Topic 1: Ladakh’s Sui Generis Model under Article 371
Subject: GS Paper 2 (Polity & Governance)
Context: The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has shared a draft proposal with Ladakh’s civil society leaders to adopt a “sui generis” (unique) administrative model for the Union Territory.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: Marks a shift toward a customized legislative framework that integrates traditional local council powers with a formal UT-level elected body, moving away from centralized administrative control.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: The model is designed to protect local land rights and employment, ensuring that the economic development of the region remains under the stewardship of its local population, preventing resource dilution.
- Educational & Social Equity: By strengthening the role of Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) within the new framework, the proposal aims to decentralize educational and social welfare schemes, ensuring reach to the remotest border villages.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Establishes a formal, constitutional link between the Centre and Ladakh, ensuring that national security interests in this high-altitude border region are aligned with local cultural and administrative aspirations.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Provides long-sought constitutional safeguards; empowers local voices in decision-making; balances national security with cultural autonomy. |
| Negatives | Challenges in harmonizing new legislative powers with existing Hill Development Councils; potential for bureaucratic friction during the transition. |
| Associated Schemes | Article 371, Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC) Act. |
Way Forward: Ensure transparent consultations with all stakeholders to define the specific executive and financial powers of the proposed UT-level body before formal implementation.
Topic 2: Security Review of Manipur
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Internal Security)
Context: Union Home Minister Amit Shah is reviewing the evolving security situation in Manipur amid reports of violence spreading to previously unaffected districts.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: Traditional peace-building efforts are being augmented with modern intelligence-gathering techniques to track the movement of insurgent groups and prevent the spread of misinformation that fuels ethnic tension.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Continued instability has disrupted the supply chain of essential goods to hill districts; the meeting aims to secure transport corridors to restore the local economy.
- Educational & Social Equity: Restoring order is treated as a prerequisite to reopening educational institutions and ensuring the safe return of thousands of displaced persons to their homes.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: The government is focusing on strict border management to prevent the influx of militant elements and cross-border disruptions, maintaining the integrity of the Northeast frontier.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | High-level political oversight provides a unified command structure; focus on community outreach and de-escalation. |
| Negatives | Deep-seated ethnic mistrust persists; logistical challenges in protecting remote villages; ongoing boycott of state officials by some civil society groups. |
| Associated Schemes | Modernisation of Police Forces (MPF) Scheme, Border Area Development Programme (BADP). |
Way Forward: Initiate long-term rehabilitation efforts alongside security crackdowns to build confidence among all warring communities.
Topic 3: Blocking of E-Rickshaw Battery Management Apps
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Economy/Technology)
Context: The Union Government has ordered the blocking of foreign-developed battery management apps that were being used to remotely disable e-rickshaws.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: The apps allowed unauthorized remote control over battery systems, exposing a critical vulnerability in the rapidly growing informal electric transport sector.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Miscreants used the exploit to extort drivers, directly impacting the livelihoods of thousands. The ban aims to protect the income of the informal workforce.
- Educational & Social Equity: Many e-rickshaw drivers, unaware of the digital vulnerabilities in their vehicles, were victims of extortion; the crackdown acts as a shield for vulnerable consumers.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Highlights the national security risk of foreign software governing essential public transport infrastructure, necessitating a shift toward indigenous hardware/software standards.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Immediate halt to extortion rackets; prevents vehicle immobilization during transit; alerts the industry to cybersecurity gaps. |
| Negatives | Does not eliminate the hardware vulnerability in existing batteries; lack of alternative software immediately available. |
| Associated Schemes | Digital India, Make in India, FAME-II. |
Way Forward: Mandate national cybersecurity certification for all EV components, including battery management systems (BMS).
Topic 4: Borjuli Biodiversity Heritage Site (BHS)
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Environment & Ecology)
Context: Borjuli in Assam has been notified as a Biodiversity Heritage Site (BHS) for the conservation of wild rice genetic resources.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: The project uses modern genetic mapping to identify and preserve Oryza rufipogon (wild rice), the progenitor of present-day rice varieties.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Preserving these genes is essential for breeding climate-resilient, high-yielding crops, securing the future of India’s agricultural economy.
- Educational & Social Equity: The notification empowers local communities to act as stewards of their natural resources, formalizing traditional knowledge with state-backed conservation.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Acts as a “genetic repository,” ensuring India does not become dependent on foreign patented seeds for climate-resilient farming.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Protects priceless genetic diversity; supports community-led conservation; strengthens long-term food security. |
| Negatives | Stringent BHS regulations may limit developmental activities in the immediate surrounding areas. |
| Associated Schemes | National Rainfed Area Authority (NRAA) projects, Biological Diversity Act, 2002. |
Way Forward: Replicate this “gene sanctuary” model across other states to preserve diverse crop wild relatives.
Topic 5: Satellite-Guided Landing for Helicopters (PinS)
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Science & Technology)
Context: India has approved its first Private Point-in-Space (PinS) Instrument Approach Procedure for helicopters at Undavalli Heliport.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: Utilizes the indigenous GAGAN satellite navigation system to allow precision landings in poor visibility, eliminating the need for bulky ground-based hardware.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Reduces the cost of setting up heliports in remote areas; facilitates faster medical, relief, and commercial transport.
- Educational & Social Equity: Enhances accessibility to remote, mountainous, and disaster-prone regions, potentially saving lives through better air connectivity.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Demonstrates India’s capability to manage its aviation airspace using indigenous satellite infrastructure, reducing reliance on global systems.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Improves all-weather safety; significantly lower infrastructure costs; enables regional connectivity in difficult terrain. |
| Negatives | Requires specialized pilot training; dependency on the GAGAN signal’s uptime. |
| Associated Schemes | UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik), GAGAN (GPS-Aided GEO Augmented Navigation). |
Way Forward: Standardize the PinS procedure for widespread rollout across all private and government heliports in India.
Topic 6: Highway Projects in Delhi and UP
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Infrastructure)
Context: The CCEA approved two major highway projects worth Rs 14,115 crore to improve connectivity in the Delhi-NCR and Bundelkhand regions.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: Implements modern BOT and HAM models to ensure efficient execution and long-term maintenance of vital economic corridors.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: The projects will slash travel times, reduce vehicle operating costs, and integrate industrial nodes (like Kanpur’s manufacturing belt) with national markets.
- Educational & Social Equity: The Delhi tunnel project preserves the Southern Ridge Forest, balancing infrastructure development with environmental protection.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Strengthens the national highway grid, linking mining belts and agricultural hubs to airports and rail heads, boosting logistics competitiveness.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Massive boost to logistics efficiency; employment generation; reduces urban traffic congestion in Delhi. |
| Negatives | High initial capital cost; potential land acquisition delays. |
| Associated Schemes | PM GatiShakti National Master Plan, National Highways (O) Programme. |
Way Forward: Use real-time monitoring under the GatiShakti dashboard to ensure the projects are completed within the stipulated timelines.
Topic 7: Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2026
Subject: GS Paper 3 (Defence)
Context: The draft DAP 2026 proposes raising indigenous content (IC) requirements to 60% for all major procurement categories.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: Integrates civil-military fusion, encouraging the procurement of dual-use technologies like drones and cyber-tools for military use.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Forces domestic companies to own the entire design and source code of products, turning India into a design-led manufacturing hub.
- Educational & Social Equity: Encourages the participation of start-ups and MSMEs in the defence sector through iDEX, creating high-skill jobs.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: Ensures “total ownership” of technology, allowing India to upgrade, repair, and export defence equipment without needing foreign permission.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Eliminates foreign dependency; boosts exports; secures the defence supply chain. |
| Negatives | Tight ownership definitions may challenge companies currently using hybrid/licensed foreign designs. |
| Associated Schemes | iDEX (Innovations for Defence Excellence), ADITI scheme. |
Way Forward: Simplify audit and verification processes to ensure smaller start-ups can easily comply with the 60% IC requirement.
Topic 8: Status of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT)
Subject: GS Paper 2 (International Relations)
Context: India has placed the IWT in “abeyance” until Pakistan takes credible action to end cross-border terrorism.
- Technological Convergence & Disruption: The shift moves away from passive, treaty-bound technical cooperation toward an active linkage between transboundary water management and national security.
- Economic & Manufacturing Impact: Continued instability undermines the potential for regional energy and agricultural water-sharing benefits.
- Educational & Social Equity: The decision acknowledges that regional cooperation is impossible while the state supports activities that cause loss of life, prioritizing the security of citizens.
- Strategic & Information Sovereignty: India is using its leverage as the upstream state to address the “blood and water cannot flow together” doctrine, setting a new precedent for foreign policy.
Positives, Negatives, & Government Schemes
| Dimension | Details |
| Positives | Strong message against state-sponsored terror; asserts India’s strategic leverage. |
| Negatives | Risks international criticism; creates uncertainty in transboundary water management. |
| Associated Schemes | Indus Waters Treaty, 1960. |
Way Forward: Maintain diplomatic pressure through international forums while continuing to monitor and manage water flow in line with national strategic requirements.