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Disasters and Disaster Management – Sendai Framework, Floods, Cyclones, etc.

In news: Mauritius Oil Spill

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Mauritius oil spill

Mains level: Chemical disasters these days

A Japanese ship recently struck a coral reef resulting in an oil spill of over 1,000 tonnes into the Indian Ocean near Mauritius.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Recently, “oil zapper’’ was in the news. What is it? (CSP 2011)

(a) It is an eco-friendly technology for the remediation of oily sludge and oil spills.

(b) It is the latest technology developed for undersea oil exploration.

(c) It is a genetically engineered high biofuel-yielding maize variety.

(d) It is the latest technology to control the accidentally caused flames from oil wells.

What caused the Mauritius oil spill?

  • A Japanese vessel struck a coral reef resulting in an oil spill of over 1,000 tonnes into the Indian Ocean.
  • The ship was carrying an estimated 4,000 tonnes of oil.
  • The accident had taken place near two environmentally protected marine ecosystems and the Blue Bay Marine Park Reserve, which is a wetland of international importance.

How dangerous are oil spills?

  • Oil spills affect marine life by exposing them to harsh elements and destroying their sources of food and habitat.
  • Further, both birds and mammals can die from hypothermia as a result of oil spills.
  • For instance, oil destroys the insulating ability of fur-bearing mammals, such as sea otters.
  • It also decreases the water repellency of birds’ feathers, without which they lose their ability to repel cold water.

Some major incidents

  • Some of the world’s largest oil spills include the Persian Gulf War oil spill of 1991 when more than 380 million gallons of oil was poured into the northern Persian Gulf by Iraq’s forces.
  • The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is also considered to be among the largest known accidental oil spills in history.
  • Starting April 20, 2010, over 4 million barrels of oil flowed over a period of 87 days into the Gulf of Mexico.

How is the oil spill cleaned?

  • There are a few ways to clean up oil spills including skimming, in situ burning and by releasing chemical dispersants.
  • Skimming involves removing oil from the sea surface before it is able to reach the sensitive areas along the coastline.
  • In situ burning means burning a particular patch of oil after it has concentrated in one area.
  • Releasing chemical dispersants helps break down oil into smaller droplets, making it easier for microbes to consume, and further break it down into less harmful compounds.
  • Natural actions in aquatic environments such as weathering, evaporation, emulsification, biodegradation and oxidation can also accelerate the recovery of an affected area. But these occur differently in freshwater and marine environments.

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ISRO Missions and Discoveries

[pib] Sarabhai Crater

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sarabhai Crater

Mains level: Chandrayaan 2 Mission

The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has named a crater captured by Chandrayaan 2 Orbiter after Vikram Sarabhai.

Try this PYQ:

What do you understand by the term Aitken Basin? (CSP 2012)

(a) It is a desert in southern Chile which is known to be the only location on earth where no rainfall takes place

(b) It is an impact crater on the far side of the Moon

(c) It is a Pacific coast basin, which is known to house large amounts of oil and gas

(d) It is a deep hypersaline anoxic basin where no aquatic animals are found

Sarabhai Crater

  • “Sarabhai” Crater is named after Dr Vikram Sarabhai and around 250 to 300 kilometres east of this Crater is where the Apollo 17 and Luna 21 Missions had landed.
  • The crater captured in 3D images shows that the Crater has a depth of around 1.7 Kms taken from its raised rim and the slope of Crater walls is in between 25 to 35 degree.
  • These findings will help the Space Scientists to understand further the process of the lunar region filled with lava.

Who was Vikram Sarabhai?

  • Sarabhai was an Indian physicist and astronomer who initiated space research and helped develop nuclear power in India.
  • He is internationally regarded as the Father of the Indian Space Program.
  • Known as the cradle of space sciences in India, the Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) was founded in 1947 by him. He was the founder of ISRO.
  • He started a project for the fabrication and launch of an Indian satellite.
  • As a result, the first Indian satellite, Aryabhata, was put in orbit in 1975 from a Russian cosmodrome.

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Forest Conservation Efforts – NFP, Western Ghats, etc.

Myth of the pristine forest

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Critical Wildlife Habitat (CHW) under FRA

Mains level: Forest dwellers role in its conservation

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has driven migrant workers back to their villages, including many situated inside or on the fringes of forested areas, including sanctuaries and national parks.
  • Even as they seek to remake livelihoods there, a new battle has emerged between the forest department (FD) and these local communities.
  • It pertains to the declaration of a Critical Wildlife Habitat (CWH), which a PIL in the Bombay High Court seeks to get the department to urgently notify.

Try this question for mains:

Forest dwellers are integral to the very survival and sustainability of the forest ecosystem. Analyse.

What is Critical Wildlife Habitat (CHW)?

  • CWH is a provision under the Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA).
  • The Act primarily focuses on recognising the historically-denied rights of forest-dwellers to use and manage forests.
  • The CWH provision, however, is an attempt to assuage concerns of wildlife conservationists.
  • It allows for the possibility that in protected areas (PAs) — wildlife sanctuaries and national parks — these rights could be attenuated, and, if absolutely necessary, forest-dwellers could be relocated in the interest of wildlife conservation.

Forest dwellers vs. Wildlife

  • Conservationists believe that wildlife needs absolutely “inviolate” areas — those devoid of humans and human activities.
  • Many others believe human-wildlife co-existence is generally possible and must be promoted if we are to have “socially just conservation”.

Achieving balanced conservation: The FRA provisions

  • A careful reading of the CWH provisions in the FRA shows that it is open to both possibilities, as long as they are arrived at through a rigorous and participatory process.
  • It requires setting up a multi-disciplinary expert committee, including representatives from local communities.
  • It also requires determining — using “scientific and objective criteria” and consultative processes — whether, and wherein the PA, the exercise of forest rights will cause irreversible damages.
  • It then requires determining whether coexistence is possible through a modified set of rights or management practices.
  • Only if the multi-stakeholder expert committee agrees that co-existence or other reasonable options are not possible, should relocation be taken up, again with the informed consent of the concerned gram sabhas.
  • For any such process to commence, the Act requires that all forest rights under the FRA must first be recognised.

Issues with the FRA

(1) Concerns of eviction

  • Hardline conservationists took FRA as a great opportunity to complete its agenda of evicting forest-dwellers from PAs.
  • It has been observed that many villages were resettled when they had rights claims pending, others had their claims illegally rejected or incompletely granted, and several had not even applied to this controversy erupted.
  • However, there are settlements in some of these PAs, and of course, people in villages adjacent to all the PAs are likely to have customary rights.
  • In spite of the court ordering rapid completion of the rights recognition process, there has been almost no progress on this front.

(2) Issues with expert committees

  • The constitution of the expert committees is faulty. They do not contain expert social scientists familiar with the area. Wildlife enthusiasts are sometimes substituted for experts in life sciences.
  • Many members have challenged the very constitutionality of the FRA, making a travesty of the idea of “objectivity” in the process.

(3) Criteria judging the damages

  • The criteria being used by the committees to determine the threat of “irreversible damage” to wildlife are quite extreme and are not supported by any consensus even among ecologists.
  • There are no objective criteria decided yet by these committees.

Conclusion

  • The FRA begins by recognising that forest dwellers “are integral to the very survival and sustainability of the forest ecosystem”.
  • In that context, the CWH provision should not be seen as simply a tool for evicting forest-dwellers to create so-called “inviolate” spaces.
  • It is an opportunity to rigorously and participatorily explore all avenues of co-existence.
  • Such co-existence is indeed possible. In general, forest-dwellers harbour both the knowledge and the attitudes needed for conservation.
  • Co-managing PAs is, therefore, the most effective and socially just long-term solution, and relocation should be seen as the absolute last resort.

B2BASICS

Forest Rights act

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Citizenship and Related Issues

Census 2021 and the long-pending reforms

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Census of India

Mains level: Need for reforms in Census and Surveying

  • In all likelihood, the February 2021 Census will have to be rescheduled to ensure comparability with earlier censuses.
  • This will also affect the National Sample Surveys and others that use the census as the sampling frame.
  • The delay can, however, be used to introduce much-needed reforms to this gigantic exercise whose roots go back to the late 19th century.

Try this question for mains:

Q.The Census of India needs a basic overhaul beyond its procedural digitization. Critically analyse.

Background: Census of India

  • The decennial Census of India has been conducted 15 times, as of 2011.
  • While it has been undertaken every 10 years, beginning in 1872 under British Viceroy Lord Mayo, the first complete census was taken in 1881.
  • Post-1949, it has been conducted by the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India under the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India.
  • All the censuses since 1951 were conducted under the 1948 Census of India Act.
  • The last census was held in 2011, whilst the next will be held in 2021.

Census 2021

  • The Census 2021 will be conducted in 18 languages out of the 22 scheduled languages (under 8th schedule) and English, while Census 2011 was in 16 of the 22 scheduled languages declared at that time.
  • It also will introduce a code directory to streamline the process
  • The option of “Other” under the gender category will be changed to “Third Gender”.
  • There were roughly 5 lakh people under “other” category in 2011.
  • For the first time in the 140 year history of the census in India, data is proposed to be collected through a mobile app by enumerators and they will receive an additional payment as an incentive.
  • The Census data would be available by the year 2024-25 as the entire process would be conducted digitally and data crunching would be quicker.

Issues with the Census

(1) Data quality issues

  • The past four decades have seen a decline in the quality of data and growing delays in its release despite technological innovations.
  • The use of census data in delimitation and federal redistribution has been questioned on grounds of poor quality, while the Covid-19 pandemic revealed the obsolete and poor quality of data on internal migration.

(2) No major reforms

  • The legal foundation of the census has remained largely unchanged since newly independent India enacted permanent census legislation in 1948.
  • Despite sustained problems, the census has not seen any major reform after 1994 when both the Census Act, 1948 and Census Rules, 1990 were amended.

(3) Old methods and questionnaire

  • The methodological core – extended de facto (synchronous) canvasser-based enumeration – too has remained intact even though the length and layout of schedules changed quite a bit.
  • The Household Schedule, for instance, grew with the footprint of the state, from 14 questions in 1951 to 29 questions in 2011.

(4) Workforce issues

  • Data collection has not kept pace with improvements in data processing technology due to the lack of motivated and adequately trained enumerators.
  • Given the high salaries of school teachers, the modest honorarium paid for census work does not cover the opportunity cost of conducting the door-to-door enumeration.

Understand the ‘purpose’ of the census

Reforms should begin with the design of schedules based on a clear understanding of two essential functions of the census:

(a) Resource allocations

  • First, census facilitates the rule-based distribution of power and resources through constitutionally mandated redistribution of taxes, delimitation of electoral constituencies and affirmative action policies.
  • It is also used in routine policy-making across tiers of government.

(b) Population projections

  • Second, census serves as the sampling frame for surveys and is also the basis of population projections.
  • Other routine policies require distribution of the headcount by households, marital status, age, sex, literacy, migrant status, and mother tongue.
  • Put together, these variables are sufficient for choosing representative samples for surveys.

What can be done?

1.Cut the questions

  • Nearly half of the ‘Houselisting and Housing Schedule’ of the census is devoted to questions on household amenities and assets.
  • These questions can be dropped because the information can be more appropriately collected through sample surveys and administrative statistics.

Why put fewer questions?

  • Cutting down the length of unwieldy schedules has several advantages.
  • First, it will improve data quality by reducing the workload of enumerators.
  • Second, it will also free up senior census officials and help revive the earlier tradition of producing detailed administrative and other reports crucial for understanding the context of data.
  • Third, shorter schedules will seem less invasive and assure respondents uncomfortable with sharing too many details.
  • Fourth, it will cut down processing time and help in reducing delays in the release of data.

2.Dealing with data manipulation

  • There is poor accounting of migrants that distorts estimates of urbanisation as well as the inter-state distribution of the population.
  • There exists grassroots manipulation of data-driven by political and economic considerations.
  • There is a need to demystify census operations and build trust in the impartiality of the exercise, better scrutiny of electoral records and welfare schemes to weed out bogus beneficiaries.

Conclusion

  • These reforms are essential to ensure that the census exercise is able to fulfil its constitutional, policy and statistical obligations and also clear the ground for debates on the future of census in the digital era.

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The Crisis In The Middle East

UAE, Israel reach agreement to establish diplomatic ties

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: West Bank and its location

Mains level: Israeli claims over West Bank and Gaza

The United Arab Emirates and Israel have agreed to establish full diplomatic ties as part of a deal to halt the annexation of occupied land sought by the Palestinians for their future state.

What is the deal?

  • The deal halts Israeli annexation plans, the Palestinians have repeatedly urged Arab governments not to normalize ties with Israel until a peace agreement establishing an independent Palestinian state is reached.

Significance

  • The announcement makes the UAE the first Gulf Arab state to do so and only the third Arab nation to have active diplomatic ties to Israel.
  • For Israel, the announcement comes after years of boasting by Israeli PM Netanyahu that his government enjoys closer ties to Arab nations than publicly acknowledged.

West Bank  and its annexation plan

  • The West Bank is located to the west of the Jordan River.
  • It is a patch of land about one and a half times the size of Goa, was captured by Jordan after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
  • Israel snatched it back during the Six-Day War of 1967 and has occupied it ever since.
  • It is a landlocked territory, bordered by Jordan to the east and Israel to the south, west, and north.
  • Following the Oslo Accords between the Israeli government and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) during the 1990s, part of the West Bank came under the control of the Palestinian Authority.
  • With varying levels of autonomy, the Palestinian Authority controls close to 40 per cent of West Bank today, while the rest is controlled by Israel.

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North-East India – Security and Developmental Issues

Sixth Schedule of Indian Constitution

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sixth Schedule

Mains level: Special provisions for North-east India

The revival of the demand for two autonomous councils has made political parties and community-based groups call for bringing the entire Arunachal Pradesh under the ambit of the Sixth Schedule or Article 371 (A) of the Constitution.

Try this question from CSP 2015:

Q.The provisions in Fifth Schedule and Sixth Schedule in the Constitution of India are made in order to-

(a) protect the interests of Scheduled Tribes

(b) determine the boundaries between States

(c) determine the powers, authority and responsibilities of Panchayats

(d) protect the interests of all the border States

What is the Sixth Schedule?

  • The Sixth Schedule consists of provisions for the administration of tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram, according to Article 244 of the Indian Constitution.
  • Passed by the Constituent Assembly in 1949, it seeks to safeguard the rights of the tribal population through the formation of Autonomous District Councils (ADC).
  • ADCs are bodies representing a district to which the Constitution has given varying degrees of autonomy within the state legislature.
  • The governors of these states are empowered to reorganize boundaries of the tribal areas.
  • In simpler terms, she or he can choose to include or exclude any area, increase or decrease the boundaries and unite two or more autonomous districts into one.
  • They can also alter or change the names of autonomous regions without separate legislation.

Autonomous districts and regional councils

  • The ADCs are empowered with civil and judicial powers can constitute village courts within their jurisdiction to hear the trial of cases involving the tribes.
  • Governors of states that fall under the Sixth Schedule specify the jurisdiction of high courts for each of these cases.
  • Along with ADCs, the Sixth Schedule also provides for separate Regional Councils for each area constituted as an autonomous region.
  • In all, there are 10 areas in the Northeast that are registered as autonomous districts – three in Assam, Meghalaya and Mizoram and one in Tripura.
  • These regions are named as district council of (name of district) and regional council of (name of region).
  • Each autonomous district and regional council consists of not more than 30 members, of which four are nominated by the governor and the rest via elections. All of them remain in power for a term of five years.

B2BASICS

Try this question from AWE Initiative:

The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution is often referred to as a charter for autonomy of a wide magnitude, but it has failed to decrease the tension between different stakeholders at the ground level. Elaborate. (150 W/ 10 M)

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Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

Story of our National Flag

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: National flag

Mains level: NA

The final design of the Indian National Flag, hoisted by PM Nehru on August 16, 1947, at Red Fort, had a history of several decades preceding independence.

Note various personalities involved in the development of our National flag. It may be no wonder to accept a personality-based question on such topics.

Story of our National Flag: A timeline

(1) Public display for first time

  • Arguably the first national flag of India is said to have been hoisted on August 7, 1906, in Kolkata at the Parsee Bagan Square (Green Park).
  • It comprised three horizontal stripes of red, yellow and green, with Vande Mataram written in the middle.
  • Believed to have been designed by freedom activists Sachindra Prasad Bose and Hemchandra Kanungo, the red stripe on the flag had symbols of the sun and a crescent moon, and the green strip had eight half-open lotuses.

(2) In Germany

  • In 1907, Madame Cama and her group of exiled revolutionaries hoisted an Indian flag in Germany in 1907 — this was the first Indian flag to be hoisted in a foreign land.

(3) During the Home Rule Movement

  • In 1917, Dr Annie Besant and Lokmanya Tilak adopted a new flag as part of the Home Rule Movement.
  • It had five alternate red and four green horizontal stripes, and seven stars in the saptarishi configuration.
  • A white crescent and star occupied one top corner, and the other had Union Jack.

(4) Final version by Pingali Venkayya

  • The design of the present-day Indian tricolour is largely attributed to Pingali Venkayya, an Indian freedom fighter.
  • He reportedly first met Mahatma Gandhi in South Africa during the second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902), when he was posted there as part of the British Indian Army.
  • Years of research went into designing the national flag. In 1916, he even published a book with possible designs of Indian flags.
  • At the All India Congress Committee in Bezwada in 1921, Venkayya again met Gandhi and proposed a basic design of the flag, consisting of two red and green bands to symbolise the two major communities, Hindus and Muslims.

(5) During Constituent Assembly

  • On July 22, 1947, when members of the Constituent Assembly of India, the first item on the agenda was reportedly a motion by Pandit Nehru, about adopting a national flag for free India.
  • It was proposed that “the National Flag of India shall be horizontal tricolour of deep saffron (Kesari), white and dark green in equal proportion.”
  • The white band was to have a wheel in navy blue (the charkha being replaced by the chakra), which appears on the abacus of the Sarnath Lion Capital of Ashoka.

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Indian Ocean Power Competition

Greater Male Connectivity Project (GMCP)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Greater Male Connectivity Project

Mains level: India-Maldives Relations

India will fund the implementation of the Greater Male Connectivity Project (GMCP) in the Maldives with $500 mn packages.

Try this question from 2014:

Which one of the following pairs of islands is separated from each other by the ‘Ten Degree Channel’?

(a) Andaman and Nicobar

(b) Nicobar and Sumatra

(c) Maldives and Lakshadweep

(d) Sumatra and Java

About Greater Male Connectivity Project

  • The GMCP will consist of a number of bridges and causeways to connect Male to Villingili, Thilafushi and Gulhifahu islands that span 6.7 km.
  • It would ease much of the pressure of the main capital island of Male for commercial and residential purposes.
  • When completed, the project would render the Chinese built Sinamale Friendship bridge connecting Male to two other islands, thus far the most visible infrastructure project in the islands.
  • At present, India-assisted projects in the region include water and sewerage projects on 34 islands, reclamation project for the Addl island, a port on Gulhifalhu, airport redevelopment at Hanimadhoo, and a hospital and a cricket stadium in Hulhumale.

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Solar Energy – JNNSM, Solar Cities, Solar Pumps, etc.

One Sun, One World, One Grid (OSOWOG) Initiative

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: OSOWOG Initiative

Mains level: Global collaboration for Solar Energy

The Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has put calls for proposals to the One Sun, One World, and One Grid (OSOWOG) initiative on hold till further notice.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Consider the following statements:

  1. The International Solar Alliance was launched at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in 2015.
  2. The Alliance includes all the member countries of the United Nations.

Which of the above statements is/are correct? (CSP 2016)

(a) 1 only

(b) 2 only

(c) Both 1 and 2

(d) Neither 1 nor 2

OSOWOG Initiative

  • Under the project, India envisaged having an interconnected power transmission grid across nations for the supply of clean energy.
  • The vision behind the OSOWOG mantra is ‘The Sun Never Sets’ and is a constant at some geographical location, globally, at any given point of time.
  • With India at the fulcrum, the solar spectrum can easily be divided into two broad zones viz. far East which would include countries like Myanmar, Vietnam, Thailand, Lao, Cambodia etc. and far West which would cover the Middle East and the Africa Region.

Implementation

  • The OSOWOG would have three phases. In the first phase Phase I, Middle East, South Asia and South-East Asia would be interconnected.
  • In the second phase, solar and other renewable energy resources rich regions would be interconnected.
  • In the third phase would vie for global interconnection of the power transmission grid to achieve the One Sun One World One Grid vision.

Benefits of the project

  • Attracting investment: An interconnected grid would help all the participating entities in attracting investments in renewable energy sources as well as utilizing skills, technology and finances.
  • Poverty allevation: Resulting economic benefits would positively impact poverty alleviation and support in mitigating water, sanitation, food and other socio-economic challenges.
  • Reduced project cost: The proposed integration would lead to reduced project costs, higher efficiencies and increased asset utilization for all the participating entities.

Issues with project

  • It is hindered with the issues of intricate geopolitics, unfavourable economics, unwarranted globalisation and undue centralization that act against the concept.

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Capital Markets: Challenges and Developments

What is the Business Responsibility Report?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: BRR

Mains level: Not Much

In efforts to have a single source for all non-financial disclosures by corporates, a government-appointed panel has made various proposals on business responsibility reporting, including putting in place two formats for disclosing information.

Try this PYQ:

Which one of the following is not a feature of Limited Liability Partnership firm? (CSP 2010)

(a) Partners should be less than 20

(b) Partnership and management need not be separate

(c) Internal governance may be decided by mutual agreement among partners

(d) It is corporate body with perpetual succession

What is the Business Responsibility Report (BRR)?

  • Business Responsibility  Report is a disclosure of the adoption of responsible business practices by a  listed company to all its stakeholders.
  • This is important considering the fact that these companies have accessed funds from the public, have an element of public interest involved, and are obligated to make exhaustive disclosures on a regular basis.
  • BSR is to be submitted as a part of the Annual Report.
  • It contains a standardized format for companies to report the actions undertaken by them towards the adoption of responsible business practices.
  • It has been designed to provide basic information about the company, information related to its performance and processes, and information on principles and core elements of the BSR.

SEBI recommendations for BSR

  • As per the report, reporting may be done by top 1,000 listed companies in terms of their market capitalization or as prescribed by markets regulator SEBI.
  • The reporting requirement may be extended by MCA (Ministry of Corporate Affairs) to unlisted companies above specified thresholds of turnover and/ or paid-up capital.
  • The panel has suggested two formats for disclosures — a comprehensive format and a “lite version” — and also called for the implementation of the reporting requirements in a gradual and phased manner.
  • Smaller unlisted companies may adopt a lite version of the format, on a voluntary basis.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

Strategic autonomy in foreign policy

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Strategic autonomy and alignment with the U.S.

India has been maintaining strategic autonomy in its foreign policy since Independence. But the end of Cold War and growing closeness towards the U.S. raises concerns. This article addresses this issue.

India’s foreign policy: characterised by autonomy

  • India has historically prided itself as an independent developing country which does not take orders from or succumb to pressure from great powers.
  • Indian maintained this stance in its foreign policy when the world order was bipolar from 1947 to 1991, dominated by the U.S. and Russia.
  • Also, when the world was unipolar from 1991 to 2008, dominated by the U.S.
  • Or when it is multipolar as at the present times.
  • The need for autonomy in making foreign policy choices has remained constant.

Flexibility in foreign policy

  • However, strategic autonomy has often been adjusted in India’s history as per the changing milieu.
  • During the 1962 war with China, Prime Minister Nehru, had to appeal to the U.S. for emergency military aid.
  • In the build-up to the 1971 war with Pakistan, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had to enter a Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation with the Soviet Union to ward off both China and the U.S.
  • And in Kargil in 1999, India welcomed a direct intervention by the U.S. to force Pakistan to back down.
  • In all the above examples, India did not become any less autonomous when geopolitical circumstances compelled it to enter into de facto alliance-like cooperation with major powers.
  • Rather, India secured its freedom, sovereignty and territorial integrity by manoeuvering the great power equations and playing the realpolitik game.

Concerns over India’s growing closeness to the U.S.

  • As India is facing China’s growing aggression along the LAC, Non-alignment 2.0 with China and the U.S. makes little sense.
  • Fears that proximity to the U.S. will lead to loss of India’s strategic autonomy are overblown.
  • Because independent India has never been subordinated to a foreign hegemon.

What should be India’s strategy

  • In the threat environment marked by a pushy China, India should aim to have both- American support and stay as an independent power centre by cooperation with middle powers in Asia and around the world.
  • For India complete dependence on the U.S. to counter China would be an error.
  • Such complete dependence would be detrimental to India’s national interest such as its ties with Iran and Russia and efforts to speed up indigenous defence modernisation.
  • A wide and diverse range of strategic partners, including the U.S. is the only viable diplomatic way forward in the current emerging multipolar world order.

Consider the question “Does India’s close alignment with the U.S. harms its strategic autonomy? Suggest the strategy to balance India’s security concerns and maintaining strategic autonomy.”

Conclusion

We are free and self-reliant not through isolation or alliance with one great power, but only in variable combinations with several like-minded partners. India is familiar with the phrase ‘multi-vector’ foreign policy. It is time to maximise its potential.

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Judicial Reforms

Judiciary and the challenges ahead

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much.

Mains level: Paper 2- Role of judiciary in democracy and challenges it faces

The article analyses the role of the judiciary in democracy and the challenges it has been facing.

Challenges to democracy

  • Growing lack of faith among many Indians in the functioning of the Supreme Court (SC).
  • The politicisation of the civil service and the police.
  • The creation of a cult of personality
  • The intimidation of the media.
  • The use of tax and investigative agencies to harass and intimidate independent voices.
  • The refusal to do away with repressive colonial-era laws and instead the desire to strengthen them.
  • The undermining of Indian federalism by the steady whittling down of the powers of the states by the Centre.

Role and challenges judiciary faces

  • In recent years the Supreme Court has done little to stop or stem the degradation of democracy.
  • Some examples: Court’s refusal to strike down laws like UAPA that should have no place in a constitutional democracy.
  • Its unconscionable delay in hearing major cases.
  • The COVID-19 crisis has accelerated trend towards authoritarianism and the centralisation of power.
  • But the hearings and orders of the past few months show, the Supreme Court seems unable or unwilling to check these ominous trends.
  • The failure of the SC is in part a failure of leadership.
  • One chief justice has accepted a Governorship immediately on retirement, and another has accepted a Rajya Sabha seat.
  • Powers of the Master of the Roster are imperfectly defined, and can lead themselves to widespread misuse by the incumbent.

Consider the question “Examine the role of the judiciary as the guardian of the Constitution. What are the challenges judiciary facing the judiciary in recent times?”

Conclusion

Time has come for all the serving justices in the highest court of the land to think seriously about the ever-increasing gap between their calling as defined by the Constitution, and the direction the Court is now taking.

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

What is Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: PCR, Genome Sequencing, NGS

Mains level: Genome Sequencing Applications

  • To speed up testing as well as improve the accuracy of testing COVID-19, the CSIR is working on developing “mega labs” where large machines, called Next Generation Sequencing machines (NGS), will be used for sequencing human genomes.
  • It is repurposed to sequence 1,500-3,000 viral genomes at a go for detecting the SARS-CoV-2 novel coronavirus.

Try this PYQ:

What is Cas9 protein that is often mentioned in news? (CSP 2018)

(a) A molecular scissors used in targeted gene editing

(b) A biosensor used in the accurate detection of pathogens in patients

(c) A gene that makes plants pest-resistant

(d) A herbicidal substance synthesized in genetically modified crops

What is NGS?

  • DNA sequencing is the process of determining the nucleic acid sequence – the order of nucleotides in DNA.
  • It includes any method or technology that is used to determine the order of the four bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine.
  • The advent of rapid DNA sequencing methods has greatly accelerated biological and medical research and discovery.
  • Next-generation sequencing (NGS), also known as high-throughput sequencing, is the catch-all term used to describe a number of different modern sequencing technologies.
  • These technologies allow for sequencing of DNA and RNA much more quickly and cheaply than the previously used Sanger sequencing, and as such revolutionized the study of genomics and molecular biology.

Benefits

  • The genome sequencing machines can substantially detect the possible presence of the virus even in several instances where the traditional RT-PCR tests miss out on them.
  • This is primarily because the RT-PCR test identifies the SARS-CoV-2 virus by exploring only specific sections of the virus.
  • Having an edge, the genome method can read a bigger chunk of the virus genome and thereby provide more certainty that the virus in question is indeed the particular coronavirus of interest.
  • It can also trace the evolutionary history of the virus and track mutations more reliably.

Back2Basics:

PCR Test for Diagnosis of the COVID-19

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Seeds, Pesticides and Mechanization – HYV, Indian Seed Congress, etc.

abscisic acid (ABA)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Plant growth hormones

Mains level: Not Much

A team of researchers at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER), Bhopal, has conducted a study on seed germination that could have a major impact on agriculture.

What is the study about?

  • The study aims to determine the optimum timing of seed germination and thus ensure high plant yields.
  • It focused on the interplay between plant hormones like abscisic acid (ABA) which inhibit the sprouting of the seed and environmental cues like light (which promotes the sprouting process) and darkness.

Note the following plant hormones and their functions:

Hormone

Function

Ethylene Fruit ripening and abscission
Gibberellins Break the dormancy of seeds and buds; promote growth
Cytokinins Promote cell division; prevent senescence
Abscisic Acid Close the stomata; maintain dormancy
Auxins Involved in tropisms and apical dominance

What is Abscisic Acid? 

  • Humans have glands that secrete hormones at different times to stimulate body processes such as growth, development, and the breaking down of sugars.  
  • Plants also have hormones that stimulate processes that are necessary for them to live.  
  • Abscisic acid is a plant hormone involved in many developmental plant processes, such as dormancy and environmental stress response.  
  • Abscisic acid is produced in the roots of the plant as well as the terminal buds at the top of the plant. 

Function of Abscisic Acid 

Abscisic acid is involved in several plant functions.  

  • Plants have openings on the bottom side of their leaves, known as stomata. Stomata take in carbon dioxide and regulate water content. Abscisic acid has been found to function in the closing of these stomata during times when the plant does not require as much carbon dioxide or during times of drought when the plant cannot afford to lose much water through transpiration. 
  • One of the crucial functions of abscisic acid is to inhibit seed germination. Abscisic acid has been found to stop a seed from immediately germinating once it has been placed in the soil. It actually causes the seed to enter a period of dormancy.  
  • This is of great benefit to the plants because most seeds are formed at the end of the growing season, when conditions would not be favorable for a new plant to sprout. The abscisic acid causes the seed to wait until the time when conditions are more favorable to grow. This ensures greater success in the plant’s ability to grow and reproduce successfully. 
  • ABA functions in many plant developmental processes, including seed and bud dormancy, the control of organ size and stomatal closure. It is especially important for plants in the response to environmental stresses, including drought, soil salinity, cold tolerance, freezing tolerance, heat stress and heavy metal ion tolerance.

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International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

SPT0418-47: The Baby Milky Way

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Galaxies, Milky Way

Mains level: Not Much

SPT0418-47, a golden halo glinting 12 billion light-years away is the farthest galaxy resembling our Milky Way was recently spotted by astronomers.

Try this PYQ:

Which of the statements about black holes in space is/are correct?  (CSP 2016)

  1. It is a region in space where the pulling force of gravity is so strong that light is not able to escape.
  2. It can result from the dying stars.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

(a) 1 only

(b) 2 only

(c) Both 1 and 2

(d) Neither 1 nor 2

SPT0418-47

  • The galaxy, called SPT0418-47, is so far away that it took billions of years for its light to reach Earth and so our image of it is from deep in the past.
  • It was picked up by the powerful Alma radio telescope in Chile using a technique called gravitational lensing, where a nearby galaxy acts as a powerful magnifying glass.
  • This was when the Universe was 1.4 billion years old — just 10% of its current age — and galaxies were still forming.
  • It has features similar to our Milky Way — a rotating disc and a bulge, which is the high density of stars packed tightly around the galactic centre.

What makes it special?

  • This is the first time a bulge has been seen this early in the history of the Universe, making SPT0418-47 the most distant Milky Way look-alike.
  • Thus the infant star system challenges our understanding of the early years of the Universe.
  • Researchers expect these young star systems to be chaotic and without the distinct structures typical of mature galaxies like our Galaxy.
  • This unexpected discovery suggests the early Universe may not be as chaotic as once believed and raises many questions on how a well-ordered galaxy could have formed so soon after the Big Bang.

Back2Basics: Milky Way

  • The Milky Way is the galaxy that contains our Solar System, with the name describing the galaxy’s appearance from Earth.
  • It appears like a hazy band of light seen in the night sky formed from stars that cannot be individually distinguished by the naked eye.
  • From Earth, the Milky Way appears as a band because its disk-shaped structure is viewed from within.
  • Galileo Galilei first resolved the band of light into individual stars with his telescope in 1610.
  • Until the early 1920s, most astronomers thought that the Milky Way contained all the stars in the Universe.
  • Following the 1920 Great Debate between the astronomers Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis, observations by Edwin Hubble showed that the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies.

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Wildlife Conservation Efforts

Species in news: Great Indian Hornbill

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Hornbill

Mains level: NA

A study based on satellite data has flagged a high rate of deforestation in a major hornbill habitat in Arunachal Pradesh.

Try this PYQ:

Q. In which of the following regions of India are you most likely to come across the ‘Great Indian Hornbill’ in its natural habitat? (CSP 2016)

(a) Sand deserts of northwest India

(b) Higher Himalayas of Jammu and Kashmir

(c) Salt marshes of western Gujarat

(d) Western Ghats

About Great Indian Hornbill

IUCN status: Vulnerable (uplisted from Near Threatened in 2018), CITES: Appendix I

  • The great hornbill (Buceros bicornis) also known as the great Indian hornbill or great pied hornbill, is one of the larger members of the hornbill family.
  • The great hornbill is long-lived, living for nearly 50 years in captivity.
  • It is predominantly fruit-eating, but is an opportunist and preys on small mammals, reptiles and birds.
  • Its impressive size and colour have made it important in many tribal cultures and rituals.
  • A large majority of their population is found in India with a significant proportion in the Western Ghats and the Nilgiris.
  • The nesting grounds of the birds in the Nilgiris North Eastern Range are also believed to support some of their highest densities.

Their ecological significance

  • Referred to as ‘forest engineers’ or ‘farmers of the forest’ for playing a key role in dispersing seeds of tropical trees, hornbills indicate the prosperity and balance of the forest they build nests in.

Threats

  • Hornbills used to be hunted for their casques — upper beak — and feathers for adorning headgear despite being cultural symbols of some ethnic communities in the northeast, specifically the Nyishi of Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Illegal logging has led to fewer tall trees where the bird’s nest.

Back2Basics: Hornbill Festival

  • The Hornbill Festival is a celebration held every year from 1 – 10 December, in Kohima, Nagaland.
  • The festival was first held in the year 2000.
  • It is named after the Indian hornbill, the large and colourful forest bird which is displayed in the folklore of most of the state’s tribes.
  • Festival highlights include the traditional Naga Morungs exhibition and the sale of arts and crafts, food stalls, herbal medicine stalls, flower shows and sales, cultural medley – songs and dances, fashion shows etc.

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Global Geological And Climatic Events

Perseids Meteor Shower

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Meteor terminology

Mains level: Not Much

The Perseids meteor shower is going to be active from August 17-26.

Try this question from CSP 2014:

Q.What is a coma, in the content of astronomy?

(a) Bright half of material on the comet

(b) Long tail of dust

(c) Two asteroids orbiting each other

(d) Two planets orbiting each other

What is the Perseids meteor shower?

  • The Perseids meteor shower peaks every year in mid-August. It was first observed over 2,000 years ago.
  • The Perseids occur as the Earth runs into pieces of cosmic debris left behind by the comet Swift-Tuttle.
  • The cloud of debris is about 27 km wide, and at the peak of the display, between 160 and 200 meteors streak through the Earth’s atmosphere every hour as the pieces of debris.
  • They travel at the speed of some 2.14 lakh km per hour; burn up a little less than 100 km above the Earth’s surface.

What are Meteor Showers?

  • Meteors are bits of rock and ice that are ejected from comets as they manoeuvre around their orbits around the sun.
  • As meteors fall towards the Earth, the resistance makes the space rocks extremely hot and, as meteorites pass through the atmosphere, they leave behind streaks of glowing gas that are visible to the observers and not the rock itself.
  • Meteor showers, on the other hand, are witnessed when Earth passes through the trail of debris left behind by a comet or an asteroid.
  • When a meteor reaches the Earth, it is called a meteorite and a series of meteorites, when encountered at once, is termed as a meteor shower.
  • According to NASA, over 30 meteor showers occur annually and are observable from the Earth.

Where do the Perseids come from?

  • The comet Swift-Tuttle, which was discovered in 1862 by Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle, takes 133 years to complete one rotation around the sun.
  • The last time it reached its closest approach to the sun was in 1992 and will do so again in 2125.
  • Every time comets come close to the sun, they leave behind dust that is essentially the debris trail, which the Earth passes through every year as it orbits around the Sun.

Back2Basics:

 

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Making sense of population growth of India

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: TFR

Mains level: Paper 1- Declining TFR in India

The article analyses and explains the declining trend in India’s total fertility rate. The aspirational revolution in the parents explains such decline. 

What the projections say

  • A new study was published in The Lancet, and prepared by the Seattle-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).
  • It argues that while India is destined to be the largest country in the world, its population will peak by mid-century.
  • And as the 21st century closes, its ultimate population will be far smaller than anyone could have anticipated, about 1.09 billion instead of approximately 1.35 billion today.
  • It could even be as low as 724 million, the study projects.
  • Until 2050, the IHME projections are almost identical to widely-used United Nations projections.
  •  It is only in the second half of the century that the two projections diverge with the UN predicting a population of 1.45 billion by 2100, and the IHME, 1.09 billion.

Present trends in India’s fertility rate

  •  In the 1950s, India’s Total fertility rate (TFR) was nearly six children per woman; today it is 2.2.
  •  Between 1992 and 2015, it had fallen by 35% from 3.4 to 2.2.
  • It is even below the replacement rate in 18 States and Union Territories.

What explains the trends

  • One might attribute it to the success of the family planning programme.
  • But family planning has long lost its primacy in the Indian policy discourse.
  • Punitive policies include denial of maternity leave for third and subsequent births, limiting benefits of maternity schemes and ineligibility to contest in local body elections for individuals with large families.
  • However, these policies are mostly ignored in practice.

Aspirational revolution

  •  It seems highly probable that the socioeconomic transformation of India since the 1990s has played an important role.
  • Over the years parents began to rethink their family-building strategies.
  • Smaller families when compared with a bigger family with same income level, invest more money in their children by sending them to private schools and coaching classes.
  • It is not aspirations for self but that for children that seems to drive fertility decline.

Consider the question “Examine the factors responsible for the declining trends in the total fertility rate for India. What are its implications for country?”

Conclusion

Demographic data suggest that the aspirational revolution is already under way. What we need to hasten the fertility decline is to ensure that the health and family welfare system is up to this challenge and provides contraception and sexual and reproductive health services that allow individuals to have only as many children as they want.

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Banking Sector Reforms

RBI revises guidelines for opening Current Accounts

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Current Account

Mains level: Paper 3- Steps taken by the RBI to stop banking frauds

The article explains the salience of the RBI’s recent restriction on the opening of current accounts by the companies.

Context

  • RBI has put restrictions on who can open a current account with which bank.

What are the restrictions and why it matters

  • A company that has borrowed from a bank cannot open a current account with another bank.
  • It can open a current account with its lending banks under some circumstances.
  • Otherwise such company is encouraged to use the cash credit and overdraft facilities under which it has borrowed.

Let’s understand why it matters

  • Firms borrow from PSU banks, but open current accounts with private or foreign banks.
  • When transactions move to current account of banks other than the lending bank, it loses visibility on end use of the funds.
  • Basically the PSU bank has no idea where the money has gone.
  • For example, when a firm gets money from its customers, instead of parking it with the lending bank it puts it in the current account with another bank.
  • The lending bank has no way of knowing if the loan is going bad wilfully or otherwise.

Why private banks may oppose the move

  • Easy revenue source has got blocked.
  • They can, of course, start lending to firms to retain this business but that would mean taking risk.
  • It would be far safer to be with retail customers who have neither power nor lawyers to defend them against sharp banking practices.

Why it matters to bank customers

  • Vanishing money raises the cost of funds to the bank and results in higher lending rates and lower deposit rates for us.
  • For taxpayers, it means regular use of our funds to recapitalize the banking system that periodically goes bankrupt due to loans gone bad.
  • So, an overall tightening of the system is great news.

Conclusion

For too long have the citizens been punished with greater scrutiny, tighter rules, higher costs and fewer benefits as compared to the suits. We should let the banks hand-wring, but celebrate the closure of each loophole as it happens.


Back2Basics: What is the current account?

  • A current account is like a savings bank account, but with many facilities for swift and multiple transactions, overdraft facilities and it carries no interest.
  • Banks like to sell these accounts as they enjoy huge floats, or money that just sits with the bank waiting to be used by the depositing firms.

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The future of Indian secularism

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Challenges to secularism in India

Secularism in India faces multiple challenges. This article analyses challenge the Indian secularims faces from the party-political secularims.

Features of constitutional secularism in India

  • Constitutional secularism is marked by at least two features.
  • First, critical respect for all religions.
  • Unlike some secularisms, ours is not blindly anti-religious but respects religion.
  • It respects not one but all religions.
  • Every aspect of religious doctrine or practice cannot be respected but respect for religion must be accompanied by critique.
  • Second, intervene whenever religious groups promote communal disharmony.
  • Thus, it has to constantly decide when to engage or disengage, help or hinder religion depending entirely on which of these enhances our constitutional commitment to freedom, equality and fraternity.

How populism is harming secularism

  • Secularism has paid a heavy price in our country for being at the centre of public and political discourse.
  • Populism based politics is indifferent to freedom and equality-based religious reform, it has removed critical from the term ‘critical respect’.
  • It has even been complicit in igniting communal violence.
  • This party-political ‘secular’ state, cozying up alternately to the fanatical fringe of the minority and the majority, was readymade for takeover by a majoritarian party.
  • This takeover was accomplished by removing the word ‘all’ and replacing it by ‘majority’.
  • Today, Indian constitutional secularism is swallowed up by this party-political secularism, with not a little help from the Opposition, media and judiciary.

Way forward

  • 1) There is a need for a shift of focus from a politically-led project to a socially-driven movement for justice.
  • 2) Also, a shift of emphasis from inter-religious to intra-religious issues.
  • Such focus on intra-relisious issues may allow deeper introspection within, multiple dissenting voices to resurface, create conditions to root out intra-religious injustices, and make its members free and equal.
  • 3) Europe’s secularism provided a principle to fight intra-religious oppressions. 
  • In India, secularism was not only a project of civic friendship among religious communities but also of opposition to religion-based caste and gender oppressions.
  • A collective push from young men and women  may help strengthen the social struggle of emancipation from intra-religious injustices.
  • 4) Inter-religious issues also should not be ignored.
  • Distance, freedom from mutual obsession, give communities breathing space.
  • Each can now explore resources within to construct new ways of living together.

Consider the question “How populism in the politics thretens the idea of secularim in India? Suggest the ways to deal with it.”

Conclusion

Needed today are new forms of socio-religious reciprocity, crucial for the business of everyday life and novel ways of reducing the political alienation of citizens, a democratic deficit whose ramifications go beyond the ambit of secularism.

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