{GS2 – Governance} 50 Years of ICDS Programme **
- Context (TH): The Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) programme, a flagship initiative of the Government of India, marked its 50th anniversary in 2025.
About ICDS
- Launched in 1975, it is the world’s most extensive community-based early childhood development programme. It has now been restructured into Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0.
- It functions as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under the Ministry of Women and Child Development.
- Objective: to enhance the nutritional and health status of children aged 0-6, support their overall development, and decrease mortality and malnutrition.
- Integrated Services: The ICDS scheme provides six core services—supplementary nutrition, preschool non-formal education, nutrition and health education, and immunisation.
- Implementation: It is carried out through a nationwide network of Anganwadi Centres (AWC).
Key Achievements
- Coverage: ICDS has over 9 crore beneficiaries nationwide with a network of nearly 1.4 million AWCs.
- Nutrition Support: Approximately 95% of children registered under ICDS avail supplementary nutrition.
- Positive Outcomes: Studies show improvements in early literacy and numeracy among children.
Key Challenges
- Funding Strain: The revised 60:40 Centre–State funding pattern (from 90:10 earlier) has increased State-level financial pressure, resulting in implementation disparities.
- Infrastructure Gaps: Many AWCs lack permanent buildings, functional toilets, and potable water.
- Worker Shortage: Anganwadi workers continue to be underpaid, overburdened, and often assigned to non-ICDS duties.
- Technology Issues: Poshan Tracker and facial recognition systems (FRS) encounter issues, risking the exclusion of beneficiaries.
- Nutrition Concerns: Quality and adequacy issues persist in supplementary nutrition, as evidenced by high rates of stunting (35.5%) and wasting (18.7%).
Karnataka’s ICDS Innovations as a Model
- System Expansion: Karnataka expanded ICDS from a pilot block to 204 blocks, demonstrating planned administrative scaling.
- Infrastructure Upgrade: Over 47,720 AWCs now function from government-owned buildings equipped with kitchens, toilets, drinking water, and electricity.
- Preschool Reform: Converting 250 centres into government Montessori units connects ICDS preschool education with structured, bilingual, activity-based foundational learning.
- Curriculum Standardisation: The Chilipili curriculum offers weekly themes and hands-on activities to boost cognitive readiness and ensure consistent learning.
- Childcare Coverage: Koosinamane crèches address the 0–3 childcare gap by providing Anganwadi-linked support for working women in rural and semi-urban areas.
- Nutrition Intervention: The Chiguru programme integrates growth monitoring with community-based nutrition counselling, strengthening management in high-burden districts.
- Worker Welfare: Enhanced state honorariums and welfare measures improve Anganwadi workers’ motivation, retention, and service delivery.
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{GS2 – Polity} Supreme Court Case Pendency **
- Context (TH): Chief Justice of India-designate Justice Surya Kant has identified reducing the Supreme Court’s case backlog and clearing long-pending constitutional matters as his foremost agenda.
- Pending cases reached 90,225 (as of Nov 22, 2025) – the highest in the Supreme Court’s history, as per the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG).
- NJDG: A public dashboard under the e-Courts project that compiles real-time data on case pendency, disposal, and institution across all courts in India.
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Reasons for Pendency
- Constitutional Docket: Supreme Court (SC) entertains a large share of Article 136 Special Leave Petitions, making it one of the most overloaded apex courts globally (Law Commission).
- Bypassing HC: Litigants increasingly approach SC directly due to online access and perceived faster relief, reducing High Court (HC) filtration of cases.
- Understaffed Judiciary: Delays in filling SC vacancies reduce bench strength, which affects hearing and disposal rates (Department of Justice data).
- Legacy Cases: Long-pending constitutional, land, tax and service matters accumulate due to absence of regular Constitution Bench sittings.
- Procedural Overload: Frequent interim applications, reviews, curative petitions & multiple listings inflate judicial time per case.
- Article 136 (Special Leave Petition): A discretionary power of the Supreme Court allowing it to hear appeals against any judgment or order from any court or tribunal in India, except military courts.
- Constitution Bench: A bench of five or more Supreme Court judges constituted under Article 145(3) to decide substantial questions of constitutional interpretation.
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Way Forward
- Constitution Bench: Constitute 7-judge and 9-judge benches to settle core legal issues, unlocking disposal of thousands of connected cases.
- Prioritise HC: Encourage litigants to approach High Courts first, reinforcing constitutional role of High Courts and reducing SC’s admission load.
- Faster Appointments: Compress the Collegium–Government clearance cycle under the Ministry of Personnel timelines and fill vacancies promptly.
- Promote Mediation: Expand institutional mediation as Justice Kant calls it a “game-changer”, reducing inflow of civil, commercial and family disputes.
Read More> Judicial Pendency in India
{GS2 – IR} Canada’s New Citizenship-By-Descent Bill
- Context (IE): Canada has introduced Bill C-3, a new citizenship law, to reform its rules on citizenship by descent.
More About the New Bill
- The bill amends the Citizenship Act (2025) to remove the “First-Generation Limit” (FGL) rule.
- The FGL rule prohibited Canadian citizens born or adopted abroad from passing citizenship to their children who were born outside Canada.
- It grants automatic citizenship to individuals born or adopted abroad before the law takes effect.
- The reform addresses the issue of “Lost Canadians” who were previously excluded under the FGL rule or older citizenship laws.
- It introduces a Substantial Connection Test requiring a parent to have resided in Canada for at least 3 years (1,095 days) before the child’s birth or adoption.
- Indian Diaspora Benefit: For Canadian citizens of Indian origin working abroad, it eliminates the need to return to Canada for childbirth to secure automatic citizenship for their children.
Indian Diaspora in Canada
- The Indian diaspora is about 1.86 million, or 5.1% of Canada’s population (2021).
- Around 125,000 Indian students study in Canada, representing 10.8% of all international students.
- India was the leading country of birth for immigrants in Canada according to the 2021 census.
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Read More > India-Canada Relations
{GS3 – Agri} Agriculture and Carbon Markets
- Context (DTE): Agricultural carbon projects face major measurement, credibility, and benefit-sharing barriers, limiting farmer participation and income gains.
- Carbon markets are mechanisms to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by allowing the trade of carbon credits. They create financial incentives for entities to lower emissions or improve energy efficiency.
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Significance of Carbon Market in Agriculture
- Income Diversification: Carbon credits offer new revenue streams for farmers adopting climate-friendly practices. E.g. India is projected to earn US$20–40 billion from voluntary carbon credits by 2030.
- Climate Mitigation: Agricultural practices can lower methane and carbon dioxide emissions while enhancing soil carbon storage, contributing to national climate goals.
- Market Expansion: Credible agriculture-based credits strengthen India’s position in global voluntary carbon markets. E.g. 242 agri-food projects registered under leading international standards by 2024.
Issues within Carbon Market in Agriculture
- Price Instability: Global carbon credit prices fluctuate widely, making long-term investment planning difficult for project developers. E.g., prices range from US$4 to over US$200 per credit.
- Low Market Trust: Agricultural credits are rated lower due to reversal risks and complex monitoring, reducing their market uptake. E.g. only 1.9 million of 3.19 million issued credits retired by 2024.
- Slow Approvals: Long processing timelines delay returns to farmers. E.g. Indian agricultural, forestry and land use projects took 1,689 days for approval versus 623 days in the rest of Asia.
Way Forward
- Policy Alignment: Link carbon markets with the Green Credit Programme, ecosystem payment schemes and state climate missions for consistent incentives.
- Digital Verification: Deploy artificial intelligence sensors, satellite remote sensing and blockchain for low-cost carbon monitoring, aligned with best practices from the FAO EX-ACT tool used globally.
- Farmer Collectives: Strengthen farmer-producer organisations to aggregate land, reduce transaction costs and secure better contract terms, similar to the Kenya Agricultural Carbon Project.
- Transparent Contracts: Adopt clear benefit-sharing norms ensuring predictable farmer income, following global models under Payment for Environmental Services (Costa Rica).
Read More> India’s Carbon Credit Mechanism
- Context (BBC | MN): Australia has introduced the world’s first nationwide under-16 social media ban (effective 10 December 2025) requiring platforms to verify ages and remove underage accounts.
- Online Harm: Around 7 in 10 children aged 10–15 report exposure to misogyny, self-harm content and violent videos, showing widespread digital harm that passive moderation has failed to prevent.
- Cyberbullying Crisis: More than 1 in 2 children in Australia admit they have been cyberbullied, correlating with rising teen depression and self-harm reported by paediatric mental-health services.
- Screen-Time Addiction: Children aged 10–15 spend 4–6 hours daily on social media; persuasive design features increase compulsive scrolling by 30–40%, according to behavioural analytics studies.
- Mental Health Decline: Australian Institute of Health shows a 13% rise in youth suicide (15–17 yrs) over the last five years, with clinicians linking compulsive screen use to worsening emotional disorders.
- Age-Verification Failures: Facial-age estimation tech shows 25–35% inaccuracy for 10–15-year-olds, risking wrongful exclusion of legitimate users and undetected minors bypassing checks.
- Privacy Breach Risks: Australia has suffered 10+ million personal-data exposures in recent breaches, intensifying fears that storing ID or biometric data could increase identity-theft incidents.
- Circumvention Potential: After the UK age-control rollout, VPN sign-ups rose 1,800%, showing children can easily use similar tools to evade platform restrictions.
- Enforcement Gaps: Meta earns about $50 million every 112 minutes, making the $49.5 million fine insufficient as a deterrent for systemic violations across multiple platforms.
Social Media Regulation in Other Countries
- United Kingdom: The Online Safety Act 2023 requires “highly effective” age checks, imposes large fines, and enables executive prosecution for failure to protect children from harmful content.
- European Union: Some countries require parental consent for under-15 access, with France, Denmark and Norway proposing stronger bans or curfews for minors.
- Malaysia: Under the Online Safety Act 2025, children under 16 will need government-ID-based digital verification (MyKad, MyDigitalID) starting January 2026.
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Way Forward
- Layered Age-Assurance Framework: Combine device-level checks, behavioural inference, and optional ID verification to reduce errors and privacy risks. E.g. Multi-layer safety architecture (UK).
- Independent Audits: Mandate annual third-party audits to ensure accuracy, privacy compliance and algorithmic fairness in age-verification systems. E.g. EU Digital Services Act’s independent auditors.
- Whole-Ecosystem Regulation: Extend safeguards to gaming platforms and AI conversational tools so risk does not migrate to unregulated spaces. E.g. Denmark’s cross-platform child-safety mandate.
- Digital-Literacy Mission: Introduce school curricula on cyber safety and parental training to reduce harmful content exposure. E.g. New Zealand’s “Online Safety in Schools” model.
About Social Media Usage in India
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{Prelims – PAN} Nehru Zoological Park Earns ISO Certification *
- Context (TH | DC): Nehru Zoological Park in Hyderabad received a five-star quality rating and ISO 9001:2015 certification for the sixth consecutive year, making it the only zoo in India with this honour.
- Telangana also launched the country’s first Tiger Protection Cell, enabling real-time monitoring to prevent poaching and to protect nearby communities from tiger attacks.
- International Organization for Standardisation (ISO): A global NGO setting certified benchmarks for quality, safety, and environmental management. Founded in 1947, headquarters at Geneva.
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About Nehru Zoological Park
- Location: Large urban zoo in Hyderabad, Telangana, spread over ~380 acres near Mir Alam Tank, inaugurated on 6 October 1963.
- Governance: Run by the Telangana Forest Department, recognised by the Central Zoo Authority (CZA) under the Wildlife (Protection) Act framework.
- Recognition: Only Indian Zoo to receive the ISO 9001:2015 (quality) for six consecutive years and ISO 14001:2015 (environment) certification, plus a 5-star zoo management rating.
- Conservation: Houses ~2,184 animals from 198 species, with successful captive-breeding of various endangered fauna like mugger crocodile, Indian mouse deer and vultures.
Zoological Parks (Zoo)
- Facilities where wild animals are kept in managed enclosures for public display, research, education, and ex-situ conservation, including captive breeding of endangered species.
- Legal Framework: Governed under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, regulated by the Central Zoo Authority (Estd. 1992) and guided by the National Zoo Policy, 1998.
- Conservation Role: Support ex-situ conservation, veterinary care, gene-pool preservation, & species recovery; strengthened under the CZA Vision Plan 2021–2031 to reach global standards.
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Read More > National Parks of India
{Prelims – Species} Hawfinch Bird Sighted at Jim Corbett National Park *
- Context (HT): A Hawfinch was recently sighted at Jim Corbett National Park, Uttarakhand, marking the first confirmed record of the species in India.
About Hawfinch (Coccothraustes coccothraustes)
- The hawfinch is the largest finch species in Europe and Asia, known for its massive, conical beak.
- Appearance: It has a large round head, a thick neck, and a distinctive black patch on the throat. The bill changes colour with the seasons.
- Habitat Preference: It prefers mature deciduous and mixed forests with cherry, hornbeam, maple, and other hard-seed trees.
- Partial Migrants: European populations are mostly resident, while the Asian hawfinches migrate south during winter.
- Distribution: It is widely found across the Palearctic realm, including Europe, North Africa, and temperate Asia.
- Diet: The species is primarily granivorous (seed-eater). Strong bill and jaw muscles crack hard seeds and fruit pits, such as cherry, olive, and plum.
- Ecological Engineer: Its selective preference for particular tree species influences seed dynamics and forest regeneration.
- Conservation Status: IUCN: Least Concerned.
{Prelims – S&T} Entrepreneur-in-Residence (EIR) Programme
- Context (PIB): India’s Entrepreneur-in-Residence Programme (EIR) was highlighted as a key driver of biotechnology innovation at the BRIC Annual General Meeting in New Delhi.
- BRIC: The Biotechnology Research & Innovation Council, formed in 2023, is apex autonomous society under Ministry of Science & Technology, overseeing India’s leading biotechnology research institutions.
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About EIR Programme
- The EIR Programme is an initiative under the National Initiative for Developing and Harnessing Innovations (NIDHI) to support entrepreneurship.
- Objective: Encouraging science and engineering graduates and young researchers to pursue entrepreneurship as a career through incubation and financial assistance.
- Implementing Agency: The Department of Science and Technology (DST) through a nationwide network of Technology Business Incubators under the Ministry of Science & Technology.
- Key Feature: The programme provides a monthly fellowship of up to ₹30,000 per month for 12 months, extendable to 18 months in deserving cases.
- Significance: It bridges the gap between academic research and enterprise to enhance India’s innovation-led start-up ecosystem.
- NIDHI is an umbrella programme designed to convert knowledge-based and technology-driven innovations into successful startups, in line with Startup India and Atmanirbhar Bharat.
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{Prelims – Diseases} WHO Declares Indonesia Polio-Free
- Context (DD | WHO): WHO declared the end of Indonesia’s poliovirus type-2 outbreak after no virus was detected in children or the environment since June 2024, following a nationwide vaccination surge.
- WHO: World Health Organisation is United Nations’ global health agency for international public health coordination, disease surveillance, emergency response, & setting global health standards.
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About the Announcement
- Outbreak closure: WHO confirmed cessation of type-2 poliovirus transmission after sustained zero detection since June 27, 2024, meeting Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) criteria.
- Vaccination response: Indonesia administered ~60 million additional polio vaccine doses, including multiple rounds of novel Oral Poliomyelitis type 2 Vaccine (nOPV2) campaigns across affected provinces.
- Immunisation gains: Routine Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV-2) coverage increased from 63% (2023) to 73% (2024).
- Independent verification: Consecutive assessments by GPEI (2023–2025) validated Indonesia’s response and confirmed transmission closure for the Western Pacific Region
About Polio
- Disease profile: Poliomyelitis (polio) is a highly infectious enterovirus disease spread via the faecal-oral route, causing irreversible paralysis in ~1 out of 200 infections.
- Virus types: Three serotypes exist-Poliovirus 1, 2 and 3; wild poliovirus type-2 was globally eradicated in 2015, though vaccine-derived strains can still cause outbreaks.
- Vaccines: Control uses the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) and the Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV); nOPV2 is a genetically stabilised OPV used to stop circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type-2 (cVDPV2).
- Global status: As of 2024, wild poliovirus remains endemic only in Pakistan and Afghanistan, per WHO surveillance reports.
- India’s achievement: India was certified polio–free in 2014 after its last wild-polio case on 13 January 2011 (Howrah, West Bengal), following nationwide Pulse Polio campaigns.
- India’s risk management: India continues environmental sewage surveillance in high-risk cities and uses bivalent OPV (bOPV) plus IPV in routine immunisation to prevent re-importation
- Enterovirus Disease: Illnesses caused by enteroviruses-RNA viruses that spread mainly via the faecal-oral route and commonly infect the gut; ranging from mild fever to severe conditions like paralysis.
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Read More > Polio
{Prelims – In News} Titanium Windows for Ayodhya Ram Temple
- Context (TH): Defence public sector firm MIDHANI has supplied 31 titanium windows for Ayodhya Ram Temple’s Pradakshina corridor – the first use of titanium as a structural material in a monument.
- The windows were painted gold using an anodisation process to give them a distinct appearance.
- Anodisation: Electrochemical process to thicken the natural oxide layer on metals like titanium and aluminium for increased durability & colour control; used in consumer devices such as iPhone casings.
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About Titanium
- 9th most abundant element in Earth’s crust, found as Ilmenite (FeTiO3) and Rutile (TiO2) ores. Placer deposit reserves in India in Odisha, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh.
- Properties: Exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, corrosion & heat resistance, biocompatible, non-toxic, non-magnetic and high longevity.
- Applications: Titanium alloys are used in spacecrafts, aircrafts, missiles, ships, medical implants and for structural reinforcement. Titanium Oxide is used in paints, sunscreen, toothpaste, etc.
Read More > Ram Mandir Ayodhya