IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs Analysis
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(PRELIMS Focus)
Subject: Environment – New Species Discovery; Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot; Murlen National Park; Herpetology; Mizoram.
Why in News?
- Scientists have discovered a new species of burrowing snake named Trachischium lalremsangai in Murlen National Park, Mizoram, near the India–Myanmar border.
- The discovery highlights the rich biodiversity of the Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot.
- One of the two specimens was found in Myanmar’s Chin State in 2007, but was only recently identified as a distinct species.
About Trachischium lalremsangai
Basic Details
- Type: Burrowing snake; also known as slender snake or worm-eating snake.
- Diet: Primarily feeds on earthworms.
- Habitat: Spends most of its life underground in loose soil.
- Behaviour: Harmless to humans; not venomous.
Distinguishing Features
- Smooth iridescent scales.
- Brown body with a white-speckled underside.
- Light-brown belly (unlike related species that have dark brown to black belly).
- Two scales behind the eye (unique arrangement of head scales).
- DNA analysis confirmed its distinctiveness from other Trachischium species.
Naming
- Named after Dr. Hmar Tlawmte Lalremsanga, a professor of Zoology at Mizoram University, in recognition of his remarkable contributions to herpetology (study of reptiles and amphibians) in India, especially in Northeast India.
- He has mentored students and fostered research collaborations within the Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot.
Discovery Team
- Virender K. Bhardwaj, Amit K. Bal, Chhangte L. Tluanga (Mizoram University)
- Zeeshan A. Mirza (Max Planck Institute for Biology, Germany)
Key Terms for Prelims
- Trachischium lalremsangai: New worm-eating burrowing snake species from Mizoram
- Herpetology: Study of reptiles and amphibians
- Holotype: Single physical specimen used to formally describe a new species
- Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot: One of 36 global biodiversity hotspots; covers Northeast India and Southeast Asia
- Murlen National Park: Protected area in Champhai district, Mizoram (Indo-Myanmar border)
- Mizo Hills: Part of Patkai range (extension of Himalayas)
- Hoolock gibbon: Only ape species found in India; endangered
- Mrs. Hume’s pheasant: State bird of Mizoram
- Patkai range: Hill range in Northeast India (part of Purvanchal range)
- Max Planck Institute for Biology: German research institute (co-discoverer institution)
- California Academy of Sciences: San Francisco-based research institution housing the second specimen
Possible Prelims MCQs
Q1: Trachischium lalremsangai, a new species of burrowing snake, was discovered in which protected area?
- Murlen National Park
Q2: The new snake species is named after:
- Hmar Tlawmte Lalremsanga
Q3: Murlen National Park is located in which Indian state?
- Mizoram
Q4: Trachischium lalremsangai belongs to which genus of snakes?
- Trachischium
Q5: The newly discovered snake primarily feeds on:
- Earthworms
Q6: What is the state bird of Mizoram?
- Mrs. Hume’s pheasant
Q7: The Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot covers which of the following regions?
- Northeast India, parts of Bangladesh, China, Malaysia, and all of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam
Q8: Which endangered ape species is found in Murlen National Park?
- Hoolock gibbon
Source/Reference:
Subject: Art & Culture – Literary Prizes; International Booker Prize; Translated Literature; Indian Winners; Taiwan Travelogue.
Why in News?
- Taiwan Travelogue by Taiwanese author Yang Shuang-zi, translated by Taiwanese-American Lin King, won the 2026 International Booker Prize.
- This is the first novel translated from Mandarin Chinese to win this prestigious award.
About the Winning Book: Taiwan Travelogue
- Author: Yang Shuang-zi (Taiwan)
- Translator: Lin King (Taiwanese-American)
- Original Language: Mandarin Chinese
Plot
- Set in 1930s Taiwan (under Japanese rule)
- Follows a fictional Japanese writer, Aoyama Chizuko, on a government-sponsored culinary tour of Taiwan
- She is accompanied by a Taiwanese translator, O Chizuru, whom she falls in love with
- Explores themes of: love, culture, colonial history, power, food, and adventure
Unique Format
- Elaborately framed as the translation of a rediscovered travel memoir
- Includes fictional footnotes – many readers initially thought it was a genuine historic text
Previous Accolades
- Golden Tripod Award (Taiwan’s highest literary honour) – 2021 (original Mandarin version)
- National Book Award for Translated Literature (US) – 2024 (English translation)
About the International Booker Prize
Establishment
- Established in 2005 as the Man Booker International Prize
- Renamed to International Booker Prize in 2019
Purpose
- Celebrates the best works of long-form fiction or collections of short stories translated into English and published in the UK and/or Ireland
- Aims to encourage reading of quality fiction from all over the world
Prize Money
- £50,000 (approx. $67,000) – split equally between author and translator
- Shortlisted authors and translators each receive £2,500
Key Feature
- Recognises the vital work of translators – unique among major literary prizes
Indian Winners of International Booker Prize
| Year | Winner | Language | Translator |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Geetanjali Shree – Tomb of Sand | Hindi | Daisy Rockwell |
| 2025 | Banu Mushtaq – Heart Lamp | Kannada | Deepa Bhasthi |
Significance
- Tomb of Sand (2022) was the first Hindi work to win the prize
- Heart Lamp (2025) was the first Kannada work to win the prize
Key Terms for Prelims
- International Booker Prize: Annual literary award for translated fiction (established 2005)
- Taiwan Travelogue: 2026 winning book by Yang Shuang-zi, translated by Lin King
- Golden Tripod Award: Taiwan’s highest literary honour
- National Book Award for Translated Literature: US literary award (2024 winner)
- Geetanjali Shree: First Indian winner (2022) – Tomb of Sand (Hindi)
- Banu Mushtaq: Second Indian winner (2025) – Heart Lamp (Kannada)
- Lin King: First translator of Mandarin Chinese work to win the prize
- Man Booker International Prize: Original name (2005-2018)
Possible Prelims MCQs
Q1: The 2026 International Booker Prize was won by which book?
- Taiwan Travelogue
Q2: Taiwan Travelogue is the first novel translated from which language to win the International Booker Prize?
- Mandarin Chinese
Q3: Who translated the 2026 winning book Taiwan Travelogue?
- Lin King
Q4: Which Indian language work won the International Booker Prize in 2025?
- Kannada – Heart Lamp
Q5: What is the total prize money for the International Booker Prize?
- £50,000
Q6: The International Booker Prize prize money is split equally between:
- Author and translator
Source/Reference:
Subject: Environment – Wildlife Conservation; Tiger Reserves; Project Tiger; NTCA; Canine Distemper Virus.
Why in News?
- A six-year-old male tiger was found dead in Kanha Tiger Reserve (KTR) on May 19, 2026 – the sixth tiger death within a month due to suspected Canine Distemper Virus (CDV)
About Canine Distemper Virus (CDV)
What is CDV?
- Highly contagious viral disease affecting dogs and wild carnivores (tigers, lions, leopards, wolves, jackals)
- Spreads through direct contact with infected animals or their body fluids (saliva, urine, feces)
- Also spreads through aerosol droplets (coughing, sneezing)
- Not transmissible to humans
Symptoms in Tigers
- Respiratory distress, fever, pneumonia
- Neurological signs (seizures, paralysis)
- Suppressed immunity leading to secondary infections
- Often fatal in wild big cats
Transmission to Wild Cats
- Infected stray/domestic dogs roaming in or near forest areas
- Tigers contract virus by killing and eating infected dogs, or through direct contact
Precautionary Measures Taken
- Water body near which tiger was found – contained and disinfected with bleach and lime
- Animal’s scat and food leftovers – burnt to prevent contact with other animals
- Rabies and CDV vaccination drive for dogs in core and buffer areas underway
Concern
- Authorities had earlier claimed the virus was contained after the Sarhi range deaths
- Death in Mukki range suggests the virus may be spreading across the Reserve
About Kanha Tiger Reserve
- Location: Mandla and Balaghat districts, Madhya Pradesh
- Established: 1973 under Project Tiger
- Area: Core ~940 sq km; Total (with buffer) ~2,050 sq km
- Famous for: Barasingha (Swamp Deer) – last refuge in India; inspiration for Rudyard Kipling’s “The Jungle Book”
Key Terms for Prelims
- Canine Distemper Virus (CDV): Viral disease affecting dogs and wild carnivores; not transmissible to humans
- Kanha Tiger Reserve: Tiger reserve in MP; Project Tiger (1973)
- NTCA: National Tiger Conservation Authority – statutory body under MoEFCC
- SWFH Jabalpur: School of Wildlife Forensic and Health – forensic laboratory for wildlife cases
- Barasingha (Rucervus duvaucelii): Swamp deer; Kanha is its last refuge in India
- Sarhi range: Location of first five tiger deaths (April 2026)
- Mukki range: Location of sixth tiger death (May 19, 2026)
- Project Tiger: Centrally sponsored scheme launched in 1973 for tiger conservation
Possible Prelims MCQs
Q1: The recent tiger deaths in Kanha Tiger Reserve (April-May 2026) are suspected to be caused by:
- Canine Distemper Virus (CDV)
Q2: The School of Wildlife Forensic and Health (SWFH) that confirmed CDV as the cause of death is located in:
- Jabalpur
Q3: Which species of deer has its last refuge in Kanha Tiger Reserve?
- Barasingha (Swamp Deer)
Q4: The first five tiger deaths in Kanha occurred in which range?
- Sarhi range
Q5: Project Tiger was launched in which year?
- 1973
Source/Reference:
Subject: Social Justice – Women Empowerment; Economy – Rural Livelihoods; SHGs; DAY-NRLM; Lakhpati Didi; Budget 2026-27.
Why in News?
- The Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD) has initiated a nationwide roadmap for the creation of women-led rural marketing ecosystems through the SHE-MART initiative.
- Announced in the Union Budget 2026-27, it aims to establish community-owned retail outlets for women self-help groups (SHGs).
What is SHE-MART?
- Full Form: Self Help Entrepreneurs – Marketing Avenues for Rural Transformation
- Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development
- Implementation: Under Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM)
Target Beneficiaries
- Women entrepreneurs running home-based or micro businesses
- Active members of registered SHGs
- Rural micro-enterprises
- Women-led cooperatives
- Women in agricultural and allied sectors (handicrafts, textiles, food processing)
- First-time women entrepreneurs
Key Objectives
- Provide direct market access for SHG products
- Help women reach larger markets and build brands
- Provide greater control over markets and branding
- Strengthen grassroots institutions like SHGs
- Support sustainable income generation
- Promote inclusive economic growth
Key Features
Community-Owned Retail Outlets
- Retail outlets owned and managed by local women’s groups within cluster-level federations
- Ensures community control and ownership
Direct Market Access
- Structured retail platforms for women entrepreneurs to sell products
- Access formal markets without intermediaries (eliminates middlemen)
Permanent Infrastructure
- Permanent retail points for SHG-made goods
- Value-added product support for sustainable business operations
Empowerment
- Greater control over markets, branding, and sustainable income generation
- Moves women from income generation to enterprise ownership
Link with Lakhpati Didi
- Next step after Lakhpati Didi programme
- Helps women transition from earners to enterprise owners
- Builds on existing success of SHG movement
Products to be Supported
- Handicrafts
- Textiles
- Food products
- Agricultural produce
- Value-added processed products
Expected Impact
- Target women beneficiaries: Over 1 crore across India
- Strengthened rural economy – enhanced local markets
- Increased financial inclusion – banking and credit access
- Women-led enterprises – business ownership growth
- Multiplier effects on household income, education, healthcare, and community development
Key Terms for Prelims
- SHE-MART: Self Help Entrepreneurs – Marketing Avenues for Rural Transformation
- DAY-NRLM: Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (implementing agency)
- Lakhpati Didi: Government scheme to help SHG members earn annual income of ₹1 lakh+
- Cluster-level federation: Group of SHGs at cluster level (10-20 villages)
- Community-owned retail outlets: Retail stores owned and managed by local women’s groups
- Direct Market Access: Selling directly to consumers without intermediaries
- Value-added processed products: Products that have undergone processing to increase value (e.g., pickles, spices, packaged foods)
Possible Prelims MCQs
Q1: SHE-MART initiative is being implemented under which scheme?
- Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM)
Q2: What is the full form of SHE-MART?
- Self Help Entrepreneurs – Marketing Avenues for Rural Transformation
Q3: SHE-MART is announced in which Union Budget?
- 2026-27
Q4: Which ministry is the nodal ministry for the SHE-MART initiative?
- Ministry of Rural Development
Q5: SHE-MART is positioned as the next step after which existing government scheme?
- Lakhpati Didi
Q6: What is the target number of women beneficiaries under the SHE-MART initiative?
- 1 crore
Q7: Which type of retail outlets are established under SHE-MART?
- Community-owned retail outlets within cluster-level federations
Q8: Lakhpati Didi scheme helps SHG members achieve annual income of:
- ₹1 lakh+
Source/Reference:
Subject: Science & Tech – Space Exploration; Solar Wind; Planetary Magnetospheres; MAVEN Mission; Mars Atmosphere.
Why in News?
- NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft detected the Zwan-Wolf effect in the ionosphere of Mars – the first time this phenomenon has been observed in a planet’s atmosphere rather than its magnetosphere.
- The findings were published in the journal Nature Communications (May 2026) by researchers from France, the UK, and the US.
What is the Zwan-Wolf Effect?
Definition
- A process where charged particles are squeezed along magnetic structures known as flux tubes.
- Discovered in 1976 – previously observed only in planetary magnetospheres (not atmospheres).
How it Happens
- The solar wind (stream of charged particles from the Sun) nears the magnetic field of a planet.
- It becomes compressed near magnetic boundaries.
- This creates a pressure gradient that squeezes charged particles along the magnetic field, away from the stream.
- Result: an area with lower density of charged particles closer to the stream.
On Earth
- This mechanism deflects much of the solar wind and protects us from the Sun’s constant bombardment.
Discovery at Mars
Why Mars is Different
- Mars lacks a strong, global magnetic field (unlike Earth).
- Scientists previously believed such magnetic phenomena could not occur in Mars’s atmosphere.
Detection (December 2023)
- MAVEN recorded data during a powerful solar storm – a coronal mass ejection (CME) struck Mars.
- The event created intense magnetic structures in Mars’s magnetic field that moved downwards into the planet’s ionosphere (below 200 km altitude).
- These structures squeezed charged particles in the ionosphere towards the planet’s unlit side.
- Result: Local density of charged particles reduced by approximately 50%.
Key Finding
- The Zwan-Wolf effect is likely continuously active at Mars but too weak to be detectable most of the time.
- Even “unmagnetised” planets like Mars can experience complex magnetic phenomena.
About MAVEN Spacecraft
Full Form: Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN
Launch: November 2013
Arrival at Mars: September 2014
Mission Objective
- First spacecraft mission dedicated to surveying the upper atmosphere of Mars.
- Part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program.
- Aims to understand the role that loss of atmospheric gas to space played in changing the Martian climate over time.
Key Finding (Prior)
- Mars lost about two-thirds of its early atmosphere to space.
Instrument Packages
- Package 1: Studies the solar wind and its impact on Mars’s ionosphere (Mars has no magnetic field, so atmosphere is slowly removed by solar wind interaction)
- Package 2: Ultraviolet spectrometer – studies the upper atmosphere
- Package 3: Mass spectrometer – studies the composition of the upper atmosphere
Key Terms for Prelims
- Zwan-Wolf Effect: Squeezing of charged particles along magnetic flux tubes; creates low-density regions
- Solar Wind: Stream of charged particles flowing outward from the Sun
- Flux Tubes: Magnetic structures along which charged particles are channeled
- Ionosphere: Layer of Earth’s (or planet’s) atmosphere containing significant numbers of electrically charged particles (ions and electrons)
- Coronal Mass Ejection (CME): Powerful solar storm; large ejection of plasma and magnetic field from the Sun’s corona
- Magnetosphere: Region around a planet dominated by its magnetic field
- MAVEN: Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN – NASA orbiter mission (2013)
- NASA’s Mars Exploration Program: Long-term robotic exploration of Mars
Possible Prelims MCQs
Q1: The Zwan-Wolf effect, recently detected on Mars by NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft, is a process where charged particles are squeezed along:
- Magnetic flux tubes
Q2: The Zwan-Wolf effect was first discovered in which year?
- 1976
Q3: On Earth, the mechanism that deflects much of the solar wind and protects us from constant bombardment is related to:
- Global magnetic field (magnetosphere)
Q4: What percentage of charged particle density reduction was observed during the Zwan-Wolf effect detection on Mars?
- 50%
Q5: MAVEN spacecraft is part of which space agency’s Mars Exploration Program?
- NASA
Source/Reference:
(MAINS Focus)
GS Paper II – Governance (Education) | GS Paper I – Society | GS Paper IV – Ethics
National Education Policy (NEP) 2020; Multidisciplinary Learning; Liberal Arts; STEM vs. Humanities
Introduction
AI is reshaping higher education, making the NEP’s emphasis on multidisciplinary and flexible learning more relevant than ever. In the age of intelligent machines, universities must go beyond narrow specialisation and nurture critical thinking, creativity, and the ability to ask meaningful questions — strengths that remain uniquely human.
Main Body
Reason One: Judgement Over Information
The AI Capability:
- AI can process massive amounts of data at speeds no human can match.
- AI can write essays, create computer programs, identify trends, and engage in convincing conversation.
- AI is dangerously masquerading as truth.
The Human Imperative:
- Nothing can substitute judgement informed by history, ethics, culture, and politics.
- The more sophisticated machines become, the more precious distinctly human capacities will grow.
Reason Two: Future Problems Are Not Neatly Labelled
The False Binary:
- Debates about liberal arts versus STEM are based on a false binary.
- The biggest challenge is whether India can do both.
What the Best Engineers Need:
- Insights from History, Political Science, and Ethics to solve future problems.
- Social science to build humane technology.
What India Needs:
- Economists who can speak knowledgeably about climate change and behavioural science.
- In the age of AI, disciplinary silos will hinder those who work within them.
NEP’s Relevance:
- The NEP’s stress on multidisciplinary and holistic education is welcome.
Reason Three: Liberal Arts Matter for Democracy
What Democracies Need:
- Citizens who can think critically, engage in civil disagreement, and have some understanding of the past.
The Danger of Market-Driven Priorities:
- When markets determine educational priorities, the social value of learning can easily be reduced to its immediate monetary value.
- History, Philosophy, Anthropology, and Political Theory will always seem less important than degrees with easy job placements.
- Democracies that stop valuing these subjects will do so at their own peril.
The Purpose of Universities:
- Universities are more than employment facilitation or placement centres.
- JNU was imagined almost as an intellectual republic: students from every corner of India introduced to new ideas that helped them see beyond their backgrounds.
- Universities play an important role in nurturing democratic citizenship and values.
Private Universities’ Role:
- Shiv Nadar, Ahmedabad University, Ashoka – several private institutions have pioneered serious investments in liberal-arts education and interdisciplinary programmes.
- India needs both private and public universities.
- But if market forces alone dictate the purpose of a university, certain areas of study will naturally be privileged over others.
Reason Four: Resilience
The Changing Landscape:
- Coding languages and technical skills change every few years.
- What employers look for changes.
What Will Not Change:
- The ability to think critically, communicate effectively, and relate to others.
- As AI takes over more blue-collar and white-collar jobs, human skills will need to become more human.
Liberal Arts’ Unique Position:
- Liberal-arts degrees are uniquely positioned to provide that education.
- At JNU’s School of International Studies, International Relations is being reshaped by tech: climate change, cybersecurity, big data, and disinformation aren’t just “topics” – they will define opportunities and challenges for the next generation of global leaders.
- We must train students who are tech-savvy, historically literate, ethically mindful, and globally literate.
Reason Five: Civilisational
India’s Intellectual Traditions:
- India’s own intellectual traditions never viewed knowledge as fragmented into isolated disciplines.
- There was no divide between Philosophy and Politics, Economics and Ethics, or even Literature and public service.
- Education was seen as a cohesive whole.
NEP’s Recognition:
- India’s strengths in the modern knowledge economy are tied to a return to this interdisciplinary approach.
- The NEP mirrors a growing recognition that Indian traditions of knowledge are no longer compartmentalised.
The Historic Opportunity
What Higher Education Must Do:
- More than create workers.
- Help us become better human beings.
India’s Opportunity:
- If implemented with care and seriousness, the NEP has the potential to help India educate a generation that is technologically literate and democratically mindful.
- That will make India not just a stronger knowledge economy but a stronger democracy.
The Ultimate Challenge of AI:
- Not technological, it is human.
- Machines may increasingly answer questions.
- Universities must still teach which questions are worth asking.
Challenges:
- Market forces favour STEM degrees with immediate job placement.
- Private universities have pioneered liberal arts, but public universities lag due to funding constraints.
- JNU’s model is not easily replicable across 1,000+ universities.
- NEP implementation is uneven across states and institutions.
The Core Reality:
- The age of AI has finally exposed the poverty of thinking that dismisses liberal arts as economically dispensable.
- The more sophisticated machines become, the more precious distinctly human capacities will grow.
- The ultimate challenge posed by AI is not technological – it is human.
Conclusion
In the age of AI, liberal-arts education matters more than ever. While AI can process information, human judgement rooted in history, ethics, culture, and critical thinking remains irreplaceable. Future challenges will demand multidisciplinary understanding, not narrow specialisation. Democracies need thoughtful citizens, and universities must nurture creativity, communication, empathy, and the ability to ask meaningful questions — strengths machines cannot replicate.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- In the age of AI, critically examine the relevance of liberal-arts education under NEP 2020 for harnessing India’s demographic dividend. (150 words, 10 marks)
GS Paper I – Society (Social Issues) | GS Paper II – Social Justice (Health) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Mental Health Stigma; Celebrity Influence; Ethical Advertising; Social Responsibility
Introduction
A recent cement advertisement trivialises mental illness by portraying it as entertainment, reinforcing harmful stereotypes and deepening social stigma. In a country already burdened by rising depression, anxiety, and suicides, such portrayals discourage people from seeking help. A truly compassionate society is measured by how it treats its most vulnerable citizens.
Main Body
The Advertisement: What It Got Wrong
The Imagery:
- Actor locked in a bare room, speaking incoherently, behaving irrationally.
- Ends with the actor as a doctor, reassuring that the person cannot escape because the room is built with strong cement.
The Harmful Messages:
- Mental illness is a spectacle for entertainment.
- Behaviour associated with psychological distress is caricatured and presented as comedy.
- People with mental-health conditions should be confined (segregation, not treatment).
The Darker History:
- The imagery is impossible to separate from a darker history of mental-health treatment.
- When people with psychiatric conditions were deprived of basic human dignity.
The Emphasis Today:
- Treatment, inclusion, community support, rehabilitation – not segregation.
India’s Mental Health Burden and Access Gaps
The Burden:
- Enormous burden of depression, anxiety, and suicide.
- Social and psychological stresses have intensified in recent years.
Access Gaps:
- Severe shortages of psychiatrists, psychologists, and community-support systems.
- Mental-health services remain inadequate.
Social Stigma:
- Remains a big barrier preventing people from seeking help.
- Families hide mental illness.
- Young people hesitate to speak openly about depression or anxiety.
The Advertisement’s Impact:
- Using mental illness as comic relief only deepens prejudice.
Corporate Social Responsibility and Advertising Ethics
What Companies Speak About:
- Inclusion, diversity, ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) commitments.
- Social responsibility.
- Campaigns related to gender equality, disability rights, and social inclusion.
The Contradiction:
- A corporation cannot claim commitment to social responsibility while its advertisements mock vulnerable individuals.
- Mental health deserves the same sensitivity as other social issues.
The Need for Introspection:
- India’s advertising industry needs serious introspection about ethical boundaries and social responsibility.
- Humour has a place in advertising, but humour that humiliates is neither clever nor harmless.
The Role of Celebrities: Influence and Responsibility
The Problem:
- Public figures wield enormous influence, particularly among younger audiences.
- When they endorse content that demeans mental illness, it normalises prejudice.
- Undermines years of work by professionals and civil-society organisations.
The Constructive Role (Counter-Example):
- Celebrities such as Deepika Padukone have spoken openly about their struggles with depression.
- Others from cinema, sports, and media have encouraged people to seek support without shame or fear.
- These efforts have contributed significantly to reducing stigma, especially among younger Indians.
The Responsibility:
- Precisely because celebrities possess such influence, they must recognise that the messages they endorse carry wider social consequences.
- Creative freedom cannot become an excuse for demeaning vulnerable groups.
The Ethical Framework
A Compassionate Society:
- Judged not by how it treats the powerful but by how it treats the vulnerable.
Mental Illness:
- A human condition deserving understanding, care, and dignity.
What Is Needed:
- Sensitivity in advertising and media representation.
- Responsible celebrity endorsement.
- Continued efforts to reduce stigma through open conversation (Padukone model).
- Improved access to mental-health services (psychiatrists, psychologists, community support).
Conclusion
A recent advertisement trivialising mental illness reinforces harmful stereotypes of ridicule and confinement, undermining modern values of treatment, inclusion, and dignity. In India, where depression, anxiety, and suicide already face stigma and inadequate mental-health support, such portrayals are deeply irresponsible. Companies and celebrities must recognise their social influence and promote empathy, not prejudice, towards vulnerable individuals.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
- Critically examine the role of advertisements and celebrity endorsements in reinforcing or reducing mental health stigma in India. What ethical responsibilities do corporations and public figures bear in this regard? (250 words, 15 marks)







