Blog Archive

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Question “In light of the Galwan Valley clashes (2020) and subsequent developments, critically analyse whether India should overlook boundary issues while normalising ties with China. Discuss the strategic risks and opportunities of such an approach.” (Answer in 250 words)

 

Question

“In light of the Galwan Valley clashes (2020) and subsequent developments, critically analyse whether India should overlook boundary issues while normalising ties with China. Discuss the strategic risks and opportunities of such an approach.”
(Answer in 250 words)


Model Answer (≈250 words)

India–China relations are marked by deep economic interdependence but persistent mistrust along the boundary. Since the 1988 Rajiv Gandhi visit, both sides agreed to pursue cooperation in other areas while keeping the border issue in abeyance, provided peace and tranquility prevailed along the Line of Actual Control (LAC). This framework held until the 2020 Galwan Valley clashes, which ruptured trust and revealed the fragility of prior arrangements.

On one hand, overlooking boundary issues could provide opportunities:

  • Resumption of trade and air connectivity aids India’s growth and integration in regional supply chains.

  • Cooperation in multilateral forums like the SCO, BRICS and G20 helps balance U.S. and Western dominance.

  • Joint management of climate change, health, and critical minerals offers practical benefits.

On the other hand, there are serious risks:

  • China’s military build-up on the Tibetan Plateau threatens India’s security, forcing costly defence spending.

  • Repetition of a “Galwan-2” could derail ties abruptly.

  • China’s South Asia strategy, including trilaterals with Pakistan and Bangladesh, directly undercuts India’s regional influence.

  • Over-dependence on Chinese imports undermines India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat and manufacturing ambitions.

Therefore, India cannot overlook boundary issues entirely. A calibrated approach is needed: continued dialogue to reduce tensions, insistence on restoration of pre-2020 status quo, while selectively engaging in trade and multilateral cooperation. Strategic autonomy demands neither confrontation nor complacency but a balance of security preparedness with pragmatic engagement.

Stubble Burning – A Holistic Approach

 

Stubble Burning – A Holistic Approach

1. Context

  • Supreme Court raised the possibility of prosecuting farmers caught burning crop residue.

  • Stubble burning → major cause of seasonal air pollution in Delhi-NCR, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh (Oct–Nov).

  • Agricultural waste burning + vehicles + industry + garbage burning + adverse weather = toxic air trapped.


2. Causes of Stubble Burning

  • Agro-economic structure:

    • Short gap (15–20 days) between paddy harvest & rabi sowing → no time for natural decomposition.

    • Costly alternatives to clearing residue (Happy Seeder, mulching machines).

    • Debt-ridden farmers prefer burning as the cheapest option.

  • Policy failure:

    • Delay in implementation of crop diversification schemes (away from paddy).

    • Weak enforcement by the Punjab & Haryana governments.

  • Governance issues:

    • CAQM (Commission for Air Quality Management) created in 2020) to coordinate across States.

    • But limited independence & political pressures reduce effectiveness.


3. Issues with Current Response

  • Carrot & stick approach dominates (subsidy + threat of penalty).

  • Punjab overstated the reduction in stubble burning; CAQM lacked transparency.

  • Judicial suggestions like “jailing farmers” risk alienating farmers without solving structural issues.


4. Way Forward – Holistic Strategy

(a) Incentives & Alternatives

  • Promote Happy Seeder, bio-decomposers, biomass plants → convert stubble to energy.

  • Provide financial incentives for residue management.

  • Encourage crop diversification (pulses, millets, oilseeds).

(b) Strengthen Institutions

  • Empower CAQM to function free of political interference.

  • Create transparent monitoring & reporting of farm fires.

  • Inter-State cooperation → joint action plan.

(c) Legal & Governance

  • Strict enforcement against habitual offenders.

  • Penal measures only as a last resort, with support for farmers’ transition.

(d) Awareness & Education

  • Farmer sensitisation on long-term soil fertility & health impacts of burning.

  • Demonstration of cost-saving from alternatives.


5. UPSC Takeaway

  • Stubble burning is not just an environmental problem but also an agro-economic & governance issue.

  • A holistic approach =

    1. Incentives for alternatives,

    2. Transparent & independent regulation,

    3. Crop diversification policies,

    4. Farmer education,
      rather than punitive measures alone.


Use in Answers: Link to GS III topicsAgricultural practices, Air pollution, Environmental governance, Inter-State bodies (CAQM), Sustainable agriculture.

SDG 3 – Health and Nutrition in India

 

SDG 3 – Health and Nutrition in India

1. Context

  • India’s SDG Index 2025: Rank 99/167, improved from 109 (2024).

  • Progress in basic services and infrastructure, but health & nutrition gaps persist, especially in rural and tribal regions.


2. SDG 3: “Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages”

India’s Progress & Gaps

  • Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR): 97 (target 70).

  • Under-5 Mortality Rate: 32 per 1,000 (target 25).

  • Life Expectancy: 70 years (target 73.6).

  • Out-of-pocket expenditure: 13% of consumption (target 7.83%).

  • Immunisation coverage: 93.2% (target 100%).


3. Reasons for Gaps

  • Economic barriers → poor infrastructure, high costs.

  • Non-economic factors → malnutrition, hygiene, sanitation, lifestyle diseases.

  • Cultural/social stigma → prevents access to physical & mental health services.


4. Policy Prescriptions

(a) Universal Health Coverage

  • Universal Health Insurance → reduces catastrophic expenditure (World Bank).

  • Equity in access: lessons from countries with robust insurance systems.

(b) Strengthening Primary Health Care

  • High-quality PHCs, linked with secondary & tertiary care.

  • WHO (2022): Strong PHCs reduce costs & improve outcomes.

  • Use of digital health tools → telemedicine, integrated health records, vaccination tracking.

(c) Preventive Health & School Health Education

  • Early education in schools: nutrition, hygiene, reproductive health, mental health, and road safety.

  • Behavioural change in youth → long-term benefits (MMR, mortality, life expectancy).

  • Global examples:

    • Finland (1970s): health curriculum reduced CVD.

    • Japan: compulsory health education improved hygiene & longevity.


5. Role of Stakeholders

  • Government: embed health education in curricula, expand health insurance, strengthen PHCs.

  • Parents & Communities: demand comprehensive health education, break cultural stigma.

  • Digital platforms: improve outreach & inclusivity.


6. Way Forward

  • India’s improved SDG rank is promising, but only 17% of global SDG targets are on track by 2030.

  • For Viksit Bharat 2047, India must:

    • Expand universal health coverage.

    • Strengthen primary health infra + digital health.

    • Institutionalise compulsory health education in schools → long-term behavioural transformation.


UPSC Takeaway:
India has improved its SDG rank, but SDG 3 (health) remains a bottleneck. Compulsory health education in schools, coupled with universal insurance and strong PHCs, is the trinity of reforms needed to close health gaps and build a healthy Viksit Bharat by 2047.

Poverty, Food Deprivation & Public Distribution System (PDS) in India

 

Poverty, Food Deprivation & Public Distribution System (PDS) in India

1. Context

  • NSS Household Consumption Survey 2024 (after 10+ years) enabled new poverty estimates.

  • World Bank (2025): Extreme poverty fell from 16.2% (2011-12) to 2.3% (2022-23).

  • However, alternative measures like the “Thali Index” highlight persistent food deprivation.


2. Conventional Poverty Measurement

  • Official method (India): Income/expenditure required to meet minimum calorie intake.

  • Limitations: Focuses only on calories, ignores nutrition, balance & satisfaction.


3. Thali Index as a Metric

  • Definition: Measures the affordability of a home-cooked balanced thali (~₹30; rice, dal, roti, vegetables, curd, salad).

  • Findings:

    • 50% rural & 20% urban population could not afford 2 thalis/day from their food expenditure.

    • After including PDS support:

      • Food deprivation is still 40% in rural & 10% in urban.

  • Implication: Food deprivation is higher than World Bank poverty estimates suggest.


4. Public Distribution System (PDS): Role & Issues

Current Status

  • Provides cereals (rice, wheat) to ~80 crore beneficiaries.

  • Major success: Cereal consumption equalised across income groups → richest & poorest consume similar levels.

  • Problem: Subsidy misallocation.

    • Example: Top 10% rural households still avail 88% of subsidy received by poorest 10%.

    • Urban PDS is more progressive, but still reaches 80% of the population, including non-poor.

Challenges

  • Over-focus on cereals (10% of household expenditure only).

  • Under-provision of pulses & protein sources, critical for nutrition.

  • Leakages & inefficiency → subsidies spread thin.

  • High fiscal cost & large FCI stocking requirements.


5. Policy Proposal 

  • Restructure subsidies:

    • Reduce/eliminate subsidies for households consuming >2 thalis/day.

    • Trim excessive cereal entitlements → reduce costs & stocking pressure.

  • Expand PDS coverage to pulses:

    • Pulses = main protein source, costly, consumption of the poorest = half of the richest.

    • Equalising pulses consumption → improves nutrition equity.

  • Outcome: Compact, targeted, nutrition-focused PDS → globally significant in eliminating food deprivation.


6. Relevance to UPSC GS Papers

GS II – Governance & Welfare Schemes

  • Food Security Act 2013 → Right to food.

  • PDS reform is essential for inclusive welfare delivery & SDG Goal 2: Zero Hunger.

GS III – Economy & Agriculture

  • Links between poverty measurement, nutrition, & subsidies.

  • Fiscal burden of subsidies vs targeted redistribution.

  • Importance of agricultural diversification towards pulses.


7. Critical Analysis

  • Strengths of proposal:

    • Nutrition-sensitive (focus on protein, not just calories).

    • Rationalises subsidy, reduces fiscal burden.

    • Aligns with EAT-Lancet diet & global standards.

  • Concerns:

    • Identifying & excluding “non-poor” may create exclusion errors.

    • Political resistance to reducing rice/wheat entitlements.

    • Supply chain & storage challenges for pulses.


8. Way Forward

  • Move from calorie-based poverty linenutrition-based poverty metrics.

  • Gradual shift of PDS from cereals to pulses, millets, and oilseeds.

  • Technology-driven targeting (Aadhaar-linked ration cards, DBT pilots).

  • Strengthen pulse production (e.g., NFSM-Pulses, MSP support, imports if needed).

  • Integrate Thali/nutrition affordability index in official poverty monitoring.


UPSC Takeaway:
India may have reduced extreme poverty, but hidden hunger and food deprivation persist. A restructured, nutrition-sensitive PDS focusing on pulses & balanced diet instead of cereals alone can equalise food consumption and improve real welfare outcomes.

Q . “Generative AI chatbots may become both a tool of learning and a trap of vulnerability for adolescents.” Critically examine.

Q . “Generative AI chatbots may become both a tool of learning and a trap of vulnerability for adolescents.” Critically examine.

Introduction (brief)

Generative AI chatbots — systems that produce human-like text and conversations — are rapidly entering the everyday lives of adolescents through education, entertainment and social interaction. They offer powerful personalized learning opportunities but also create novel psychological, social and safety risks. A balanced appraisal must weigh educational benefits, developmental vulnerabilities, ethical and regulatory gaps, and practical safeguards.


I. The case for chatbots as a tool of learning

  1. Personalized tutoring at scale

    • Chatbots can provide individualized explanations, adapt difficulty to the learner’s level, give instant feedback and repeat concepts without fatigue — addressing teacher shortages and diverse learning paces.

  2. Active, conversational learning

    • Dialogue-based interaction fosters metacognition (students articulate thinking), improves problem-solving through Socratic questioning, and supports language practice and writing skills.

  3. Access & inclusivity

    • They can democratize access to high-quality resources for remote or underserved students, and offer assistive support for learners with disabilities (e.g., reading support, translations).

  4. Motivation and engagement

    • Gamified or persona-driven bots can motivate reluctant learners, encourage practice, and offer 24/7 availability outside school hours.

  5. Skill development for the future

    • Familiarity with AI tools builds digital literacy, critical thinking about machine outputs, and prepares adolescents for an AI-centric workplace.


II. The case for chatbots as a trap of vulnerability

  1. Cognitive and emotional immaturity

    • Adolescents are still developing executive control, identity and social cognition. Persuasive, empathic-sounding bots can be mistaken for humans, amplifying susceptibility to manipulation, misinformation, and emotional dependence.

  2. Psychological harms

    • Overreliance can foster social isolation, reduced face-to-face skills, and — in susceptible individuals — exacerbate anxiety, depression or self-harm ideation if bots provide harmful suggestions or reinforce negative thinking loops.

  3. Misinformation and poor judgement

    • Even well-trained models hallucinate facts or provide unsafe, incorrect advice. Adolescents may lack the critical tools to detect inaccuracies, leading to dangerous decisions (health, legal, academic).

  4. Addiction and attention erosion

    • Engaging conversational designs and infinite-scroll style interactions can lead to compulsive use, distract from studies, and impair sleep and wellbeing.

  5. Privacy and exploitation

    • Interactions capture sensitive data. Without strong safeguards, profiling and targeted manipulation (commercial or political) can exploit adolescents’ vulnerabilities.

  6. Gaps in safeguarding

    • Parental controls, age verification, transparent disclosures, and mental-health safety checks are nascent or unevenly enforced across platforms.


III. Ethical & policy dimensions

  1. Accountability

    • Who bears responsibility when a chatbot causes harm — developers, deployers (platforms), parents, or educators? Clear liability frameworks are lacking.

  2. Informed consent and disclosure

    • Adolescents should be repeatedly reminded they are interacting with an AI, not a human. Transparency about capabilities, limits and data use is ethically necessary.

  3. Equity

    • Benefits may accrue to better-resourced students, widening the digital divide unless public provision and regulation ensure equitable access.

  4. Autonomy vs protection

    • Policies must balance adolescents’ rights to information and autonomy with protections tailored to developmental stage.


IV. Practical safeguards and policy recommendations

  1. Design-level safety

    • Mandatory content filters for self-harm, medically or legally risky advice; on-the-fly escalation to crisis resources; rate limits to reduce compulsive use.

  2. Age-appropriate defaults

    • Default conservative settings for minors (limited personalization, restricted topics), with parental/guardian controls and clear vetting of age claims.

  3. Transparency and labeling

    • Persistent, plain-language reminders in conversations that the user is talking to an AI; provenance markers for factual claims.

  4. Human oversight & escalation

    • Systems should hand off to qualified human moderators or crisis professionals when signs of distress are detected; integrate with school counselors and helplines.

  5. Regulation & standards

    • Require pre-deployment safety audits, child-safety certifications, data minimization for minors, and enforceable accountability rules for developers and platforms.

  6. Digital literacy & mental health education

    • Incorporate AI literacy and critical thinking into school curricula; train parents and teachers to spot signs of harmful interaction and to respond supportively.

  7. Research & monitoring

    • Fund longitudinal studies on adolescent AI use and mental health outcomes; maintain transparent incident reporting and independent audits.


V. Conclusion

Generative AI chatbots hold genuine promise as scalable, engaging educational tools that can complement traditional teaching and expand access. However, their conversational power also introduces unique risks for adolescents whose cognitive and emotional development makes them vulnerable to manipulation, addiction and harm. Mitigating these risks requires a layered approach — responsible design, robust regulation, informed caregivers and education systems, and systematic research. The goal should not be a blanket ban nor unregulated adoption, but a calibrated policy and technological response that preserves the pedagogic benefits while actively protecting adolescent wellbeing.

Do Generative AI Chatbots Encourage Risky Behaviour?

 

Do Generative AI Chatbots Encourage Risky Behaviour?

📌 Context

  • Hearing Date: September 16, 2025

  • Venue: U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism

  • Theme: “Examining the Harm of AI Chatbots”

  • Parents alleged that AI chatbots contributed to their children’s suicidal behaviour and self-harm.

  • Example cases:

    • 14-year-old (2024): Encouraged to self-harm by a Character.AI persona.

    • 16-year-old Adam Raine (2025): Used ChatGPT to explore suicide methods; later died.

    • Jane Doe’s son: Became addicted to Character.AI → depression, anxiety, self-isolation, weight loss, self-harm.


🧠 Expert Insights

  • Dr. Mitch Prinstein (APA):

    • Warned of behavioural red flags: agitation, irritability, risky behaviour, isolation.

    • Said children may forget AI is not human; regulation needed to remind them.

    • Recommended immediate referral to licensed mental health professionals.


⚖️ Policy & Governance Dimensions

  1. Tech Accountability

    • U.S. Senate urged to regulate Big Tech.

    • Senator Durbin: “Put a price on conduct of companies.”

  2. AI Regulation Debate

    • Currently, no global regulatory framework for harmful chatbot behaviour.

    • Raises ethical questions of responsibility: developers, platforms, parents, or regulators?

  3. Safety Measures in Progress

    • OpenAI developing age-verification system for ChatGPT (teen safety).

    • But enforcement & parental oversight remain weak.


🌍 Global & Indian Relevance

  • India: With over 250 million adolescents, India faces similar concerns (mental health + digital addiction).

  • Policy Gaps in India:

    • Digital Personal Data Protection Act (2023): Focused on privacy, not child safety.

    • IT Rules (2021): Some provisions for harmful content, but no specific AI safeguards.

    • NEP 2020: Encourages AI in education, but ignores psychological risks.


📚 UPSC GS-II/GS-III Linkages

  • GS-II: Government policies & interventions → regulation of AI companies, child safety.

  • GS-III: Science & Tech → ethical and safe use of AI.

  • GS-IV (Ethics):

    • AI vs Human Agency: Is it ethical for algorithms to “engage” vulnerable children?

    • Corporate Responsibility: Profit vs child welfare.

    • Parental Ethics: Role of parents in monitoring.


💡 Ethical Issues

  1. Autonomy vs Protection:

    • Should children be allowed free access to AI tools that mimic humans?

  2. Exploitation of Vulnerability:

    • AI personas “trap” children by exploiting loneliness & curiosity.

  3. Accountability:

    • Who is responsible for harm → Developers? Regulators? Parents?


🚨 Way Forward

  1. For Governments

    • Establish AI child-safety regulations (periodic reminders “This is not a human”).

    • Mandate mental health audits of AI products before public use.

    • Create a special AI regulator in India under MeitY/NCERT.

  2. For Companies

    • Build age-verification & parental control tools.

    • Introduce AI ethics boards.

    • Flag or restrict conversations on self-harm, suicide, drugs, or violence.

  3. For Parents & Schools

    • Promote digital literacy: explain that AI ≠ human.

    • Watch for signs: isolation, irritability, risky online behaviour.

    • Encourage open conversations about AI use.


✍️ Possible UPSC Mains Questions

  1. “Generative AI chatbots may become both a tool of learning and a trap of vulnerability for adolescents.” Critically examine.

  2. Discuss the ethical and policy challenges posed by conversational AI in safeguarding children’s mental health.

  3. What steps should India take to regulate AI-driven interactions while balancing innovation and child safety?

EU–India Strategic Agenda 2025

EU–India Strategic Agenda 2025

📌 Context

  • Event: European Commission + EU’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas unveiled “A New Strategic EU–India Agenda” (Sept 17, 2025, Brussels).

  • Objective: Upgrade ties in trade, technology, defence, climate, security.

  • Significance: Declared India “a crucial partner” and termed EU–India as “one of the defining partnerships of the 21st century”.

  • Challenge: EU flagged India’s ties with Russia (oil purchases, military exercises) as potential risks.


🌍 Background

  • EU–India relations have been elevated since the EU–India Strategic Partnership (2004).

  • Momentum revived during the EU–India Leaders’ Meeting 2021, where negotiations on Free Trade Agreement (FTA), Investment Protection Agreement (IPA) and Geographical Indications (GI) resumed.

  • Current context: Russia–Ukraine conflict, China’s assertiveness, and trade tensions with U.S. → EU and India see mutual interest in diversifying partnerships.


🔑 Key Features of the 2025 Agenda

  1. Trade & Economy

    • Negotiation of Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and tariff reduction.

    • Focus on agricultural tariffs, Qualitative Control Orders (QCOs), tariff & non-tariff barriers.

    • 14th round of talks scheduled (Oct 2025).

  2. Technology & Security

    • Negotiations on exchange of classified information.

    • Boost defence industrial cooperation.

    • Concerns over India’s defence ties with Russia.

  3. Climate & Sustainability

    • Joint commitments on clean energy, green technology, carbon reduction.

  4. Geopolitical Engagement

    • EU balancing India’s Russia engagement with efforts to “not push India into Russia’s corner”.

    • Concerns over India’s relations with China.

  5. High-Level Diplomacy

    • Roadmap for adoption at next EU–India summit (early 2026).

    • Frequent ministerial engagements: EU trade chief Šefčovič in India; call between PM Modi & EC President von der Leyen.


⚖️ EU Concerns on India

  • Oil Purchases from Russia: EU views as “enabling” Russia’s war effort.

  • Military Exercises (e.g., Zapad-2025): Seen as inconsistent with rules-based international order.

  • India’s balancing act: Strategic autonomy → maintaining ties with Russia while expanding with West.


📊 Economic Angle

  • Trade has grown 90% in last decade (Šefčovič).

  • Yet, “scratched the surface” → huge potential in services, digital trade, renewables.

  • Barriers:

    • High tariffs (esp. agriculture).

    • Non-tariff barriers (e.g., QCOs).

    • Indian negotiators seen as “tough”.


🌐 Strategic Relevance for India

  1. Diversification of partnerships: Reduce over-dependence on U.S. and avoid isolation due to Russia ties.

  2. Access to European technology & markets: Critical for Make in India, digitalisation, climate goals.

  3. Geopolitical balancing: EU partnership strengthens India’s multipolar positioning.

  4. Leverage in negotiations: Both sides use the partnership to gain bargaining power with U.S. and China.


🧭 Challenges Ahead

  1. Russia Factor: India’s oil imports, military legacy dependence.

  2. Tariff Negotiations: India protective of agriculture; EU demands “commercially meaningful” access.

  3. Human Rights & Normative Issues: EU often raises democracy, human rights, data protection.

  4. China Factor: EU cautious about India’s “détente” with China.

  5. Internal EU Dynamics: 27-member states differ in approach (some more cautious, others eager).


🚨 Way Forward

  1. Balanced Diplomacy: India to pursue strategic autonomy → engage EU without abandoning Russia.

  2. Sectoral Priorities: Focus on green hydrogen, semiconductors, digital regulation, renewable energy.

  3. FTA Breakthrough: Political will required to compromise on tariffs & QCOs.

  4. Institutional Mechanisms: High-level dialogues → defence, technology councils, joint research hubs.

  5. People-to-People ties: Mobility agreements for students, professionals, tourism.


✍️ Possible Mains Questions

  1. “EU–India relations are increasingly shaped by global geopolitical shifts rather than bilateral issues.” Discuss.

  2. What are the challenges in concluding the EU–India Free Trade Agreement? Evaluate its strategic significance for both sides.

  3. How does India balance its strategic autonomy in the context of growing ties with the EU and continued dependence on Russia?


🧩 Ethics/Essay Angle

  • Ethics: EU’s emphasis on “rules-based international order” vs India’s pragmatic approach.

  • Essay: “In a multipolar world, partnerships are forged not by alignment of values but by convergence of interests.”

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Kiran vs Rajkumar Jivaraj Jain (2025) – Supreme Court on Anticipatory Bail under SC/ST Act

 

Kiran vs Rajkumar Jivaraj Jain (2025) – Supreme Court on Anticipatory Bail under SC/ST Act

Context

  • Supreme Court (Sept 1, 2025) quashed Bombay High Court’s order granting anticipatory bail in caste-crimes case.

  • Bench led by CJI B.R. Gavai reaffirmed bar on anticipatory bail under Section 18, SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989.


Facts of the Case

  • Incident (Nov 26, 2024):

    • Victim (Kiran, SC community) attacked by Rajkumar Jain & others for refusing to vote as directed in Assembly elections.

    • Assault with iron rods, casteist abuse, molestation of women relatives, looting, petrol threats.

    • Corroborated by independent witnesses & medical evidence.

  • Judicial Journey:

    • Sessions Court: rejected anticipatory bail (clear casteist intent).

    • Bombay HC (Aurangabad Bench): granted bail (politically motivated, inconsistent).

    • Supreme Court: set aside HC order.


Why is Anticipatory Bail Barred?

  • Section 18, SC/ST Act: excludes Section 438 CrPC (anticipatory bail).

  • Objective: protect victims from intimidation & ensure effective prosecution.

  • Key Precedents:

    • State of M.P. vs Ram Krishna Balothia (1995) – bar valid under Articles 14 & 21.

    • Vilas Pandurang Pawar (2012) – no anticipatory bail if prima facie case exists.

    • Prathvi Raj Chauhan (2020) – safeguards constitutional validity.


Supreme Court’s Observations

  1. Prima facie test only – no “mini-trial” at bail stage.

  2. Public view requirement – caste abuse/assault in open satisfies Sec. 3(1)(r).

  3. Electoral retaliation – falls under Sec. 3(1)(o) (coercion in voting).

  4. Independent witnesses, recovery of weapons, & medical evidence strengthen case.

  5. HC’s order called a “manifest error & jurisdictional illegality.”


Significance of the Judgment

  • Reinforces protection of SC/ST communities against caste crimes & retaliation.

  • Constitutionally valid bar on anticipatory bail—legislative intent respected.

  • Strengthens democratic participation of marginalised communities.

  • Signals caution to High Courts against dilution of the Act at bail stage.


Way Forward

  • Apply prima facie test strictly on FIR, without evidence evaluation.

  • Maintain balance: safeguard victims while preventing misuse.

  • Recognise caste crimes, especially in electoral contexts, as threats to social justice & democracy.


GS Paper Relevance

  • GS II (Polity & Governance): Protection of vulnerable groups, role of judiciary.

  • GS II (Constitution): Articles 14 & 21, special legislations.

  • GS I (Society): Caste system, social justice.

  • Essay / Ethics: Dignity, rule of law, protection of marginalised.

Monday, September 15, 2025

Rising Obesity and Ultra-Processed Food Exposure in Children

 

Rising Obesity and Ultra-Processed Food Exposure in Children

Context

  • UNICEF’s Feeding Profit: How Food Environments Are Failing Children (2025) highlights alarming trends in childhood overweight and obesity.

  • One in five (20%) children and adolescents (5–19 yrs) are now living with overweight.


Key Data Points

  1. Age Groups Most Affected:

    • 5–9 years and 10–14 years show the highest prevalence of overweight.

  2. Food Environment:

    • Rise in density of chain outlets (supermarkets, hypermarkets, convenience stores).

    • These facilitate widespread availability and aggressive promotion of ultra-processed foods and sugary beverages.

  3. Schools as Exposure Sites (U-Report, 2023):

    • Unhealthy foods & beverages more commonly available than fresh fruits/vegetables.

    • Indicates institutional neglect of nutrition in childhood settings.

  4. Policy Deficit (Global):

    • Only 18% of 202 countries have mandatory nutrition standards for school meals.

    • Only 19% levy national taxes on unhealthy foods & sugary drinks.


Analysis (UPSC Lens)

  • Health Impact: Early onset of obesity → risk of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

  • Economic Cost: WHO estimates obesity-related healthcare costs drain GDP via productivity loss + health expenditure.

  • Social Angle: Aggressive marketing exploits vulnerable children; widens inequity as low-income groups rely more on cheap ultra-processed foods.

  • Governance Failure: Weak regulatory environment allows corporations to shape diets over public health priorities.


Criminology & Victimology Link (Optional GS II/III Enrichment)

  • Children as structural victims → exposed to harmful environments without agency.

  • Commercial forces act as perpetrators of structural violence by normalising junk food culture.


Policy Interventions Suggested

  1. Legal & Regulatory:

    • Ban marketing of unhealthy foods targeting children (like tobacco).

    • Strict nutrition standards for school meals & canteens.

    • Front-of-pack labelling (warning labels for high sugar/salt/fat).

  2. Fiscal Measures:

    • Sugar/“junk food” taxes to disincentivise consumption.

    • Subsidies for fruits, vegetables, and healthy snacks.

  3. Education & Awareness:

    • Integrate nutrition education in curricula.

    • Public campaigns against ultra-processed foods.

  4. Institutional Reform:

    • Mid-Day Meal Scheme (PM POSHAN) can be leveraged for healthy eating models.

    • Community monitoring of school canteens and vending machines.


UPSC Relevance

  • GS II (Governance, Health, Rights): Role of state in protecting children’s health.

  • GS III (Science & Tech, NCDs, Economy): Obesity as a public health + economic challenge.

  • Essay Paper: “Children as victims of market forces” / “Food security vs nutrition security.”

  • Ethics Case Study: Corporate responsibility vs profit in food industry.