely an isolated moral failure. The Ministry of Law and Justice is now under pressure to institutionalize a credible framework that ensures accountability while preserving the independence of judges. As a senior bureaucrat, your role involves reconciling competing concerns: respecting judicial autonomy as guaranteed under the Constitution while reinforcing mechanisms of integrity, transparency, and public confidence. Questions What ethical values and constitutional principles are at stake in this situation? How can the judiciary be held accountable without undermining its independence? As a senior bureaucrat in the Ministry of Law and Justice, what should be your course of action to address this issue institutionally and ethically? (250 words, 20 marks)
Day 33 – Q. 1. As an officer in the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), you are part of a high-level panel tasked with reviewing the authenticity of reservation-related documents—such as those for SC, ST, OBC, EWS, and persons with disabilities—submitted by a number of civil servants at the time of their appointment. Recent audits have raised serious concerns regarding the legitimacy of some of these certificates. Many of the individuals under scrutiny have already been serving in various government departments for 5 to 10 years, with overall satisfactory performance records and no major disciplinary issues. While legal action, including termination and prosecution, is being actively considered for those found guilty of submitting false documents, a parallel debate has emerged. Some experts and internal stakeholders argue that administrative leniency should be shown in cases where there was no clear malicious intent or where systemic lapses—such as inadequate verification mechanisms—enabled the breach. However, rightful candidates who were displaced due to the fraudulent use of reserved category certificates are now demanding justice and restoration of their lost opportunities. Civil society groups and public interest litigants are also adding pressure, urging the government to take decisive, transparent, and equitable action. In this context, the government must walk a tightrope—balancing the legal and moral imperative to uphold fairness in public employment with the pragmatic challenges of dealing with long-serving officials who may have been products of an administrative failure. Questions What are the ethical concerns involved in allowing or removing such officers from service? How can the principle of natural justice be upheld while ensuring fairness to genuine beneficiaries? What measures would you suggest to strengthen the verification of eligibility claims in public service recruitment. (250 words, 20 Marks)
DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS हिन्दी | UPSC प्रारंभिक एवं मुख्य परीक्षा – 9th July 2025
DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS हिन्दी | UPSC प्रारंभिक एवं मुख्य परीक्षा – 10th July 2025
UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 10th July 2025
DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 10th July – 2025
UPSC Mains 2025 – 3 Full-Length Mocks (GS + ESSAY) | Join FLM Series Now
IASbaba’s Think Learn Perform (TLP – Phase 1) 2025 – UPSC Mains Answer Questions [10th July, 2025] – Day 32
Day 32 – Q. 1. “While laws regulate conduct, a code of ethics elevates it.” Discuss the role of a code of ethics in shaping public servant behavior beyond legal obligations. How can ethical conduct be effectively inculcated in public service? (150 words, 10 marks)
Your Name
*
Your Email
*
Subject
Comments
*
Send Message
Search now.....
Search
[jetpack_subscription_form title="Sign Up To Receive Regular Updates" subscribe_button="Sign Up Now !" subscribe_text=""]