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Academic Eligibility for IAS Exams
· A degree of any of the Universities
incorporated by an Act of the Central or State
Legislature in India or other educational institutions
established by an Act of Parliament or declared to be
a Deemed University under the UGC Act, 1956, or an
equivalent qualification.
· Candidates who have appeared or intend to
appear for the qualifying examination and are awaiting
results are also eligible to appear for the Preliminary
Examination. All such candidates who qualify to
appear for the Civil Services Main Examination must
produce proof of having passed the said examination
along with their application for the Main Examination.
· The UPSC may in exceptional cases treat a
candidate without the foregoing requisite qualification
as an eligible candidate if he / she has passed an
examination conducted by other institutions, the
standard of which justifies his / her admission in the
opinion of the Commission.
· Candidates with professional and technical
qualifications recognised by the Government as
equivalent to professional and technical degrees.
· Candidates who have passed the final year
of MBBS or any Medical Examination but are yet to
complete the internship can also appear for the Main
Examination. However they must submit along with
their Main Examination application, a certificate from
the concerned authority of the University / Institution
that they have passed the final professional medical
examination. At the Interview stage they must then
produce a certificate from a competent authority that
they have completed (including internship) all the
requirements for the award of the Medical Degree.
Other Eligibility Conditions for IAS Exams
(1) Nationality
i. Only Indian nationals are eligible for IAS and IPS.
ii. For other services a candidate can be either of the
following:
a. a citizen of India,
b. a subject of Nepal,
c. a subject of Bhutan,
d. a Tibetan refugee who came over to India before
January 1, 1962 with the intention of permanently
settling in India, or
e. a person of Indian origin who has migrated from
Burma, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Vietnam, Zaire
or Zambia with the intention of permanently settling in
India. Candidates belonging to either categories of b.,
c., d. or e., must produce an eligibility certificate
issued by the Government of India. Those who belong
to either of b., c., or d., categories are not eligible for
appointment to the Indian Foreign Service.
(2) Age Limit
i. A candidate must have attained 21 years and not be
over 30 years on August 1 of the year of examination.
ii. The upper age limit is relaxed in specific cases as
mentioned below:
a. upto a maximum of 5 years if the candidate belongs
to SC/ST.
b. upto a maximum of 3 years if the candidate belongs
to Other Backward Classes.
c. upto a maximum of 5 years if the candidate had
been domiciled in Jammu & Kashmir during the period
between January 1, 1980 and December 31, 1989.
d. upto a maximum of 3 years in the case of Defence
Services personnel disabled during hostilities with
foreign countries or in a disturbed area and
consequently released.
e. upto a maximum of 5 years in the case of ex-
servicemen including Commissioned Officers and
ECOs / SSCOs who have rendered at least five years
Military Service as on August 1 of the year of
examination and have been released:
o on completion of assignment (including
those whose assignment is due to be completed
within one year from August 1 of the year of
examination) otherwise than by way of dismissal or
discharge on account of misconduct or inefficiency, or
o on account of physical disability attributable
to Military Service, or
o on invalidment.
f. upto a maximum of 5 years in the case of ECOs /
SSCOs who have completed an initial period of
assignment (5 years Military Service) as on August 1
of the year of examination and whose assignment has
been extended beyond 5 years. Such candidates will
have to provide a certificate from the Ministry of
Defence stating that they can apply for civil
employment and they will be released on a notice of 3
months, upon selection, from the date of receipt of
offer of appointment.
g. upto a maximum of 10 years in the case of blind,
deaf-mute and orthopaedically handicapped
candidates.
If you are preparing for the Civil Services
Examinations and dream of being an IAS officer, do
not hesitate in taking coaching for the UPSC Exam. In
your prepration of the UPSC Examination, you should
only keep in mind the kind of IAS coaching you would
want to go for.
UPSC Civil Services Prelims Results 2006
The Civil Services exams are very tough and the
UPSC takes stringent steps to keep it fair. Many in
India aspire to be Civil Servants; therefore the
competition for the IAS exams is very tough. As a
result taking long distance IAS coaching alone is not
sufficient. If you can afford to come to Delhi or such
centers where IAS coaching facilities are good, that is
the best option. Shifting to centers like Delhi also
helps in exposure to other people appearing for the
IAS examination. This, at many times is more useful
than the coaching provided.
Here is the list of Civil Services according to
preference given in rankings.
· Indian Administrative Service
· India Foreign Service
· Indian Police Service
· Indian P & T Accounts & Finance Service,
Group - A
· Indian Audit and Accounts Service, Group - A
· Indian Customs and Central Excise Service,
Group - A
· Indian Defence Accounts Service, Group - A
· Indian Revenue Service, Group - A
· Indian Ordnance Factories Service, Group -
A (Assistant Works Manager, non-technical)
· Indian Postal Service, Group - A
· Indian Civil Accounts Service, Group - A
· Indian Railway Traffic Service, Group - A
· Indian Railway Accounts Service, Group - A
· Indian Railway Personnel Service, Group - A
· Posts of Assistant Security Officer, Group - A
in Railway Protection Force (RPF)
· Indian Defence Estates Service, Group - A
· Indian Information Service (Junior Grade),
Group - A
· Railway Board Secretariat Service (Section
Officer's Grade), Group - B
· Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service
(Section Officer's Grade), Group - B
· Customs Appraisers' Service, Group - B
· Delhi, Andaman & Nicobar Islands,
Lakshadweep, Daman & Diu and Dadra & Nagar
Haveli Civil Service and Police Service, Group - B
· Pondicherry Civil Service, Group - B
The Application Procedure for the Civil Services
Examination is pretty simple. Electronically scannable
Application Forms along with the Information Brochure
can be obtained from the designated Head Post
Offices / Post Offices throughout the country. The duly
filled in Application Form with the acknowledgement
card should be sent to - Secretary, Union Public
Service Commission, Dholpur House, New Delhi -
110011. For more details regarding Syllabi,
Examination Centres and other clauses, interested
candidates are advised to check UPSC's Notification
issued during December in 'Employment News' and
all major newspapers.
Scheme of the Examination
The successive stages of examination are:
· Preliminary Examination for the selection of
candidates for the Main Examination
· Main Examination (Written) for the selection
of candidates for interview for a Personality Test.
· Interview (Personality Test)
A maximum of 4 attempts is permitted to every
candidate and 7 to those belonging to Other Backward
Classes. There is no restriction on the number of
attempts in the case of SC/ST candidates. All this
provided you are still under the age limit. Also it is
wiser to be mentally ready for several attempts as
cracking the Civil Services Exams is a tough nut to
crack the first time around; and if you do qualify you
may want to attempt again to improve your ranking
and therefore your service allotment.
The Preliminary Examination is one of the toughest
exams in India and you should not take it lightly even
though it is meant to serve as a screening test. This
examination is conducted according to the following
pattern:
PAPER SUBJECT DURATION MARKS
QUESTION TYPE
I General Studies 2 hrs 150
Objective Type
II Optional Subject 2 hrs 300
Objective Type
General Studies includes the following: General
Science, Current Events of national and international
importance, History of India and Indian National
Movement, India and World Geography, Indian Polity
and Economy and General Mental Ability.
Optional Subjects for Preliminary Examination:
Agriculture, Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science,
Botany, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Commerce,
Economics, Electrical Engineering, Geography,
Geology, Indian History, Law, Mathematics,
Mechanical Engineering, Medical Science,
Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology,
Public Administration, Sociology, Statistics and
Zoology.
The Main Examination is to assess the overall
intellectual traits and depth of understanding of the
candidates. The Written Examination in the Main
Examination consists of 9 papers and is conducted
according to the following pattern:
PAPER SUBJECT DURATION MARKS
QUESTION TYPE
I One Indian language from those included in
the Eighth Schedule* of the Constitution 3 hrs
300 Essay Type
II English 3 hrs 300 Conventional
Type
III Essay 3 hrs 200 Essay Type
IV&V General Studies 3 hrs 300 for each
Essay Type
VI,VII,VIII & IX Two papers in each of two
Optional ** Subjects 3 hrs 300 for each
Essay Type
* Languages are: Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi,
Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Marathi, Malayalam,
Manipuri, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Sindhi,
Tamil, Telugu, Urdu.
** Optional Subjects for the Main Examination:
Agriculture, Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science,
Anthropology, Botany, Chemistry, Civil Engineering,
Commerce & Accountancy, Economics, Electrical
Engineering, Geography, Geology, History, Law,
Management, Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering,
Medical Science, Philosophy, Physics, Political
Science & International Relations, Psychology, Public
Administration, Sociology, Statistics, Zoology,
Literature of one of the following languages: Arabic,
Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada,
Kashmiri, Konkani, Marathi, Malayalam, Manipuri,
Nepali, Oriya, Pali, Persian, Punjabi, Russian,
Sanskrit, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu.
Even though the interview carries 300 marks with no
minimum qualifying marks, it is the deciding factor at
many times of your being within the services or out of
it and in the least matters in which service you get.
However since the interview is so personal and
variable it is most desirable to do very well in the
written mains. But an Interview can make or break you
so take your personality development rather seriously
and make sure to attend some mock interviews at
leading institutes.
UPSC Interview Questions
UPSC Interview questions range from questions about
your choice of subject to why you want to join the civil
services. It is good to answer honestly but at the
same time avoid cliches like wanting to do service to
the nation etc. Questions on your hobbies are
imperative so prepare well as they expect some
indepth knowledge on that. Questions relating to your
name, your college or school name are also a big
posibility. If someone well-know shares one of these
names please also prepare on that. Also learn up
about important events on the year or date of your
birth. As you can see, UPSC Interview questions are
mainly from what you have filled in your form
including your subject but here it is more a test of
logic and presentation and awareness rather than
pure subject knowledge. In the UPSC interview many
questions are situational like what will you do if a
Tsunami strikes your district and you are the
DM/Collector/SP. Questions on your choice of service
preference also need to be prepared. Current affairs
analysis is important too.
Tips to improve your performance at the UPSC
Interview
· There are generally 5 members at the board
with the Chairperson seated at the center. Enter
confidently and greet the Chairperson, who will
probably welcome you, and pleasantly nod at other
members. Wait till you are asked to sit.
· Intelligent listing is the mantra, and for this
maintaining eye contact is very important. You should
not glare but all the same appear attentive and do not
glance at other members, it can be very distracting for
the interviewer. However if some other member asks
you anything, look at that member and answer and
turn back to the first - this is what we do in normal
attentive listening.
· Do not fidget or throw your hands around, or
shake your head. Less amount of movement does not
mean you should sit unnaturally stiff. Your posture
should be attentive and relaxed at the same time. Do
not crouch/bend forward or place your hands on the
table.
· Cut your answer short to the required
patience shown by the member talking to you. They
usually like to talk more, so listen carefully and think
for a few seconds before you start answering the
question. This will show that you are organising your
thoughts in mind before starting to speak.
· Leave some room for difference in opinion.
Do take a stand, but do not look adamant or unwilling
to appreciate the board's opinion.
· Use couple of words from the question while
answering any question. It shows you have listened to
the question carefully. But at the same time limit the
use the technical jargon.
· Listen very carefully. Come to the central
issue of the enquiry immediately. Wild guessing or
speculation are a complete no no.
· Do not start evaluating your performance
while still inthe interview. Even if you have committed
mistakes in the beginning, do not think that you have
already lost the game. They are looking for warm,
sensitive respectful and attentive youngsters. They
know you are good or you would not have come so far.
· Talk humbly about your achievements and
hobbies. You may have mentioned some hobbies in
the form without serious background in them, but
before the interview it would be useful to pick up some
basic info on the hobby.
· Say less to convey more. Less is more
these days as per the minimalist creed. Argue
logically and generalise correctly. Do not try to read
too much between the lines.
· Remember, while answering any question,
what is easy to see is easy to miss. We often tend to
miss the obvious and go for some non-crucial aspect
of the subject.
· Get up to leave only when the chairperson
asks you to, not because you think everyone has
asked a question. Similarly, even if someone has not
asked a question and the chairperson asks you to
leave then please leave. Some members do not ask
questions at all, due to various reasons like limited
time.
· Before leaving politely thank the
chairperson and nod at the others politely. Avoid
saying "Have a good day sir". A "Thank you
Sir/Madam" is enough.
The Application Procedure for the Civil Services
Examination is pretty simple. Electronically scannable
Application Forms along with the Information Brochure
can be obtained from the designated Head Post
Offices / Post Offices throughout the country. The duly
filled in Application Form with the acknowledgement
card should be sent to - Secretary, Union Public
Service Commission, Dholpur House, New Delhi -
110011. For more details regarding Syllabi,
Examination Centres and other clauses, interested
candidates are advised to check UPSC's Notification
issued during December in 'Employment News' and
all major newspapers.
Syllabus:
General Studies- Compulsory
Preliminary Examination of Civil Services Exam
Section-A
General Studies
· General Science.
· Current events of national and international
importance
· History of India and Indian National Movement
· Indian and World Geography
· Indian Polity and Economy
· General Mental Ability
Questions on General Science will cover general
appreciation and understanding of science including
matters of everyday observation and experience, as
may be expected of a well educated person who has
not made a special study of any particular scientific
discipline. In current events, knowledge of significant
national and international events will be tested. In
History of India, emphasis will be on broad general
understanding of the subject in its social, economic
and political aspects. Questions on the Indian
National Movement will relate to the nature and
character of the nineteenth century resurgence, growth
of nationalism and attainment of Independence. In
Geography, emphasis will be on Geography of India.
Questions on the Geography of India will relate to
physical, social and economic Geography of the
country, including the main features of Indian
agricultural and natural resources. Questions on
Indian Polity and Economy will test knowledge of the
country’s political system and Constitution of India,
Panchayati Raj, Social Systems and economic
developments in India. On general mental ability, the
candidates will be tested on reasoning and analytical
abilities.
Top
Main Examination of Civil Services Exam
The nature and standard of questions in these papers
will be such that a well-educated person will be able to
answer them without any specialized study. The
questions will be such as to test a candidate's general
awareness of a variety of subjects, which will have
relevance for a career in Civil Services.
Paper-I
(a) History of Modern India and Indian Culture
The History of Modern India will cover history of the
Country from about the middle of nineteenth century
and would also include questions on important
personalities who shaped the Freedom Movement and
Social reforms. The part relating to Indian Culture will
cover all aspects of Indian Culture from the ancient to
modern times.
(b) Geogrphy of India
In this part, questions will be on the physical,
economic and social geography of India.
(c) Indian Polity
This part will include questions on the Constitution of
India, Political system and related matters.
(d) Current National issues and topics of social
relevance
This part is intended to test the Candidate's
awareness of current national issues and topics of
social relevance in the present-day India, such as the
following.
Demography & Human Resource & related issues.
Behavioural & Social issues & Social Welfare
problems, such as child labour, gender equality, adult
literacy, rehabilitation of the handicapped and other
deprived segments of the society, drug abuse, public
health etc.
Law enforcement issues, human rights, corruption in
public life, communal harmony etc.
Internal Security and related issues.
Environmental issues, ecological preservation,
conservation of natural resources and national
heritage.
The role of national institutions, their relevance and
need for change.
Paper-II
(a) India and the World
This part is intended to test candidate's awareness of
India's relationship with the world in various spheres,
such as the following:-
· Foreign Affairs
· External Security and related matters
· Nuclear Policy
· Indians abroad
(b) Indian Economy
In this part, questions will be on the planning and
economic development in India, economic & trade
issues, Foreign Trade, the role and functions of I.M.F.,
World Bank, W.T.O. etc.
(c) International Affairs & Institutions
This part will include questions on important events in
world affairs and on international institutions.
(d) Developments in the field of science & technology,
communications and space
In this part, questions will test the candidate's
awareness of the developments in the field of science
& technology, communications and space and also
basic ideas of computers.
(e) Statistical analysis, graphs and diagrams
This part will include exercises to test the candidate's
ability to draw common sense conclusions from
information presented in statistical, graphical or
diagrammatical form and to point out deficiencies,
limitations or inconsistencies therein.
Geography- Optional
Section-A
Physical Geography
i) Geomorphology
Origin of the earth; Geological Time Scale; Interior of
the earth; Types and characteristics of rocks; Folding
and Faulting; Volcanoes; Earthquakes; Weathering;
Landforms caused by fluvial, aeolian and glacial
actions.
ii) Climatology
Structure and composition of atmosphere;
Temperature; Pressure belts and Wind systems;
Clouds and rainfall types; Cyclones and anti-cyclones;
Major climatic types.
iii) Oceanography
Ocean relief; Temperature; Salinity; Ocean deposits;
Ocean currents, El Nino and La Nino; Waves and
tides.
iv) Biogeography
Origin and types of soils; Major biomes of the world;
Ecosystem and food chain; Environmental
degradation and conservation.
Section-B
Human Geography
i) Man and Environment Relationship
Growth and development of Human Geography;
Concepts of Determinism and Possibilism.
ii) Population
Races of mankind and tribes; growth and distribution
of world population; migration; population problems of
developed and developing countries.
iii) Economic Activities
Food gathering and hunting; pastoral herding; fishing
and forestry; Types of agriculture-shifting,
subsistence, commercial and plantation; Mining,
Power; Manufacturing -locational factors of textile, iron
and steel, sugar and fertilizer industries; Tertiary
activities-trade, transport, communication and
services.
iv) Settlements
Origin, types and patterns of rural settlements;
Processes of urbanisation; morphology and functional
classification of towns; million-cities and mega-cities.
Section-C
Geography of the World
i) Major Natural Regions : Characteristics, economic
base and human adaptation.
ii) Regional Geography of Developed Countries :
Canada, U.S.A., Western Europe, Russia, Japan,
Australia and New Zealand.
iii) Regional Geography of Developing Countries : S.E.
Asia, S.W. Asia, China, Southern Africa and Brazil.
iv) Regional Geography of South Asia.
Section-D
Geography of India
i) Physical Setting
Landforms, drainage, climate, soils and natural
vegetation.
ii) Economic Base
Minerals & energy resources, aquatic resources,
forest resources; irrigation, agriculture and industries;
trade and commerce.
iii) Population
Growth, distribution and density; demographic
characteristics.
iv) Environmental problems, developmental issues
and regional planning.
Section-E
Geographical Thought
i) Ancient Period : Contributions of Indians, Greeks,
Romans and Arabs.
ii) Pre-Modern Period : Contribution of Verenius, Kant,
Humboldt and Ritter.
iii) Modern Period : Dichotomy of determinism and
possibilism; contributions of Ratzel, Semple,
Huntington and La Blache.
iv) Recent Period : Quantitive Revolution; Radicalism,
Behaviouralism and Humanism.
Section-F
Techniques of Geographical Analysis
i) Maps : Scale and types, uses.
ii) Diagrams : Types and uses
iii) Projections : Types, characteristics and uses.
iv) Remote sensing and geographical information
system (GIS) : Aerial photographs and imagery, GIS.
Top
Main Examination of Civil Services Exam
Paper-I
Principles of Geography
Section-A
Physical Geography
i) Geomorphology : Factors controlling landform
development; endogenetic and exogenetic forces;
origin and evolution of the earth’s crust; physical
conditions of the earth’s interior; geosynclines;
continental drift; isostasy; sea-floor spreading; plate
tectonics; mountain building; volcanicity; earthquakes;
concepts of geomorphic cycles; landforms associated
with fluvial, arid, glacial, coastal and karst cycle;
groundwater; Applied Geomorphology.
ii) Climatology : Temperature and pressure belts of the
world; heat budget of the earth; atmospheric
circulation; planetary and local winds; monsoons and
jet streams; air masses and fronts; temperate and
tropical cyclones; types and distribution of
precipitation; Koppen’s and Thornthwaite’s
classification of world climate; hydrological cycle;
climatic change.
iii) Oceanography : Bottom topography of the Atlantic,
Indian and Pacific Oceans; temperature and salinity of
the oceans; ocean deposits; ocean currents and tides;
marine resources–biotic, mineral and energy
resources; coral reefs; sea-level changes.
iv) Biogeography : Genesis of soils; classification and
distribution of soils; soil profile; soil erosion and
conservation; factors influencing world distribution of
plants and animals; problems of deforestation and
conservation measures; social forestry, agro-forestry.
v) Environmental Geography : Human ecological
adaptations; transformation of nature by man;
environmental degradation and conservawtin;
ecosystems and their management; global ecological
imbalances–problems of pollution, global warming,
reduction in bio-diversity and depletion of forests.
Section-B
Human Geography
i) Perspectives in Human Geography : A real
differentiation; regional synthesis; dichotomy and
dualism; environmentalism; quantitative revolution
and locational analysis; radical, behavioural, human
and welfare approaches; cultural regions of the world
human and welfare approaches; cultural regions of the
world; human development indicators.
ii) Economic Geography : World economic develpment–
measurement and problems; world resources and
their distribution; energy crisis; the limits to growth;
world agriculture–typology of agricultural regions;
agricultural inputs and productivity; food and nutrition
problems; famine–causes, effects and remedies; world
industries–location patterns and problems; patterns of
world trade.
iii) Population and Settlement Geography : Growth and
distribution of world population; demographic
atrributes; causes and consequencies of migration;
concepts of over–, under– and optimum population;
world population problems.
Types and patterns of rural settlements; hierarchy of
urban settlements; concept of primate city and rank-
size rule; functional classificatipn of towns; sphere of
urban influence; rural-urban fringe; satellite town;
problems of urbanisation.
iv) Regional Planning : Concept of a region; types of
regions and methods of regionalisation; growth
centres and growth poles; regional imbalances;
environmental issues in regional planning; planning
for sustainable development.
v) Models, Theories and Laws in Human Geography :
System analysis in Human Geography; Malthusian,
Marxian and Demographic Transition models; Central
Place theories of Christaller and Losch; Von Thunen’s
model of agricultural location; Weber’s model of
industrial location; Rostov’s model of stages of
growth. Heart-land and Rimland theories; laws of
international boundaries and frontiers.
Note : Candidates will be required to answer one
compulsory map question pertinent to subjects
covered by this paper.
Paper-II
Geography of India
Section-A.
i) Physical Setting : Space relationship of India with
neighbouring countries; structure and relief; drainage
system and watersheds; physiographic regions;
mechanism of Indian monsoons; tropical cyclones and
western distrubances; floods and droughts; climatic
regions; natural vegetation, soil types and their
distributions.
ii) Resources : Land, surface and groundwater,
energy, minerals, and biotic resources, their
distribution, utilisation and conservation; energy
crisis.
iii) Agriculture : Infrastructure–irrigation, seeds,
fertilizers, power; institutional factors–land holdings,
land tenure and land reforms; agricultural productivity,
agricultural intensity, crop combination, land
capability; agro-and social forestry; green revolution
and its socio-economic and ecological implications;
significance of dry farming; livestock resources and
white revolution; blue revolution; agricultural
regionalisation; agro-climatic zones.
iv) Industry : Evolution of industries; locational factors
of cotton, jute, iron and steel, fertiliser, paper, drugs
and pharmaceutical, automobile and cottage
indusries; industrial complexes and industrial
regionalisaiton; new industrial policy; multinationals
and liberalisation.
v) Transport, Communication and Trade : Road,
railway, waterway, airway and pipeline networks and
their complementary roles in regional development;
growing importance of ports on national and foreign
trade, trade balance; free trade and export promotion
zones; developments in communication technology
and its impact on economy and society.
Section-B
i) Cultural Setting : Racial and ethnic diversities; major
tribes, tribal areas and their problems; role of
langague, religion and tradition in the formation of
cultural regions; growth, distribution and density of
population; demographic attributes–sex-ratio, age
structure, literacy rate, work-force, dependency ratio
and longevity; migration (inter-regional, intra-regional
and international) and associated problems,
population problems and policies.
ii) Settlements : Types, patterns and morphology of
rural settlements; urban development; census
definition of urban areas; morphology of Indian cities;
functional classification of Indian cities; conurbations
and metropolitan regions; urban sprawl; slums and
associated problems; town planning; problems of
urbanisaiton.
iii) Regional Development and Planning: Experience
of regional planning in India; Five Year Plans;
integrated rural development programmes; panchayati
raj and decentralised planning; command area
development; watershed management; planning for
backward area, desert drought-prone, hill and tribal
area development; multi-level planning; geography
and regional planning.
iv) Political Aspects : Geographical basis of Indian
federalism; state reorganisation; regional
consciousness and national integration; international
boundary of India and related issues; disputes on
sharing of water resources; India and geopolitics of
the Indian Ocean.
v) Contemporary Issues : Environmental hazards–
landslides, earthquakes, floods and droughts,
epidemics; issues related to environmental pollution;
changes in patterns of land use; principles of
environmental impact assessment and environmental
management; population explosion and food security;
environmental degradation; problems of agrarian and
industrial unrest; regional disparities in economic
development; concept of sustainable growth and
development.
Note : Candidates will be required to answer one
compulsory map question pertinent to subjects
covered by this paper
Indian History - Optional
Section-A
1. Prehistoric cultures in India
2. Indus Civilization. Origins. The Mature Phase:
extent, society, economy and culture. Contacts with
other cultures.Problems of decline.
3. Geographical distribution and characteristics of
pastoral and farming communities outside the Indus
region, from the neolithic to early iron phases.
4. Vedic society. The Vedic texts; changefrom
Rigvedic to later Vedic phases. Religion; Upanishadic
thought. Political and social organisation; evolutuion
of monarchy and varna system.
5. State formation and urbanization, from the
mahajanapadas to the Nandas. Jainism and
Buddhism. Factors for the spread of Buddhism.
6. The Mauryan Empire. Chandragupta; Megasthenes.
Asoka and his inscriptions; his dhamma,
administration, culture and art. The Arthasastra.
7. Post-Mauryan India, BC 200- AD 300. Society:
Evolution of jatis. The Satavahanas and state
formation in Peninsula. Sangam texts and society.
Indo-Greeks, Sakas, Parthians, Kushanas; Kanishka.
Contacts with the outside world. Religion : Saivism,
Bhagavatism, Hinayana and Mahayana Buddhism;
Jainism; Culture and art.
8. The Guptas and their successors (to c. 750 AD).
Changes in political organisation of empire. Economy
and society. Literature and science. Arts.
Section-B
9. Early Medieval India. Major dynasties; the Chola
Empire. Agrarian and political structures. The
Rajaputras. Extent of social mobility. Postition of
women. The Arabs in Sind and the Ghaznavides.
10. Cultural trends, 750-1200, Religious conditions :
importance of temples and monastic institutions;
Sankaracharya; Islam; Sufism. Literature and Science.
Alberuni’s "India". Art and architecture.
11-12. Thirteenth and fourteenth Centuries: Ghorian
invasions causes and consequences. Delhi Sultanate
under the "Slave" Rulers. Alauddin Khalji : Conquests;
administrative, agrarian and economic measures.
Muhammad Tughlug's innovations. Firuz Tughluq and
the decline of the Delhi Sultanate. Growth of
commerce and urbanization. Mystic movements in
Hinduism and Islam. Literature. Architecture,
Technological changes.
13. The fifteenth and early 16th Century : major
Provinicial dynasties; Vijaya-nagara Empire. The
Lodis, First phase of the Mughal Empire: Babur,
Humayun. The Sur empire and administration. The
Portuguese.
Montheistic movements: Kabir; Guru Nanak and
Sikhism; Bhakti. Growth of regional literatures. Art and
Culture.
14-15. The Mughal Empire , 1556-1707. Akbar:
conquests, administrative measures, jagir and
mansab systems; policy of sulh-i-kul. Jahangir,
Shahjahan and Aurangzeb : expansion in the Deccan;
religious policies. Shivaji.
Culture: Persian and regional literatures. Religious
thought: Abul Fazl; Maharashtra dharma. Painting.
Architecture.
Economy: conditions of peasants and artisans, growth
in trade; commerce with Europe. Social stratification
and status of women.
16. Decline of Mughal Empire, 1707-61. Causes
behind decline. Maratha power under the Peshwas.
Regional states. The Afghans. Major elements of
composite culture. Sawai Jai Singh, astronomer. Rise
of Urdu language.
Section-C
17. British expansion : The Carnatic Wars, Conquest
of Bengal. Mysore and its resitance to British
expansion: The three Anglo-Maratha Wars. Early
structure of British raj: Regulating and Pitt's India
Acts.
18. Economic Impact of the British Raj : Drain of
Wealth (Tribute); land revenue settlements (zamindari,
ryotwari, mahalwari); Deindustrialisation; Railways
and commercialisation of agriculture; Growth of
landless labour.
19. Cultural encounter and social changes:
Introduction of western education and modern ideas.
Indian Renaissance, social and religious reform
movements; growth of Indian middle class; The press
and its impact: rise of modern literature in Indian
languages. Social reforms measures before 1857.
20. Resistance to British rule : Early uprisings; The
1857 Revolt- causes, nature, course and
consequences.
21. Indian Freedom struggle-the first phase: Growth of
national consciousness; Formation of Associations;
Establishment of the Indian National Congress and its
Moderate phase;- Economic Nationalism; Swadeshi
Movement; The growth of "Extremism" and the 1907
split in Congress; The Act of 1909 - the policy of
Divide and Rule; Congress-League Pact of 1916.
22. Gandhi and his thought; Gandhian techniques of
mass mobilisation- Khilafat and Non Cooperation
Movement, Civil Disobedience and Quit India
Movement; Other strands in the National Movement-
Revolutionaries, the Left, Subhas Chandra Bose and
the Indian National Army.
23. Separatist Trends in Indian nationalist politics- the
Muslim League and the Hindu Mahasabha; The post -
1945 developments; Partition and Independence.
24. India independent to 1964. A parliamentary,
secular, democratic (republic the 1950 Constitution).
Jawaharlal Nehru's vision of a developed, socialist
society. Planning and state-controlled
industrialization. Agrarian reforms. Foreign policy of
Non-alignment. Border conflict with China and Chinese
aggression.
Top
History Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
Section-A
1. Sources and approaches to study of early Indian
history.
2. Early pastoral and agricultural communities. The
archaeological evidence.
3. The Indus Civilization: its origins, nature and
decline.
4. Patterns of settlement, economy, social
organization and religion in India (c. 2000 to 500
B.C.) : archaeological perspectives.
5. Evolution of north Indian society and culture:
evidence of Vedic texts (Samhitas to Sutras).
6. Teachings of Mahavira and Buddha. Contemporary
society. Early phase of state formation and
urbanization.
7. Rise of Magadha; the Mauryan empire. Ashoka's
inscriptions; his dhamma. Nature of the Mauryan
state.
8-9 Post-Mauryan period in northern and peninsular
India: Political and administrative history,. Society,
economy, culture and religion. Tamilaham and its
society: the Sangam texts.
10-11 India in the Gupta and post-Gupta period (to c.
750) : Political histroy of northern and peninsular
India; Samanta system and changes in political
structure; economy; social structure; culture; religion.
12. Themes in early Indian cultural history: languages
and texts; major stages in the evolution of art and
architecture; major philosphical thinkers and schools;
ideas in science and mathematics.
Section-B
13. India, 750-1200 : Polity, society and economy.
Major dynasties and political structurs in North India.
Agrarian structures. " Indian feudalism". Rise of
Rajputs. The Imperial Cholas and their
contemporaries in Peninsular India. Villagle
communities in the South. Conditions fof women.
Commerce mercantile groups and guilds; towns.
Problem of coinage. Arab conquest of Sind; the
Ghaznavide empire.
14. India, 750-1200: Culture, Literature, Kalhana,
historian. Styles of temple architecture; sculpture.
Religious thought and institutions: Sankaracharya's
vedanta. Ramanuja. Growth of Bhakti, Islam and its
arrival in India. Sufism. Indian science. Alberuni and
his study of Indian science and civilization.
15. The 13th Century. The Ghorian invasions. Factors
behind Ghorian success. Economic, social and
cultural consequences. Foundation of Delhi Sultanate.
The "slave" Dynasty. IItutmish; Balban. "The Khalji
Revolution". Early Sultanate architecture.
16. The 14th Century. Alauddin Khalji's conquests,
agrarian and economic measures. Muhammad
Tughluq's major "projects". Firuz Tughluq's
concessions and public works. Decline of the Sultante.
Foreing contacts: Ibn Battuta.
17. Economy societyand culture in the 13th and 14th
centureis. Caste and slavery under sultanate.
Tehnological changes. Sultanate architecture. [persian
literature: Amir Khusrau, Historiography; Ziya Barani.
Evolution of a composite culture. Sufism in North
India. Lingayats. Bhakti schools in the south.
18. The 15th and early16th Century (Political History).
Rise of Provincial Dynasties: Bengal, Kashmir (Zainul
Abedin), Gujarat, Malwa, Bahmanids. The Vijayanagra
Empire. Lodis. Mughal Empire, First phase : Babur,
Humayun. The Sur Empire : Sher Shah's
administration. The Portuguese colonial enterprise.
19. The 15th and early 16th Century (society, economy
and culture). Regional cultures and literatures.
provincial architectural styles. Society, culture,
literature and the arts in Vijayanagara Empire.
Monotheistic movements: Kabir and Guru Nank.
Bhakti Movements: Chaitanya. Sufism in its
pantheistic phase.
20. Akbar: His conquests and consolidation of empire.
Establishment of jagir and mansab systems. His
Rajput policy. Evolution of religious and social
outlook. Theory of Sulh-i-kul and religious policy. Abul
Fazl, thinker and historian. Court patronage of art and
technology.
21. Mughal empire in the 17th Century. Major policies
(administrative and religious) of Jahangir, Shahjahan
and Aurangzeb. The Empire and the Zamindars.
Nature of the Mughal state. Late 17th Century crisis:
Revolts. The Ahom kingdom, Shivaji and the early
maratha kingdom.
22. Economy and society, 16th and 17th Centuries.
Population. Agricultural and craft production. Towns,
commerce with Europe through Dutch, English and
French companies- a "trade revolution". Indian
mercantile classes. Banking, insurance and credit
systems. Conditions of peasants, famines. Condition
of Women.
23. Culture during Mughal Empire. Persian literature
(including historical works). Hindi and relgious
literatures. Mughal architecture. Mughal painting.
Provincial schools of architecture and painting.
Classical music. Science and technology. Sawai Jai
Singh, astronomer. Mystic eclecticism : Dara Shukoh.
Vaishnav Bhakti. Mahrasthra Dharma. Evolution of the
Sikh community (Khalsa).
24. First half of 18th Century: Factors behind decline
of the Mughal Empire. The regional principalities
(Nizam's Deccan, Bengal, Awadh). Rise of Maratha
ascendancy under the Peshwas. The Maratha fiscal
and financial system. Emergency of Afghan Power.
Panipat, 1761. Internal weakness, political cultural
and economic, on eve of the British conquest.
Paper-II
Section-A
1. Establishment of British rule in India: Factors
behind British success against Indian powers-Mysore,
Maratha Con federacy and the Punjab as major
powers in resistance; Policy of subsidiary Alliance
and Doctrine of Lapse.
2. Colonial Economy : Tribute system. Drain of wealth
and "deindustrialisation", Fiscal pressures and
revenue settlements (Zamindari, Ryotwari and
Mahalwari settlements); Structure of the British raj up
to 1857 (including the Acts of 1773 and 1784 and
administrative organisation).
3. Resistance to colonia rule : Early uprisings;
Causes, nature and impact of the Revolt of 1857;
Reorganisation of the Raj, 1858 and after.
4. Socio-cultural impact of colonial rule: Official social
reform measures (1828-57); Orientalist-Anglicist
controversy; coming of English education and the
press; Christian missionary activities;Bengal
Renaissance; Social and religious reform movements
in Bengal and other areas; Women as focus of social
reform.
5. Economy 1858-1914: Railways; Commercialisation
of Indian agriculture; Growth of landless labourers and
rural indebtedness; Famines; India as market for
British industry; Customs removal, exchange and
countervailing excise; Limited growth of modern
industry.
6. Early Indian Nationalism: Social background;
Formation of national associations; Peasant and tribal
uprising during the early nationalist era; Foundation of
the Indian National Congress; The Moderate phase of
the Congress; Growth of Extremism; The Indian
Council Act of 1909; Home Rule Movement; The
Government of India Act of 1919.
7. Inter-War economy of India: Industries and problem
of Protection; Agricultural distress; the Great
Depression; Ottawa agreements and Discriminatory
Protection; the growth of trade unions; The Kisan
Movement; The economic programme of the
Congress' Karachi resolution, 1931.
8. Nationalism under Gandhi's leadership: Gandhi's
career, thought and methods of mass mobilisation;
Rowlatt Satyagraha, Khilafat- Non Cooperation
Movement, Civil Disobedience Movement, 1940
Satyagraha and Quit India Movement; State People's
Movement.
9. Other strands of the National Movement:
a) Revolutionary movements since 1905; (b)
Constitutional politics; Swarajists, Liberals,
Responsive Cooperation; (c) Ideas of Jawharlal Nehru,
(d) The Left (Socialists and Communists); (e) Subhas
Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army; (f)
Communal strands: Muslim League and Hindu
Mahasabha; (g) Women in the National Movement.
10. Literary and cultural lmovements: Tagore,
Premchand, Subramanyam Bharati, Iqbal as
examples only; New trends in art; Film industry;
Writers' Organisations and Theatre Associations.
11. Towards Freedom: The Act of 1935; Congress
Ministries, 1937-1939; The Pakistan Movement; Post-
1945 upsurge (RIN Mutiny, Telangana uprising etc.,);
Consititutional negotiations and the Transfer of Power,
15 August 1947.
12. First phase of Independence (1947-64): Facing the
consequences of Partition; Gandhiji's murder;
economic dislocation; Integration of States; The
democratic constitution, 1950; Agrarian reforms;
Building an industrial welfare state; Planning and
industrialisation; Foreign policy of Non-alignment;
Relations with neighbours.
Section-B
13. Enlightenment and Modern ideas
#1. Renaissance Background
#2. Major Ideas of Enlightenment: Kant, Rousseau
#3. Spread of Enlightenment outside Europe
#4. Rise of socialist ideas (to Marx)
14. Origins of Modern Politics
#1. European States System
#2. American Revolution and the Constitution.
#3. French revolution and after math, 1789-1815.
#4. British Democratic Politics, 1815-1850;
Parliamentary Reformers, Free Traders, chartists.
15. Industriatization
#1. English Industrial Revolution: Causes and Impact
on Society
#2. Industrialization in other countries: USA, Germany,
Russia, Japan
#3. Socialist Industrialization: Soviet and Chinese.
16. Nation-State System
#1. Rise of Nationalism in 19th century
#2. Nationalism : state-building in Germany and Italy
#3. Disintegration of Empires through the emergence
of nationalities.
17. Imperialism and Colonialism
#1. Colonial System (Exploitation of New World, Trans-
Atlantic Slave Trade, Tribute from Asian Conquests)
#2. Types of Empire: of settlement and non-
settlement: Latin America, South Africa, Indonesia,
Australia.
#3. Imperialism and Free Trade: The New Imperialism
18. Revolution and Counter-Revolution
#1. 19th Century European revolutions
#2. The Russian Revolution of 1917-1921
#3. Fascist Counter-Revolution, Italy and Germany.
#4. The Chinese Revolution of 1949
19. World Wars
#1. 1st and 2nd World Wars as Total Wars: Societal
Implications
#2. World War I : Causes and Consequences
#3. World War II : Political Consequence
20. Cold War
#1. Emergence of Two Blocs
#2. Integration of West Europe and US Strategy;
Communist East Europe
#3. Emergence of Third World and Non-Alignment
4. UN and Dispute Resolution
21. Colonial Liberation
#1. Latin America-Bolivar
#2. Arab World-Egypt
#3. Africa-Apartheid to Democracy
#4. South-East Asia-Vietnam
22. Decolonization and Underdevelopment
#1. Decolonization: Break up of colonial Empires:
British, French, Duth
#2. Factors constraining Development : Latin America,
Africa
23. Unification of Europe
#1. Post War Foundations : NATO and European
Community
#2. Consolidation and Expansion of European
Community/European Union.
24. Soviety Disintegration and the Unipolar World
#1. Factors in the collapse of Soviet communism and
the Soviet Union, 1985-1991
#2. Political Changes in East Europe 1989-1992
#3. End of the Cold War and US Ascendancy in the
World
#4. Globalization
Political Science- Optional
Section-A
1. Political Science :
Nature & scope of the discipline, relationship with
allied disciplines like History, Economics, Philosophy,
Sociology, Psychology.
2. Meaning of Politics :
Approaches to the study of Politics.
3. Key Concepts :
State, Soceity, Sovereignty, Power, Citizenship,
Nation, Global order and Imperialism.
4. Political Ideas :
Rights, Liberty, Equality, Justice, Rule of Law. Civil
Soceity Swaraj, Revolution, Democratic Participation.
5. Democracy :
Meaning and Theories of Democracy, Electoral
system, Forms of Representation & Participation,
Political accountability.
6. Political Ideologies :
Liberalism, Neoliberalism, Marxism, Socialism,
Fascism, Gandhism.
7. Party System and Political Process :
Therories of Party System, National and regional
parties, Political Parties in the Third World. Patterns of
coalition politics, interest and pressure groups.
8. Forms of Government :
Parliamentary and Presidential. Federal & unitary
Modes of decentralisation.
9. Bureaucracy Concept :
Theories, Weber and critiques of Bureaucracy.
10. Theories of Development :
Meaning and various approaches. Concept and
Theories of underdevelopment Debates in the Third
World.
11. Social Movements :
Meaning, Theories & Forms, Role of Environmental
Feminist Peasant & workers movements, Role of Non
Government organisation.
12. Nationalism and Internationalism :
13. Major theories of International relations :
Realist Marxist, Systems & Decision making & Game
theory.
14. State & the Global order :
Neo-Liberalism, globalisation, structural adjustment,
regional economic integration, Nature and Impact of
globalisation.
Section-B
Indian Government and politics
1. Approaches to the study of Governments :
Comparative historical, legal institutional, political
economy and political sociology, approaches.
2. Classification of Political systems :
Democratic and Authoritarian, characteristics of
Political systems in the third world.
3. Typologies of constitutions : Basic features of these
constitutions & governments : including U.K., USA.
France, Germany, China, and South Africa.
4. Constitutional development :
in India during British Rule-A historical perspective.
5. Constituent Assembly :
philosophical and socio-economic dimensions. Salient
features of the Indian Constitution.
6. Nature of Indian federalism :
Centre-state relations, legislative, administrative,
financial and political; politics of regional move and
National Integration.
7. Fundamental Rights :
Constitutional provisions and political dynamics.
Judicial Interpretations and socio political realities;
Fundamental Duties.
8. The Union Executive :
President, Prime Minister and the Council of
Ministers, Constitutional provisions & framework and
political trends.
9. Parliament :
Powers and functions of the Lok Sabha & Rajya
Sabha; Parliamentary Committees; Functioning of the
Parliamentary system in India.
10. The Judiciary : The Supreme Court , Judicial
Review Judicial Activism, Public Intrest Litigation;
Judicial Reforms.
11. The State Executive :
Governor, Chief Minister and the Council of Ministers;
Constitutional Provisions and Political trends.
12. Indian Party System :
Evolution and Contemporay trends; coalition
government at the Centre and States, pressure groups
in Indian politics.
13. The interaction of Government & Scientific &
Technology business :
Previous and now their inter relationship and
changing roles in Society, Elites, Role of Pressure
groups class and voluntary associations in society.
14. Local Government & Politics :
Panchayti Raj and Municipal Government, structure
power & functions. Political realities, significance of
73rd and 74th Amendements, role of women in
Panchayats.
15. Bureaucracy and Development : Post-colonial
India; its changing role in the context of liberatis after,
bureauratic Accountability.
16. Challenges to Indian Democracy :
a) Communalism Regionalism violence,
criminalisation and corruption.
b) Regional disparities, environmental degradation,
illiteracy, Mass Poverty, Population, growth, caste
oppressions and socio economic inequalities among
backward classes.
Top
Main Examination of Civil Services Exam
Paper-I
Political Theory and Indian Politics
Section-A
1. Approaches to the study of political theory:
historical, normative and empirical.
2. Theories of state: Social contract, Liberal, Neo-
liberal, Marxist, communitarian, post-colonial.
3. State Sovereignty: Marxist and pluralistic theories;
globalisation and the State.
4. Democracy and Human Rights: Democratic theory-
classical and contemporary. Theories of Human
Rights; Theories of Justice, Equality and Revolution,
political obligation; New Social Movements.
5. Theories of Political Culture; Culture and politics in
Third World countries.
6. Theories of Political Economy-Classical and
contemporary.
7. Political Ideologies: Nature of Ideology; Liberalism,
Socialism, Marxism, Fascism, Gandhism and
Anarchism.
8. Theories of Power and Hegemony: Pareto, Mosca,
Mitchels, C. Wright Mills, Weber, Gramsci, Hannah
Arendt.
9. Indian Political Thought: Manu, Kautilya M.N. Roy
Gandhi Ambedkar and E V Ramswami Naicker.
10. Political Thought: Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli,
Hobbes, J S Mill, Hegel and Marx, Lenin, Rosa
Luxemberg and Mao Zedong.
Section-B
Indian Government and Politics
1. Indian Nationalism: Dadabhai Naoroji, Tilak,
Savarkar, Gandhi, Jayaprakash Narain, Nehru,
Subhas Bose, Ambedkar, Ram Manohar Lohia.
2. Nature and struggle of Indian freedom struggle :
From constitutionalism to Mass Satyagraha,
Revolutionary movements Non Co-operation, Civil
disobedience and Quit India, Indian Naval uprising,
Indian National Army; role of women in freedom
struggle.
3. Socio- economic dimensions of the nationalist
movement: The communal question and the demand
for partition; backward caste movements, Trade union
and Peasant movements, Civil rights movement.
4. Landmarks in Constitutional Development during
British Rule: Morley-Minto Reforms; Montagu-
Chelmsford Reforms; Simon Commission;
Government of India Act, 1935; Cripps Mission : Indian
Independence Act, 1947.
5. Salient Features of the Indian Constitution: The
Preamble, Fundamental Rights and Duties, Directive
Principles; federalism, parliamentary system;
amending procedures; judicial review.
6. The Executive System in theory and practice:
President, Prime Minister and the Council of
Ministers; Governor, Chief Minister and the State
Council of Ministers. The Bureaucracy.
7. Role and function of the Parliament and
Parlimentary Committee-Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha;
changing socio economic profile.
8. The Supreme Court and the High Courts; Judicial
Activism; PIL.
9. Statutory institutions/commis sions-UPSC, Election
Commission, Comptroller and Auditor General,
Backward Classes Commission, National Commission
for women; National Human Rights Commission;
Minorities Commission.
10. Party system : ideology and social base of
parties; fragmentation and regionalisation. Pressure
groups; patterns of coalition politics; trends in
electoral behaviour.
11. Class, caste, ethnicity and gender in Indian
politics; politics of regionalism, communalism,
backward class and Dalit movements, Tribal people
movements, struggle for gender justice.
12. Planning and Economic Development : Role of the
Planning Commission; Planning in the era of
liberalisation; political dimensions of economic
reforms.
13. Grassroots democracy : Panchayati Raj and
municipal government; significance of 73rd and 74th
Amendements. Grass root movement and women's
empowerment.
Paper - II
Comparative Politics and International Relations
Section-A
Comparative Analysis and International Politics
1. Approaches to the study of comparative politics :
traditional approaches; political economy, political
sociology or political system approaches; Nature of
political process in the Third World.
2. The Modern State :
Evolution, the contemporary trends in the advanced
industrial countries and the third world.
3. Development :
Strategies and contemporary discourse.
4. Concepts of International politics :
Power, national interest, balance of power, national
security, collective security and peace.
5. Theories of International politics Marxist, Realist,
Systems, Decision-making and Game Theory.
6. Determinants of foreign policy : Domestic
compulsions, geopolitics, geoeconomics and global
order.
7. Origin and contemporary relevance of the Cold War,
nature of the post-cold war global order.
8. Major issues of world politics : Cuban Missile
Crisis; Vietnam War, Oil Crisis, Afghan Civil War, Gulf
War, Collapse of the Soviet Union, Yugoslav Crisis.
9. Non-alignment :
Concept and movement; Third World Movements for
global justice, Non-alignment in the post cold war era.
10. The evolution of the international economic
system-from Bretton woods to WTO, the North-South
dimension.
11. International organisations UN and its specialized
agencies :
International Court of Justice; ILO, UNICEF, WHO
UNESCO.
12. Regional, organizations such as the ASEAN, APEC,
EU, SAARC, NAFTA
13. Contemporary Global Concerns : Democracy,
Human Rights, Ecology, Gender Justice, Global
commons, Communication.
Section-B
India and the World
1. Indian Foreign Policy :
Historical origins, determinants; the institutions of
policy-making; continuity and change.
2. India and the Non-Alignment Movement :
Evolution and contemporary relevance. Socio- political
basis of non-alignment-domestic and global.
3. Major issues in Indian foreign policy :
Sino-Indian Border War (1962); Indo-Pakistan War
(1971) and the liberation of Bangladesh; IPKF in Sri
Lanka; India as military nuclear power (1998).
4. Conflict and co-operation in South Asia :
India's relations with Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Bangladesh, Nepal. Regional co-operation and
SAARC. Kashmir question in India's foreign policy.
5. India's relation with Africa and Latin America.
6. India and South East Asia; ASEAN.
7. India and the major powers : USA, EU, China, Japan
and Russia.
8. India and the UN System : India's role in UN Peace
Keeping and global disarmament.
9. India and the emerging international economic
order; multilateral agencies-WTO, IMF, IBRD, ADB.
10. India and the question of nuclear weapons : NPT
and CTBT
Sociology - Optional
Unit I :
Basic Concepts :
Society, community, association, institution. Culture-
culture change, diffusion, Cultural-tag, Cultural
relativism, ethnocentrism, acculturation.
Social Groups-primary, secondary and reference
groups.
Social structure, social system, social action.
Status and role, role conflict, role set.
Norms and values-conformity and deviance.
Law and customs.
Socio-cultural processes :
socialisation, assimilation, integration, cooperation,
competition, conflict, accommodation, Social distance,
relative deprivation.
Unit II :
Marriage, Family and Kinship :
Marriage : types and norms, marriage as contract, and
as a sacrament.
Family : types, functions and changes.
Kinships : terms and usages, rules of residence,
descent, inheritance.
Unit III :
Social Stratification :
Forms and functions; Caste and Class. Jajmani
system, purity and pollution, dominant caste,
sanskritisation.
Unit IV :
Types of Society :
Tribal, agrarian, industrial and post-industrial.
Unit V :
Economy and Society :
Man, nature and social production, economic systems
of simple and complex societies, non-economic
determinants of economic behaviour, market (free)
economy and controlled (planned) economy.
Unit VI :
Industrial and Urban Society :
Rural-Urban Continuum, urban growth and
urbanisation-town, city and metropolis; basic features
of industrial society; impact of automation on society;
industrialisation and environment.
Unit VII :
Social Demography :
Population size, growth, composition, and distribution
in India; components of population growth-births,
deaths and migration; causes and consequences of
population growth; population and social
development; population policy.
Unit VIII :
Political Processes :
Power, authority and legitimacy; political
socialisation; political modernisation, pressure
groups; caste and politics.
Unit IX :
Weaker Sections-and Minorities :
Social justice-equal opportunity and special
opportunity; protective discrimination; constitutional
safeguards.
Unit X :
Social Change : Theories of change; factors of change;
science, technology and change. Social movements-
Peasant Movement, Women's Movement, Backward
Caste Movement, Dalit Movement.
Top
Sociology Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
General Sociology/Foundations of
Sociology/Fundamentals of Sociology
1. Sociology-The Discipline :
Sociology as a science and as an interpretative
discipline; impact of industrial and French Revolution
on the emergence of sociology; sociology and its
relationship with history, economics, political science,
psychology and anthropology.
2. Scientific Study of Social Phenomena :
Problem of objectivity and value neutrality; issue of
measurement in social science; elements of scientific
method-concepts, theory and fact, hypothesis;
research designs-descriptive, exploratory and
experimental
3. Techniques of data collection and analysis :
Participant and quasi-participant observation;
interview, questionnaire and schedule case study,
sampling-size, reliability and validity, scaling
techniques-social distance and Likert scale.
4. Pioneering contributions to Sociology:
a) Karl Marx : Historical materialism, mode of
production, alienation and class struggle.
b) Emile Durkheim : Division of labour, social fact,
religion and society.
c) Max Weber : Social action, ideal types, authority,
bureaucracy, protestant ethic and the spirit of
capitalism.
d) Talcott Parsons : Social system, pattern variables.
e) Robert K. Merton : Latent and manifest functions,
anomie, conformity and deviance, reference groups.
5. Marriage and Family :
Types and forms of marriage; family-structure and
function; personality and socialization; Social control;
family, lineage, descent and property; changing
structure of family marriage and sex roles in modern
society; divorce and its implications; gender issues;
role conflicts.
6. Social Stratification :
Concepts-hierarchy, inequality and stratification;
theories of stratification-Marx, Davis and Moore and
Melvin Tumin's critique; forms and functions; class-
different conceptions of class; class-in-itself and class-
for-itself; caste and class; caste as a class.
7. Social Mobility :
Types of mobility-open and closed models; intra-and
inter-generational mobility; vertical and horizontal
mobility; social mobility and social change.
8. Economic System :
Sociological dimensions of economic life; the impact
of economic processes on the larger society; social
aspects of division of labour and types of exchange;
features of pre-industrial and industrial economic
system; industrialisation and social change; social
determinants of economic development.
9. Political System :
The nature of power-personal power, community
power, power of the elite, class power, organisational
power, power of the un-organised masses; authority
and legitimacy; pressure groups and political parties;
voting behaviour; modes of political participation-
democratic and authoritarian forms.
10. Educational System :
Education and Culture; equality of educational
opportunity; social aspects of mass education;
problems of universalisation of primary education;
role of community and state intervention in education;
education as an instrument of social control and
social change; education and modernisation.
11. Religion :
Origins of religious beliefs in pre-modern socieites;
the sacred and the profane; social functions and
dysfunctions of religion; monistic and pluralistic
religion; organised and unorganised religions;
semitism and antisemitism; religion, sect and cults;
magic, religion and science.
12. Science & Technology :
Ethos of science; social responsibility of science;
social control of science; social consequences of
science and technology; technology and social
change.
13. Social Movements :
Concepts of social movements; genesis of social
movements; ideology and social movement; social
movement and social change; types of social
movements.
14. Social change and Development :
Continuity and change as fact and as value; theories
of social change-Marx, Parsons and Sorokin; direted
social change; social policy and social development.
Paper-II
Study of Indian Society
1. Historical Moorings of the Indian Society :
Traditional Hindu social organisation; socio-cultural
dynymics through the ages; impact of Buddhism,
Islam, and the West, factors in continuity and change.
2. Caste System :
Origin of the caste system; cultural and structural
views about caste; mobility in caste; caste among
Muslims and Christians; change and persistence of
caste in modern India; issues of equality and social
justice; views of Gandhi and Ambedkar on caste; caste
on and Indian polity; Backward Classes Movement;
Mandal Commission Report and issues of social
backwardness and social justice; emergence of Dalit
consciousness.
3. Class Structure :
Class structure in India, agrarian and industrial class
structure; emergence ofmiddle class; emergence of
classes among tribes; elite formation in India.
4. Marriage, Family and Kinship:
Marriage among different ethnic groups, its changing
trends and its future; family-its structural and
functional aspects-its changing forms; regional
variations in kinship systems and its socio-cultural
correlates; impact of legislation and socio-economic
change on marriage and family; generation gap.
5. Agrarian Social Structure :
Peasant society and agrarian systems; land tenure
systems-historical perspectives, social consequences
of land reforms and green revolution; feudalism-semi-
feudalism debates; emerging agrarian class structure;
agrarian unrest.
6. Industry and Society :
Path of industrialisation, occupational diversification,
trade unions and human relations; market economy
and its social consequences; economic reforms
liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation.
7. Political Processes :
Working of the democratic political system in a
traditional society; political parties and their social
base; social structural origins of political elites and
their orientations; regionalism, pluralism and national
unity; decentralisation of power; panchayati raj and
nagarpalikas and 73rd and 74th constitutional
amendments.
8. Education :
Directive Principles of State Policy and primary
education; education; educational inequality and
change; education and social mobility; the role of
community and state intervention in education;
universalisation of primary education; Total Literacy
Campaigns; educational problems of disadvantages
groups.
9. Religion and Society :
Size, growth and regional distribution of different
religious groups; educational levels of different
groups; problems of religious minorities; communal
tensions; secularism; conversions; religious
fundamentalism.
10. Tribal Societies :
Distinctive features of tribal communities and their
geographical spread; problems of tribal communities-
land alienation, poverty, indebetedness, health and
nutrition, education; tribal development efforts after
independence; tribal policy-isolation, assimilation and
integration; issues of tribal identity.
11. Population Dynamics :
Population size, growth, composition and distribution;
components of population growth; birth rate, death rate
and migration; determinants and consequences of
population growth; issues of age at marriage, sex
ratio, infant mortality rate; population policy and
family welfare programmes.
12. Dimensions of Development :
Strategy and ideology of planning; poverty,
indebtedness and bonded labour; strategies of rural
development-poverty alleviation programmes;
environment, housing, slums, and unemployment;
programmes for urban development.
13. Social Change :
Endogenous and exogenous sources of change and
resistance toc hange; processes of change-
sanskritisation and modernisation; agents of change-
mass media, education and communication; problems
of change and modernisation; structural contradictions
and breakdowns.
14. Social Movements :
Reform Movements : Arya Samaj, Satya Sadhak
Samaj, Sri Narayanguru Dharma Paripalana Sabha,
and Ram Krishna Mission.
Peasant movements-Kisan Sabha, Telengana,
Naxalbari.
Backward Castes Movement : Self-respect Movement,
backward castes mobilisation in North India.
15. Women and society :
Demographic profile of women; special problems-
dowry, atrocities, discrimination; existing programmes
for women and their impact. Situational analysis of
children; child welfare programmes.
16. Social Problems :
Prostitution, AIDS, alcoholism, drug addiction,
corruption.
Indian Public Administration - Optional
. Introduction : Meaning, scope and significance.
Evolution and status of the discipline. Comparative
Public Administration and Development
Administration. Public and Private Administration:
State versus market debate. New Pubic
Administration. New Public Management perspective.
2. Basic concepts and principles : Organisation,
hierarchy, Unity of command, Span of control,
Authority and Responsibility, Co-ordination,
Centralization and Decentralization, Delegation,
Supervision, Line and Staff.
3. Theories of Administration : Scientific Management
(Taylor and the Scientific Managment Movement),
Classical Theory (Fayol, Urwick, Gulick and others)
Bureaucratic Theory (Weber and his critics). Ideas of
Mary Parker Follett and C.I. Barnard; Human Relations
School (Elton Mayo and others). Behavioral Approach,
Systems approach.
4. Administrative Behaviour : Decision making with
special reference to H. Simon, communication and
control, leadership theories. Theories of motivation
(Maslow and Herzberg)
5. Accountability and Control : The concepts of
Accountability and control : Legislative, executive and
judicial control. Citizen and Administration: Role of
civil society, people's participation and Right to
Information.
6. Administrative Systems : Comparative
administrative features of USA, Great Britain, France
and Japan.
7. Personnel Administration : Role of Civil Service in
developing societies; position classification,
Recuritment, Training, Promotion, Pay and Service
conditions. Relations with the Political Executive;
Administrative Ethics.
8. Financial Administration : Budget: Concepts and
forms. Formulation and execution of budget, deficit
financing and public debt, Accounts and Audit.
9. Union Government and Administration in India.
British legacy : Constitutional context of Indian
Administration; The President, Prime Minister and the
Council of Ministers; Central Secretariat; Cabinet
Secretariat, Prime Minister's Office, Planning
Commission; Finance Commission; Election
Commission; Comptroller and Auditor-General of India.
Public enterprises: Patterns, role performance and
impact of liberalization.
10. Civil Services in India : Recruitment to All India
and Central Services. Union Public Service
Commission; Training of Civil Servants. Generalists
and Specialists. Minister-Civil Servant relationship.
11. State and District Administration : Governor, Chief
Minister, Secretariat, Chief Secretary, Directorates,
District Collector: changing role.
12. Local Government : Panchayati Raj and Urban
local Government: Main features, structures, finances
and problem areas. 73rd and 74th Constitutional
Amendements.
Top
Public Administration Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
Administrative theory
Section-A
I Introduction : Meaning, scope and significance of
Public Administration, Public and Private
Administration, Wilson's vision of Public
Administration, Evolution of the discipline and its
present status. New Public Administration. Public
choice approach and New Public Management
perspective. Features of Entrepreneurial Government,
Good Governance : concept and application.
II Theories of Administration : Nature and typologies;
Scientific Management (Taylor and the Scientific
Management Movement), Classical Theory (Fayol,
Urwick, Gulick and others), Bureaucratic Theory.
(Marxist view, Weber's model and its critique, post-
Weberian developments.) Ideas of Mary Parker Follett
and (C.I. Barnard) Human Relations School (Elton
Mayo and and others). Behavioral Approach to
Organizational Analysis. Participative Management;
(McGregor, Likert and others). The Systems Approach;
Open and closed systems.
III Structure of public organisations : Typologies of
Political Executive and their functions. Forms of public
organizations : Ministries and Departments :
Corporations; Companies, Boards and Commissions;
Ad hoc and Advisory bodies. Headquarters and field
relationships.
IV Administrative Behaviour : Decision making with
special reference to Herbert Simon, Theories of
Leadership, Communication, Morale, Motivation
(Maslow and Herzberg.)
V Accountability and Control : Concepts of
Accountability and Control; Legislative Executive and
Judicial Control over Administration. Citizen and
Administration, Role of civil society, people's
participation, Right to information. Administrative
corruption, machinery for redressal of citizens'
grievances. Citizens Charter.
VI Administrative Law : Meaning and significance.
Delegated Legislation : Types, Advantages,
Limitations, Safeguards, Administrative Tribunals :
limitations and methods of ensuring effectiveness.
Section-B
VII Administrative Reforms : Meaning, process and
obstacles. Techniques of administrative
improvement : O and M; Work Study and Work
Management, Information Technology.
VIII Comparative Public Administration : Meaning,
nature and scope. Models of Comparative Public
Administration : Bureaucratic and ecological.
IX Development Administration : Origin and purpose,
Rigg's Prismatic-Sala Model; Bureaucracy and
Development; Changing profile of Development
Administration; new directions in people's self
development and empowerment.
X Public Policy : Relevance of Policy making in Public
Administration. Model of Policy-making Sectoral
policies (e.g. Energy, Industries Education and
Transport Policies) Process of Policy formulation,
problems of implementation, feed-back and
evaluation.
XI Personnel Administration : Objectives of Personnel
Administration. Importance of human resource
development. Recruitment, training, career
development, position classification, discipline,
Performance Appraisal, Promotion, Pay and Service
Conditions; employer- employee relations, grievance
redressal mechanism integrity and code of conduct.
XII Financial administration : Monetary and fiscal
policies. Resource mobilisation : tax and non-tax
sources. Public borrowings and public debt. Concepts
and types of budget. Preparation and execution of the
budget. Deficit financing Performance budgeting.
Legislative control, Accounts and Audit.
Paper-II
Indian Administration
Section-A
1. Evolution of Indian Administration Kautilya, Mughal
period, British legacy.
2. Constitutional framework value premises of the
Constitution, Parliamentary democracy, federalism,
Planning. Human Rights : National Human Rights
Commission.
3. Union Government and Administration President
Prime Minister, Council of Ministers, Cabinet
committees, Cabinet Secretariat, Prime Minister's
Office, Central Secretariat, Ministries and
Departments, Advisory Bodies, Boards and
Commissions, Field Organizations.
4. State Government and Administration–Governor,
Chief Minsiter, Council of Ministers, Chief Secretary,
State Secretariat Directorates.
5. District Administration Changing role of the District
Collector : Law and Order and Development
Management. Relationship with functional
departments. District administration and the
Panchayati Raj institutions. Role and functions of the
Sub-Divisional Officer.
6. Local Government : Panchayati Raj and Urban
Local Government. Structures, Functions, finances.
Main features of 73rd and 74th Constitutional
Amendements : Problems of implementation. Major
rural and urban development programmes and their
management.
7. Public Sector : Forms of public undertakings. Their
contribution to the economy; problems of autonomy
and accountability. Changing role of the Public Sector
in the context of liberalisation.
Section-B
8 Public Services : All India Services Constitutional
position , role and functions. Central Services : nature
and functions. Union Public Service Commission.
State Services and the State Public Service
Commissions. Training in the changing context of
governance.
9. Control of Public Expenditure. Parliamentary control
Estimates Committee, Public Accounts Committee,
Committee on Public Undertakings, Office of the
Comptroller and Auditor General of India, Role of the
Finance Ministry in monetary and fiscal policy area,
co-ordination and economy in expenditure.
10. Administrative Reforms : Reforms since
independence. Reports of the Administrative Reforms
Commission, Problems of implementation.
11. Machinery for Planning : Role, composition and
review of functions of the Planning Commission; Role
of the National Development Council. Process of Plan
formulation at Union and State levels. Decentralized
planning.
12. Administration of Law and Order : Role of Central
and State Agencies in maintenance of law and order.
Criminalisation of politics and administration.
13. Welfare Administration : Machinery for welfare
administration at the national and state levels. Central
Social Welfare Board and the State, Social Welfare
Boards. Special organizations for the welfare of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Welfare
Programmes for women and children. Problems of
child labour. Role of civil society.
14. Major issues in Indian Administration : problems
of Centre-State Relations; Relationship between
political and permanent Executives. Values in Public
Service and Administrative Culture. Lok Pal and Lok
Ayuktas. Development and environmental issues.
Impact of information Technology on Public
Administration. Indian Administration and
Globalisation.
Indian Psychology - Optional
. Introduction to psychology :
Concept and definition of psychology. Nature and
Scope. Branches of psychology. Application of
psychology to soceity and social problems.
2. Methods in Psychology :
Characteristics of psychological studies, Observation.
Survey method, Clinical and case study method.
Experimental method. Application of the method.
3. Quantitive Analysis :
Measures of central tendency and dispersion.
Correlation. Levels of measurement. Reliability and
validity. Application in test construction.
4. Physiological Psychology :
Structure of neuron, nerve impulses, synapse and
neurotransmitters. Central and peripheral nervous
system-structure and neural control of behaviour.
Hemispheric specialisation. Endocrine system and
hormonal control of behaviour. Application of
hemispheric knowledge to diagnostic purposes.
5. Development of human behaviour :
Individual Differences : Heredity and environment.
Life span developent. Role of early experience and
mastering of developmental tasks. Sensitive or critical
periods of development in human life cycle and its
application.
6. Perception :
Preceptual processes. Perceputal organsiation.
Perception of form, colour, depth and time. Perceptual
readiness and constancy. Role of motivation, social
and cultural factors in perception. Application of
knowledge of perception to skill development (e.g. for
certain jobs like that of driving, airline pilots etc.)
7. Learning :
Classical conditioning and operant conditioning.
Modeling and observational learning. Transfer of
training. Learing and motivation. Application of the
above to the improvement of academic performance in
education.
8. Memory :
Physiological basis of memory. Memory and
forgetting. Measurement of memory (Recall,
Recognition, Relearning). Short term and long term
memory. Theories of forgetting (Decay and
Interference theories and Repressive forgetting).
Application of Mnemonic devices etc, to improving
memory.
9. Cognition and Language :
Concept of formation. Nature and development of
thinking. Language and thought and acquisition of
language. Problem solving. Creative thinking and its
applications.
10. Intelligence and Aptitude :
Definition and concept. Theories and models of
Intelligence. Measurement of intelligence and
aptitude. Exceptional intelligence. Mental retardation.
Concepts of multiple, emotional and artificial
intelligence and their application.
11. Motivation and Emotion :
Definition and concept of instinct, needs, drives and
motives. Theories of motivation and their application
(drive reduction theory, Maslow's motivational
hierarchy). Social motivation: Achievement, power,
affiliation motives and influence of early experiences.
Physiological basis of emotion. Theories of emotion
(James-Lange and Cannon-Brad theories, cognitive
physiological theory).
12. Personality :
Concepts and Definition of personality. Sutdy of
personality (Trait, type and eclectic approaches)
Development of personality (Freud, Erikson,
Biological and socio-cultural determinants).
Measurement of Personality (Projective tests, pencil-
paper tests). Application of personality profiles in
fitting a person to a job.
13. Adjustment and Stress :
Concept and definition. Factors affecting adjustment
(frustration and conflict). Sources of stress and
reactions to stress. Coping with stress. Application of
stress management techniques.
14. Social Behaviour :
Socio-cultural factors and behaviour. Development of
attitudes, stereotypes and prejudice, Measurement of
Attidutes (Thurstone, Likert attitude scale and
Bogardus Social Distance scale). Strategies for
reducing prejudice and changing atitude. Person
perception, implicit personality theory and integrating
impressions. Application of person perception to
impression management.
15. Application of Psychology :
Health and mental health (yoga, meditation and
relaxation therapies). Education (Programmed
learning,. self instructional learning and learning
styles). Community (self help through group
cohesiveness and leadership). Industry (Assessment
centre approach in selection, recruitment and training).
Environment (man-nature interaction, personal space
concept, pollution reduction) Information technology
(Application to commercial, educational and health
areas).
Top
Psychology (Optional) Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
Foundations of Psychology
Section-A
1. Introduction : Psychology as a Science : Definitions
and perspective. Psychology in relation to other social
and natural sciences. Use of interdiciplinary
approach.
2. Methods of Psychology : Characteristics and
components of methods in psychology (induction,
deduction and introspection). Observation, Survey,
Laboratory and field experiments. Clinical and Case
study. Experimental and quasi experimental methods.
3. Research methods and quantitative analysis :
Major steps in psychological research (problem
statement, hypothesis formulation, research design,
sampling, tools of data collection, analysis and
interpretation and report writing). Fundamental versus
applied research. Methods of data collection
(interview, observation, questionnaire and case
study). Research Designs (Ex-post facto and
experimental). Application of statistical techniques (t-
test, one-way ANOVA correlation and regression and
chi-square tests).
4. Development of Human Behaviour : The nature,
origin and development. Role of genetic and
environmental factors in determining human
behaviour. Influence of cultural factors and
socialisation. Life span development-the critical
periods and their handling, Mastery of the
developmental tasks. Influence of child rearing
practices and its impact on the growth and
development of the individual, concept of national
character.
5. Attention and perception : Attention - factors,
influencing attention including set and characteristics
of stimulus. Sensation-concepts of threshold, absolute
and difference thresholds, signal detection and
vigilance. Definition and concept of perception,
biological factors in perception. Perceptual
organisation-influence of past experiences, Perceptual
defence-factors influencing. Space and depth
perception, size estimation and perceptual readiness.
6. Learning : Concepts and theories of learning
(Pavlov, Skimer and Piaget). The processes of
extinction, discrimination and generalisation.
Programmed learning, probability learning, self
instructional learning, concepts, types and the
schedules of reinforcement. Modelling and social
learning.
7. Memory : Concepts and definition of memory and
forgetting, 7+/-2 concept and clumking Encoding,
storage and retrieval. Factors influencing retention
and foregetting. Theories of forgetting (Repression,
Decay and Interference theories). The concept of
reminiscence.
Section-B
8. Thinking and Problem Solving : Concept formation
processes. Reasoning and problem solving. Creative
thinking and fostering creativity. Information
processing. Decision making and judgment.
9. Intelligence and Aptitude : Concept and definition of
Intelligence and aptitude, Nature and theories of
intelligence. Measurement of Intelligence and aptitude
Concepts and measurement of emotional and multiple
intelligence.
10. Motivation and Emotion : Definition and concepts.
Theories and physiological basis of motivation and
emotion. Measurement of motivation and emotion
Motivation and emotion-their effects on behaviour.
11. Personality : Concept and definition of personality.
Theories of personality (psychoanalytical, socio-
cultural, interpersonal and developmental, humanistic,
behaviouristic, trait and type approaches).
Measurement of personality (projective tests, pencil-
paper test). The Indian approach to Personality.
Training for personality development.
12. Language and Communication : Human language-
properties, structure and linguistic hierarchy,
Language acquisition-predisposition, critical period
hypothesis. Theories of language development
(Skinner, Chomsky), Process and types of
communication. Effective communication and training.
13. Attitudes, Values and Interests : Definitions,
concepts of attitudes, values and interests.
Components ofattitudes, values and interests.
Formation and maintenance of attitudes. Measurement
of attitudes, values and interests. Theories of
attitudes, and attitudes changes, strategies for
fostering values.
14. Recent Trends : Computer application in the
Psychological laboratory and psychological testing.
Artificial Intelligence. Psychocybernetics. Study of
consciousness-sleep-wake schedules; dreams,
stimulus deprivation, meditation, hypnotic/drug
induced states. Extrasensory perception. Intersensory
perception Simulation studies.
Paper-II
Psychology : Issues and Applications
Section-A
1. Psychological Measurement of Individual
Diference : The nature of individual differences.
Characteristics and construction of standardized
psychological tests. Types of psychological tests.
Use, misuse and limitation of psychological tests.
Ethical issues in the use of psychological tests.
2. Well being and Mental Disorders : Concept of
health, positive health, well being and ill health.
Mental disorders (Anxiety disorders, mood disorders,
schizophernia and delusional disorders; personality
disorders, substance abuse disorders). Causal factors
in mental disorders. Factors influencing positive
health, well being, life style and quality of life.
3. Therapeutic Approaches : Psychody-namic
therapies. Behaviour therapies. Client centered
therapy. Cognitive therapies. Indigenous therapies
(Yoga, Reiki, Meditation) Biofeedback therapy.
Prevention and rehabilitation of the mentally ill.
4. Work Psychology and Organisational Behaviour :
Personnel selection and training. Use of
Psychological tests in the industry. Training and
human resource development. Theories of work
motivation. Leadership and participatory
management. Advertising and marketing.
5. Application of Psychology to Educational Field :
Psychological principles underlying effective teaching-
learning process.Learning styles Gifted, retarded,
learning disabled and their training. Training for
improving memory and better academic achievement.
Personality development and value education,
Educational, vocational guidance and Career
counselling. Use of Psychological tests in educational
institutions.
6. Communty Psychology : Definition and concept of
Community Psychology. Role of community
psychologists in social change. Use of small groups
in social action. Arousing community consciousness
and action for handling social problems. Group
decision making and leadership for social change.
7. Rehabilitation Psychology : Primary, secondary and
tertiary prevention programmes-role of psychologists.
Organising of services for rehabilitation of physically,
mentally and socially challenged persons including
old persons. Rehabilitation of persons suffering from
substance abuse, juvenile delinquency, criminal
behaviours. Rehabilitation of victims of violence.
Rehabiliation of HIV/.AIDS victims.
Section-B
8. Application of Psychology to disadvantaged
groups : The concepts of disadvantaged, deprivation
and socially deprived. Social, physical, cultural and
economic consequences of disadvantaged and
deprived groups. Educating and motivating the
disadvantaged towards development.
9. Psychological and the problem of social
integration : The concept of social integration. The
problem of caste, class, religion and language
conflicts and prejudice. Nature and manifestation of
prejudice between the ingroup and outgroup. Casual
factors of such conflicts and prejudices. Psychological
strategies for handling the conflicts and prejudices.
Measures to achieve social integration.
10. Application of psychology in Information
Technology and Mass media : The present scenario of
information technology and the mass media boom and
the role of psychologists. Selection and training of
psychology professionals to work in the field of IT and
mass media. Distance learning through IT and mass
media. Entrepre neurship through e-commerce.
Multilevel marketing. Impact of TV and fostering value
through IT and mass media. Psychological
consequences of recent developments in Information
Technology.
11. Application of Psychology in the field of Defence :
The concept of Military psychology, Aviation
psychology and Psychological warfare Role of Military
psychologists in the defence. Selection, recruitment
and training of personnel. Facilitating the process of
adjustment of personnel to military life-Role of
Counselling. Devising Psychological tests for defence
personnel. Psychological disorders due to war.
Human engineering in Defence.
12. Psychology and Economic development :
Achievement motivation and economic development.
Characteristics of entrepreneurial behavior. Motivating
and Training people for entrepreneurship and
economic development. Women Entrepreneurs.
Consumer rights and consumer courts.
13. Application of psychology to environment and
related fields : Environmental psychology-effects of
noise, pollution and crowding. Population psychology-
psychological consequences of population explosion
and high population density. Motivating for small
family norms. Impact of rapid scientific and
technological growth on degradation of environment.
14. Other applications of psychology : Sports
psychology-improving performance of sports,
personnel, psychology and understanding of political
behaviour. Voting behaviours. Psychology of
corruption and strategies to deal with Psychology of
terrorism.
Indian Physics – Optional
1. Mechanics and Waves
Dimensional analysis. Newton's laws of motion and
applications, variable mass systems, projectiles.
Rotational dynamics-kinetic energy, angular
momentum, theorems of moment of intertia and
calculations in simple cases. Conservative forces,
frictional forces. Gravitaional potential and intensity
due to spherical objects. Central forces, Kepler's
problem, escape velocity and artificial satellites
(including GPS). Streamline motion, viscosity,
Poiseuille's equation. Applications of Bernoulli's
equation and Stokes' law.
Special relativity and Lorentz transformation-length
contraction, time dilation, mass-energy relation.
Simple harmonic motion, Lissajous figures. Damped
oscillation, forced oscillation and resonance. Beats,
Phase and group velocities. Stationary waves,
vibration of strings and air columns, longitudinal
waves in solids. Doppler effect. Ultrasonics and
applications.
2. Geometrical and Physical Optics.
Laws of reflection and refraction from Fermat's
principle. Matrix method in paraxial optics- thin lens
formula, nodal planes, system of two thin lenses.
Chromatic and spherical aberrations. Simple optical
instruments-magnifier, eyepieces, telescopes and
microscopes.
Huygens' principle-reflection and refraction of waves.
Interference of light-Young's experiment, Newton's
rings, interference by thin films, Michelson
interferometer. Fraunhofer diffraction-single slit,
double slit, diffraction grating, resolving power.
Fresnel diffraction-half-period zones and zone plate.
Production and detection of linearly, circularly and
elliptically polarised light. Double refraction, quarter-
waves plates and half-wave plates. Polarizing sheets.
Optical activity and applications. Rayleigh scattering
and applications.
Elements of fibre optics-attenuation; pulse dispersion
in step index and parabolic index fibres; material
dispersion. Lasers, characteristics of laser light-
spatial and temporal coherence. Focussing of laser
beams and applciations.
3. Heat and Thermodynamics
Thermal equilibrium and temperature. The zeroth law
of thermodynamics. Heat and the first law of
thermodynamics. Efficiency of Carnot engines.
Entropy and the second law of thermodynamics.
Kinetic theory and the equation of state of an ideal
gas. Mean free path, distribution of molecular speeds
and energies. Trasport phenomena. Andrew's
experiements-van der Waals equation and
applications. Joule-Kelvin effect and applications.
Brownian motion. Thermodynamic potentials-Maxwell
relations. Phase transitions. Kirchhoff's laws. Black-
body radiation-Stefan-Boltzmann law, spectral
radiancy, Wien displacement law, application to the
cosmic microwave background radiation, Planck
radiation law.
4. Electricity and Magnetism
Electric charge, Coulomb's law, electric field, Gauss'
law. Electric potential, van de Graff accelerator.
Capacitors, dielectrics and polarization. Ohm's law,
Kirchhoff's first and second rules, resistors in series
and parallel, applications to two-loop circuits.
Magnietic field-Gauss'law for magnetism, atomic and
nuclear magnetism, magnetic susceptibility,
classification of magnetic materials. Cirulating
charges, cyclotron, synchrotron. Hall effect. Biot-
Savart law, Ampere's law, Faraday's law of induction.,
Lenz's law. Inductance. Alternating current circuits-RC,
LR, single-loop LRC circuits, impedance, resonance,
power in AC circuits. Displacement current, Maxwell's
equations (MKS units), electromagnetic waves, energy
transport and Poynting vector.
5. Atomic and Nuclear Physics
Photoelectric effect, Einstein's photon theory. Bohr's
theory of hydrogen atom. Stern-Gerlach experiment,
quantisation of angular momentum, electron spin.
Pauli exclusion principle and applications. Zeeman
effect. X-ray spectrum, Bragg's law, Bohr's theory of
the Mosley plot. Compton effect, Compton wavelength.
Wave nature of matter, de Broglie wavelength, wave-
particle duality. Heisenberg's uncertainty
relationships. Schroedinger's equation-eigenvalues
and eigenfunctions of (i) particle in a box, (ii) simple
harmonic oscillator and (iii) hydrogen atom. Potential
step and barrier penetration. Natural and artificial
radioactivity. Binding energy of nuclei, nuclear fission
and fusion. Classification of elementary particles and
their interactions.
6. Electronics
Diodes in half-waves and full-wave rectification,
qualitative ideas of semiconductors, p type and n type
semiconductors, junction diode, Zener diode,
transistors, binary numbers, Logic gates and truth
tables, Elements of microprocessors and computers.
Top
Physics (Optional) Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
Section-A
1. Classical Mechanics
(a) Particle dynamics
Centre of mass and laboratory coordinates,
conservation of linear and angular momentum. The
rocket equation. Rutherford scattering, Galilean
transformation, intertial and non-inertial frames,
rotating frames, centrifugal and Coriolis forces,
Foucault pendulum.
(b) System of particles
Constraints, degrees of freedom, generalised
coordinates and momenta. Lagrange's equation and
applications to linear harmonic oscillator, simple
pendulum and central force problems. Cyclic
coordinates, Hamilitonian Lagrange's equation from
Hamilton's principle.
(c) Rigid body dynamics
Eulerian angles, inertia tensor, principal moments of
inertia. Euler's equation of motion of a rigid body,
force-free motion of a rigid body. Gyroscope.
2. Special Relativity, Waves & Geometrical Optics
(a) Special Relativity
Michelson-Morley experiment and its implications.
Lorentz transformations-length contraction, time
dilation, addition of velocities, aberration and Doppler
effect, mass-energy relation, simple applications to a
decay process. Minkowski diagram, four dimensional
momentum vector. Covariance of equations of
physics.
(b) Waves
Simple harmonic motion, damped oscillation, forced
oscillation and resonance. Beats. Stationary waves in
a string. Pulses and wave packets. Phase and group
velocities. Reflection and Refraction from Huygens'
principle.
(c) Geometrical Optics
Laws of relfection and refraction from Fermat's
principle. Matrix method in paraxial optic-thin lens
formula, nodal planes, system of two thin lenses,
chromatic and spherical aberrations.
3. Physical Optics
(a) Interference
Interference of light-Young's experiment, Newton's
rings, interference by thin films, Michelson
interferometer. Multiple beam interference and Fabry-
Perot interferometer. Holography and simple
applications.
(b) Diffraction
Fraunhofer diffraction-single slit, double slit,
diffraction grating, resolving power. Fresnel
diffraction: - half-period zones and zones plates.
Fresnel integrals. Application of Cornu's spiral to the
analysis of diffraction at a straight edge and by a long
narrow slit. Diffraction by a circular aperture and the
Airy pattern.
(c) Polarisation and Modern Optics
Production and detection of linearly and circularly
polarised light. Double refraction, quarter wave plate.
Optical activity. Principles of fibre optics attenuation;
pulse dispersion in step index and parabolic index
fibres; material dispersion, single mode fibres. Lasers-
Einstein A and B coefficients. Ruby and He-Ne lasers.
Characteristics of laser light-spatial and temporal
coherence. Focussing of laser beams. Three-level
scheme for laser operation.
Section-B
4. Electricity and Magnetism
(a) Electrostatics and Magnetostatics
Laplace ad Poisson equations in electrostatics and
their applications. Energy of a system of charges,
multipole expansion of scalar potential. Method of
images and its applications. Potential and field due to
a dipole, force and torque on a dipole in an external
field. Dielectrics, polarisation. Solutions to bounary-
value problems-conducting and dielectric spheres in a
uniform electric field. Magentic shell, uniformly
magnetised sphere. Ferromagnetic materials,
hysteresis, energy loss.
(b) Current Electricity
Kirchhoff's laws and their applications. Biot-Savart
law, Ampere's law, Faraday's law, Lenz' law. Self-and
mutual-inductances. Mean and rms values in AC
circuits. LR CR and LCR circuits- series and parallel
resonance. Quality factor. Principal of transformer.
5. Electromagnetic Theory & Black Body Radiation
(a) Electromagnetic Theory
Displacement current and Maxwell's equatons. Wave
equations in vacuum, Poynting theorem. Vector and
scalar potentials. Gauge invariance, Lorentz and
Coulomb gauges. Electromagnetic field tensor,
covariance of Maxwell's equations. Wave equations
in isotropic dielectrics, reflection and refraction at the
boundary of two dielectrics. Fresnel's relations.
Normal and anomalous dispersion. Rayleigh
scattering.
(b) Blackbody radiation
Balckbody radiation and Planck radiation law- Stefan-
Boltzmann law, Wien displacement law and Rayleigh-
Jeans law. Planck mass, Planck length, Planck time,.
Planck temperature and Planck energy.
6. Thermal and Statistical Physics
(a) Thremodynamics
Laws of thermodynamics, reversible and irreversible
processes, entropy. Isothermal, adiabatic, isobaric,
isochoric processes and entropy change. Otto and
Diesel engines, Gibbs' phase rule and chemical
potential. van der Waals equation of state of a real
gas, critical constants. Maxwell-Boltzman distribution
of molecular velocities, transport phenomena,
equipartition and virial theorems. Dulong-Petit,
Einstein, and Debye's theories of specific heat of
solids. Maxwell relations and applications. Clausius-
Clapeyron equation. Adiabatic demagnetisation, Joule-
Kelvin effect and liquefaction of gases.
(b) Statistical Physics
Saha ionization formula. Bose-Einstein
condenssation. Thermodynamic behaviour of an ideal
Fermi gas, Chandrasekhar limit, elementary ideas
about neutron stars and pulsars. Brownian motion as
a random walk, diffusion process. Concept of negative
temperatures.
Paper-II
Section-A
1. Quantum Mechanics I
Wave-particle dualitiy. Schroedinger equation and
expectation values. Uncertainty principle. Solutions of
the one-dimensional Schroedinger equation free
particle (Gaussian wave-packet), particle in a box,
particle in a finite well, linear harmonic oscillator.
Reflection and transmission by a potential step and
by a rectangular barrier. Use of WKB formula for the
life-time calcuation in the alpha-decay problem.
2. Quantum Mechanics II & Atomic Physics
(a) Quantum Mechanics II
Particle in a three dimensional box, density of states,
free electron theory of metals. The angular
meomentum problem. The hydrogen atom. The spin
half problem and properties of Pauli spin matrices.
(b) Atomic Physics
Stern-Gerlack experiment, electron spin, fine structure
of hydrogen atom. L-S coupling, J-J coupling.
Spectroscopic notation of atomic states. Zeeman
effect. Frank-Condon principle and applications.
3. Molecular Physics
Elementary theory of rotational, vibratonal and
electronic spectra of diatomic molecules. Raman
effect and molecular structure. Laser Raman
spectroscopy Importance of neutral hydrogen atom,
molecular hydrogen and molecular hydrogen ion in
astronomy Fluorescence and Phosphorescence.
Elementary theory and applications of NMR.
Elementary ideas about Lamb shift and its
significance.
Section-B
4. Nuclear Physics
Basic nuclear properties-size, binding energy, angular
momentum, parity, magnetic moment. Semi-empirical
mass formula and applications. Mass parabolas.
Ground state of a deuteron magnetic moment and non-
central forces. Meson theory of nuclear forces. Salient
features of nuclear forces. Shell model of the nucleus-
success and limitations. Violation of parity in beta
decay. Gamma decay and internal conversion.
Elementary ideas about Mossbauer spectroscopy. Q-
value of nuclear reactions. Nuclear fission and fusion,
energy production in stars. Nuclear reactors.
5. Particle Physics & Solid State Physics
(a) Particle Physics
Classification of elementary particles and their
interactions. Conservation laws. Quark structure of
hadrons. Field quanta of electroweak and strong
interactions. Elementary ideas about Unification of
Forces. Physics of neutrinos.
(b) Solid State Physics
Cubic crystal structure. Band theory of solids-
conductors, insulators and semiconductors. Elements
of superconductivity, Meissner effect, Josephson
junctions and applications. Elementary ideas about
high temperature superconductivity.
6. Electronics
Intrinsic and extrinsic semiconductors-p-n-p and n-p-n
transistors.Amplifiers and oscillators. Op-amps. FET,
JFET and MOSFET. Digital electronics-Boolean
identities, De Morgan's laws, Logic gates and truth
tables., Simple logic circuits. Thermistors, solar cells.
Fundamentals of microprocessors and digital
computers.
Indian Economics - Optional
General Economics
1) Micro-economics : (a) Production : Agents of
Production; Costs and Supply; Isoquants (b)
Consumption and Demand; Elasticity concept (c)
Market Structure and concepts of equilibrium; (d)
Determination of prices; (e) Components and Theories
of Distribution (f) Elementary concepts of Welfare
economics : Pareto-optimality-Private and social
products-consumers surplus.
2) Macro-economics : (a) National Income concepts; (b)
Determinants of National Income Employment (c)
Determinants of consumption, savings and
Investment (d) Rate of Interest and its determination
(e) Interest and profit.
3) Money, Banking and Public Finance : (a) Concepts
of Money and measures of money supply; velocity of
money (b) Banks and credit creation; Banks and
portfolio management. (c) Central Bank and control
over money supply (d) Determination of the price
level. (e) Inflation, its causes and remedies. (f) Public,
Finance-Budgets-Taxes and non-tax revenues-Types
of Budget deficits.
4) International Economics : (a) Theories of
International Trade-comparative costs-Heckscher-
Ohlin-Gains from Trade-Terms of Trade. (b) Free Trade
and Protection. (c) Balance of Payments accounts and
Adjustment. (d) Exchange rate under free exchange
markets. (e) Evolution of the International Monetary
System and World Trading order-Gold Standard-the
Brettonwoods system. IMF and the World Bank and
their associates. Floating rates-GATT and WTO
(5) Growth and Development : (a) Meaning and
measurement of growth; Growth, distribution and
Welfare; (b) Characteristics of underdevelopment; (c)
Stages of Development; (d) Sources of growth-capital,
Human capital, population, productivity, Trade and
aid, non-economic factors; growth Strategies, (e)
Planning in a mixed economy-Indicative planning-
Planning and growth.
(6) Economic Statistics : Types of averages-measures
of dispersion-correlation-Index numbers; types, uses
and limitations.
Part-II
Indian Economics
1. Main features; Geographic size-Endowment of
natural resources, Population; size, composition
quality and growth trend-Occupational distribution-
Effects of British Rule with reference to Drain theory
and Laissez Faire policy.
2. Major problems, their dimensions, nature and broad
causes; Mass poverty-Unemployment and its types-
Economics effects of population pressure-Inequality
and types thereof-Low productivity and low per capita
income, Rural-urban disparities-Foreign Trade and
payments imbalances. Balance of Payments and
External Debt- Inflation, and parallel economy and its
effects-Fiscal deficit.
3. Growth in income and employment since
Independence-Rate, Pattern, Sectoral trends-
Distributional Changes-Regional disparities.
4. Economic Planning in India : Major controversies
on planning in India-Alternative strategies-goals and
achievements, shortfalls of different plans-planning
and the Market.
5. Broad Fiscal, monetary, industrial trade and
agricultural policies-objectives, rationale, constraints
and effects.
Top
Economics (Optional) Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
1. Ricardian, Marshallian and Walrasain approaches
to price determination. Types of Markets and price
determination. Criteria or Welfare improvement.
Alternate theories of distribution.
2. Functions of money-Measurement of price level
changes-Money and real balances-Monetary
standards-High-powered money and the Quantity
theory of money, its variants and critiques thereof-
Demand for and supply of money-The money
multiplier. Theories of determination of interest rate-
Interest and prices-Theories of inflation and control of
inflation.
3. Full employment and Says' Law-underemployment
equilibrium-Keynes' Theory of employment (and
income) determination-Critiques of Keynesian Theory.
4. The modern monetary system-Banks, non-bank
financial intermediaries, Discount House, and Central
Bank. Structure of Money and financial markets and
control. Money market instruments, bills and bonds.
Real and nominal interest rates. Goals and
instruments of monetary management in closed and
open economies. Relation between the Central Bank
and the Treasury. Proposal for ceiling on growth rate
of money.
5. Public finance and its role in market economy in
stabilisation, supply stability, allocative efficiency,
distribution and development. Sources of revenue-
Forms of Taxes and subsidies, their incidence and
effects; Limits to taxation, loans, crowding-out effects,
and limits to borrowing. Types of budget deficits-
Public expenditure and its effects.
6. International Economics
(i) Old and New theories of International Trade.
a) Comparative advantage, Terms of trade and offer
curve.
b) Product cycle and Strategic trade theories.
c) "Trade as an engine of growth" and theories of
underdevelopment in an open economy.
(ii) Forms of protection.
(iii) Balance of Payments Adjustments Alternative
Approaches.
a) Price versus income, income adjustments under
fixed exchange rates.
b) Theories of policy mix.
c) Exchange rate adjustments under capital mobility.
d) Floating Rates and their implications for developing
countries; Currency Boards.
(iv) (a) IMF and the World Bank.
(b) W.T.O.
(c) Trade Blocks and monetary unions.
7. Growth and development.
(i) Theories of growth : Classical and neo-classical
theories; The Harrod model; economic development
under surplus Labour; wage-goods as a constraint on
growth; relative importance of physical and human
capitals in growth; innovations and development;
Productivity, its growth and source of changes thereof.
Factors determining savings to income ratio and the
capital-out put ratio.
(ii) Main features of growth : Changes in Sectoral
compositions of income; Changes in occupational
distribution; changes in income distribution; changes
in consumption levels and patterns; changes in
savings and investment and in pattern of investment.
Case for and against industralization. Significance of
agriculture in developing countries.
(iii) Relation between state, planning and growth,
Changing roles of market and plans in growth
economic policy and growth.
(iv) Role of foreign capital and technology in growth.
The significance of multi-nationals.
(v) Welfare indicators and measures of growth-Human
development indices-The basic needs approach.
(vi) Concept of sustainable development; convergence
of levels of living of developed and developing
countries; meaning of self-reliance in growth and
development.
Paper-II
I. Evolution of the Indian Economy till independence.
The Colonial Heritage : Land System & Agriculture,
Taxes, Money and credit, Trade, Exchange Rate,
the "Drain of Wealth controversy" of late 19th Century.
Randade's critique of Laissez-Faire; Swadeshi
movement; Gandhi and Hind Swaraj.
II. Indian Economics in Post-Independent Era-
Contributions of Vakil, Gadgil and Rao. National and
percapita Income; Patterns, Trends, Aggregate and
sectoral-composition and changes therein. Broad
factors determining National Income and its
distribution; Measures of poverty. Trends in below
poverty-line proportion.
III. Employment : Factors determining employment in
short and long periods. Role of capital, wage-goods,
wage-rate and technology. Measures of
unemployment. Relation between income, poverty and
employment, and issues of distribution and social
justice.
Agriculture-Institutional set-up of land system size of
agricultre holdings and efficiency-Green Revolution
and technological changes-Agricultural prices and
terms of trade-Role of public distribution and farm-
subsidies on agricultural prices and production.
Employment and poverty in agriculture-Rural wages-
employment schemes-growth experience-land
reforms. Regional disparities in agricultural growth.
Role of Agriculture in export.
IV. Industry : Industrial system of India : Trends in
Composition and growth. Role of public and private
sectors, Role of small and cottage industries. Indian
industrial Strategy-Capital versus consumer goods,
wage-goods versus luxuries, capital-intensive versus
labour-intensive techniques, import-substituting
versus export promotion. Sickness and high-cost
Industrial policies and their effects. Recent moves for
liberalisation and their effects on Indian industry.
V. Money and banking : The monetary institutions of
India: Factors determining demand for and supply of
money. Sources of Reserve money-money multiplier-
Techniques of money supply regulation under open
economy. Functioning of money market in India.
Budget deficit and money supply. Issues in Reform of
Monetary and Banking Systems.
VI. Index numbers of price levels-Course of Price level
in post-Independence period-sources and causes of
inflation-role of monetary and supply factors in price
level determination-policies towards control of
inflation. Effects of inflation under open economy.
VII. Trade, balance of payments and exchange :
Foreign trade of India; composition and direction shifts
in trade policy from import substituion to export
promotion. Impact of liberalisation on pattern of trade.
India's external Borrowings-the Debt problem.
Exchange rate of the rupee; Devaluations,
depreciations and their effects on balance of
payments-Gold imports and Gold policy-convertibility
on current and capital accounts-rupee in an open
economy. Integration of Indian economy with world
economy-India and the WTO.
VIII. Public Finance and Fiscal Policy : Characteristics
of and trends in India's Public Finance-Role of Taxes,
(direct and indirect) and subsidies-Fiscal and
monetary deficits-public expenditures and their
significance-Public Finance and Inflation-Limiting
Government's debt-Recent fiscal policies and their
effects.
IX. Economic Planning in India-Trends in Savings and
investment-Trends in Savings to Income and capital-
output ratios-Productivity, its sources, growth and
trends-growth versus distribution-Transition from
Central Planning to indicative planning-relation
between Market and Plan-strategies for Growth, social
justice and Plans. Planning and increasing the growth
rate.
Indian Commerce – Optional
Accounting
Nature, Scope and Objectives of Accounting-
Accounting as an Information System-Users of
Accounting Information.
Generally Accepted Principles of Accounting-The
Accounting Equation-Accrual Concept-Other concepts
and conventions, Distinction between capital and
revenue expenditure. Accounting Standards and their
application-Accounting standards relating to fixed
assets, depreciation, inventory, recognition of
revenue.
Final Accounts of Sole Proprietors, Partnership Firms
and Limited Companies-Statutory Provisions -
Reserves, Provisions and Funds.
Final Accounts of non profit organisation.
Accounting problems related to admission and
retirement of a partner and dissolution of a firm.
Accounting for Shares and Debentures- Accounting
Treatment of Convertible Debentures.
Analysis and Interpretation of Financial Statements
Ratio analysis and interpretation. Ratios relation to
short term liquidity, long term solvency and
profitability-Importance of the rate of return on
investment (ROI) in evaluating the overall
performance of a business entity-Cash-flow Statement
and Statement of Source and Application of Funds-
Societal obligations of Accounting.
Auditing
- Nature, objectives and basic principles of auditing.
- Techniques of Auditing-physical verification,
examination of documents and vouching, direct
confirmation, analytical review.
- Planning an audit, audit programmes, working
papers, audit process.
- Evaluation of internal controls.
- Test checking and sampling.
- Broad outlines of company audit.
- Audit of non-corporate enterprises.
- Internal and management audit.
Part-II
Business Organisation
Distinctive features of different forms of business
organisation.
Sole Proprietor
Partnerships-characteristics, Registration, Partnership
deed, Rights and duties, Retirement, Dissolution.
Joint Stock Company-Concept, characteristics, types.
Cooperative and State ownership forms of
organizations.
Types of securities and methods of their issue.
Economic functions of the capital market, stock
exchanges, Mutual Funds. Control and regulation of
capital market.
Business combinations; control of Monopolies.
Problems of modernisation of industrial enterprises.
Social Responsibility of business.
Foreign Trade-Procedure and financing of import and
export trade. Incentives for export promotion.
Financing of foreign trade.
Insurance-Principles and practice of Life, Fire, Marine
and General Insurance.
Management
Management functions-Planning-strategies,
Organising-levels of authority Staffing, Line function
and staff function, Leadership, Communication,
Motivation, Directing-Principles, Strategies.
Coordination-Concept, types, methods.
Control-principles, performance standards, corrective
action. Salary and wage administration-Job
evaluation.
Organisation Structure-Centralization and
decentralization-Delegation of authority-span of
control-Management by Objectives and Management
by Exception.
Management of change; Crisis Management.
Office Management-scope and principles; systems
and routines; handling of records- modern aids to
Office management; office equipment and machines;
Automation and Personal computers.
Impact of Organisation and Methods (O & M)
Company Law
Joint stock companies-incorporation; documents and
formalities-Doctrine of indoor management and
constructive notice.
Duties and powers of the board of directors of a
company.
Accounts and Audit of Companies.
Company Secretary-role and functions-qualifications
for appointment.
Commerce Syllabus for Main Examination
Paper-I
Accounting & Finance
Part-I
Accounting, Taxation & Auditing
Financial Accounting
Accounting as a financial information system; Impact
of behavioural sciences.
Accounting Standards e.g., accounting for
depreciation, inventories, gratuity, research and
development costs, long term construction contracts,
revenue recognition, fixed assets, contingencies,
foreign exchange transactions, investments and
government grants.
Advanced problems of company accounts.
Amalgamation absorption and reconstruction of
companies.
Valuation of shares and goodwill.
Cost Accounting
Nature and functions of cost accounting.
Job Costing
Process Costing
Marginal Cositng; Techniques of segregating semi-
variable costs into fixed and variable costs.
Cost-volume-profit relationship; aid to decision making
including pricing decisions, shutdown etc.
Techniques of cost control and cost reduction.
Budgetary control, flexible budgets.
Standard costing and variance analysis.
Responsibility accounting, investment, profit and Cost
centres.
Taxation
Definitions
Basis of charge.
Incomes which do not form part of total income.
Simple problems of computation of income under
various heads, i.e., salaries, income from house
property, profits and gains from business or
profession, capital gains, income of other persons
included in assessee's total income.
Aggregation of income and set off/carry forward of loss.
Deductions to be made in computing total income.
Auditing
Audit of cash transactions, expenses, incomes,
purchases, sales.
Valuation and verification of assets with special
reference to fixed assets, stocks and debts.
Verification of liabilities.
Audit of limited companies; appointment, removal,
powers, duties and liabilities of company auditor,
significance of 'true and fare', MAOCARO report.
Auditor's report and qualifications therein.
Special points in the audit of different organisations
like clubs, hospitals, colleges, charitable societies.
Part-II
Business Finance and Financial Institutions.
Finance Function-Nature, Scope and Objectives of
Financial Management-Risk and Return relationship.
Financial Analysis as a Diagnostic Tool.
Management of Working Capital and its Components-
Forecasting working capital needs, inventory, debtors,
cash and credit management.
Investment Decisions-Nature and Scope of Capital
Budgeting-Various types of decisions including Make
or Buy and Lease or Buy-Techniques of Appraisal and
their application-
Consideration of Risk and Uncertainty-Analysis of Non-
financial Aspects.
Rate of Return on Investments-Required Rate of
Return-its measurement-Cost of Capital-Weighted
Average Cost-Different Weights.
Concepts of Valuation-Valuation of firm's Fixed Income
Securities and Common Stocks.
Dividend and Retention Policy-Residual Theory or
Dividend Policy-Other Models-Actual Practices.
Capital Structure-Leverages-Significance or Leverages-
Theories of Capital Structure with special reference to
Modigliani and Miller approach. Planning the Capital
Structure of a Company; EBIT-EPS Analysis, Cash-flow
ability to service debt, Capital Structure Ratios, other
methods.
Raising finance-short term and long term. Bank
finance-norms and conditions.
Financial Distress-Approaching BIFR under Sick
Industrial Undertakings Act : Concept of Sickness,
Potential Sickness, Cash Loss, Erosion of Networth.
Money Markets-the purpose of Money Markets, Money
Market in India-Organization and working of Capital
markets in India-Organization, Structure and Role of
Financial Institutions in India. Banks and Investing
Institutions-National and International Financial
Institutions-their norms and types of financial
assistance provided-inter-bank lending-its regulation,
supervision and control. System of Consortium-
Supervision and regulation of banks.
Monetary and Credit policy of Reserve Bank of India.
Paper-II
Organisation Theory and Industrial Relations
Part-I
Organisation Theory
Nature and concept of Organisation-Organisation
goals; Primary and secondary goals, Single and
multiple goals, ends means chain-Displacement,
succession, expansion and multiplication of goals-
Formal organisation; Type, Structure-Line and Staff,
functional matrix, and project-Informal organisation-
functions and limitations.
Evolution of organisation theory : Classical, Neo-
classical and system approach-Bureaucracy; Nature
and basis of power, sources of power, power structure
and politics-Organisational behaviour as a dynamic
system : technical, social and power systems-
interrelations and interactions-Perception-Status
system. Theoretical and empirical foundation of
theories and Models of motivation. Morale and
productivity-Leadership : Theories and styles-
Management of conflicts in organisation-Transactional
Analysis-Significance of culture to organisations.
Limits of rationality-Organisational change,
adaptation, growth and development, Professional
management Vs. family management, Organisational
control and effectiveness.
Part-II
Industrial Relations.
Nature and scope of indsutrial relations, the socio-
economic set-up, need for positive approach.
Industrial labour in India and its commitment-stages of
commitments. Migratory nature-merits and
shortcomings.
Theories of Unionism.
Trade Union movement in India-origin, growth and
structure; Attitude and approach of management of
India-recognition. Problems before Indian Trade Union
movement.
Industrial disputes-sources; strikes and lockouts.
Compulsory adjudication and collective bargaining-
approaches.
Worker's participation in management-philosophy,
rationale; present day state of affairs and future
prospects.
Prevention and settlement of industrial disputes in
India.
Industrial relations in Public Enterprises.
Absenteeism and labour turnover in Indian Industries-
causes
Relative wages and wage differentials; wage policy.
Wage policy in India; the Bonus issue.
I.L.O. and India;
Role of Personnel Department in the Organisation
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