Ethics Through Current Developments (26-10-2021)

  1. The individual is not really a single entity READ MORE
  2. What the Facebook leaks say about social media ethics in India READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (26-10-2021)

  1. Time to declare war on climate change READ MORE
  2. Atmospheric river storms can drive costly flooding — and climate change is making them stronger READ MORE
  3. Explained: The SDRF manual on how to prepare for and tackle natural disasters READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (26-10-2021)

  1. India: Facebook struggles in its battle against fake news READ MORE
  2. What makes a social movement tick READ MORE
  3. Income support during lockdown didn’t just battle poverty – it might have helped combat Covid-19 too READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (26-10-2021)

  1. End the impasse: A solution is needed for core issues concerning farmers, and not merely for road blocks READ MORE
  2. Upgrading judicial infrastructure READ MORE
  3. Internal Documents Show Facebook Wavered in Checking Misinformation, Hate Speech in India: Report READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (26-10-2021)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. Explained | What are India’s expectations from COP26? READ MORE
  2. 18th ASEAN-India Summit (October 28, 2021) and 16th East Asia Summit (October 27, 2021) READ MORE
  3. PM launches PM Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission READ MORE
  4. SC directs panel to specify maximum water level at Mullaperiyar dam READ MORE
  5. Greenhouse gas concentrations hit a new record in 2020: UN READ MORE
  6. More studies show the superiority of hybrid immunity READ MORE

Main Exam   

GS Paper- 1

  1.  India: Facebook struggles in its battle against fake news READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. End the impasse: A solution is needed for core issues concerning farmers, and not merely for road blocks READ MORE
  2. Upgrading judicial infrastructure READ MORE
  3. Internal Documents Show Facebook Wavered in Checking Misinformation, Hate Speech in India: Report READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES

  1. What makes a social movement tick READ MORE
  2. Income support during lockdown didn’t just battle poverty – it might have helped combat Covid-19 too READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. A festering crisis in the Palk Strait: A moratorium on bottom trawling and support to the fishermen is a good first step towards a solution READ MORE
  2. A ‘bubbles of trust’ approach: This offers a middle path between the extremes of technological sovereignty and laissez-faire globalization READ MORE
  3. India must pay greater attention to its most difficult neighbor READ MORE
  4. China’s new border law: De-escalation along LAC nowhere in sight READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. Reforms needed to tackle power crisis: Improving efficiency of thermal plants, developing a regional market, and greater thrust on renewables are vital READ MORE  
  2. The fuel crisis could be a wake-up call READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY  

  1. Time to declare war on climate change READ MORE
  2. Atmospheric river storms can drive costly flooding — and climate change is making them stronger READ MORE

DISASTER MANAGEMENT

  1. Explained: The SDRF manual on how to prepare for and tackle natural disasters READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. The individual is not really a single entity READ MORE
  2. What the Facebook leaks say about social media ethics in India READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. ‘Being a developing country, India shall continue to rely on fossil-based power to meet the growing demands of the economy’. Do you agree with the view? Justify your opinion.
  2. Critically analyse China’s new border law. How it will impact India.

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • Nuclear weapons offer us nothing but a balance of terror, and a balance of terror is still terror.
  • For Delhi, the current crisis in Pakistan is not a moment for schadenfreude. It should be an occasion to reflect on the long-term regional consequences.
  • A solution is needed for core issues concerning farmers, and not merely for roadblocks.
  • Improving the efficiency of thermal plants, developing a regional market, and greater thrust on renewables is vital.
  • Being a developing country, India shall continue to rely on fossil-based power to meet the growing demands of the economy.
  • Unless we reclaim the language of the Constitution, secularism, and individual rights, violence, hate and bigotry will win.
  • The issues of pendency, delays and backlogs can be tackled to large extent by strengthening the physical, digital, and human infrastructure of the courts.
  • The Government should look for long-term solutions to correct the current situation of heavy reliance on imports and reduce these to 10-15 per cent.

50- WORD TALK

  • The new claims, allegations and counter-allegations involving NCB in the Aryan Khan drugs case have made a murky scandal murkier. A premier law enforcement agency and its officer being entangled in such allegations badly damages its reputation. Headline hunting can turn into a slippery slope. It’s time NCB came clean.
  • The internal investigation at Facebook against users spreading deliberate misinformation and religious hatred in India is indisputable proof that the social media company knew about it and has been unwilling, not unable, to act. Lives were lost in the Delhi riots and Facebook’s role should be probed and accountability fixed.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and also exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the mains point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (OCTOBER 26, 2021)

INDIAN POLITY, GOVERNANCE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

1. AYUSHMAN BHARAT HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE MISSION

THE CONTEXT:  Prime Minister launched the Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission, one of the largest Pan-India schemes for strengthening healthcare infrastructure.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • It is one of the largest Pan-India schemes for strengthening healthcare infrastructure across the country. It is in addition to the National Health Mission.
  • Its objective is to fill gaps in public health infrastructure, especially in critical care facilities and primary care in both urban and rural areas. It will provide support for 17,788 rural health and wellness centres in 10 high-focus states. Further, 11,024 urban health and wellness centres will be established in all the States.
  • Through this, critical care services will be available in all the districts of the country with more than five lakh populations through exclusive critical care hospital blocks, while the remaining districts will be covered through referral services.
  • People will have access to a full range of diagnostic services in the public healthcare system through a network of laboratories across the country, and integrated public health labs will be set up in all the districts.

PM AYUSHMAN BHARAT HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE MISSION

  • There are 3 major aspects of the Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission to address the different gaps in the health sector of the country.
  • The first is related to the creation of elaborate facilities for diagnostics and treatment. Under this, Health and Wellness Centers are being opened in villages and cities, where there will be facilities for early detection of diseases. Facilities like free medical consultation, free tests, and free medicine will be available in these centres. For serious illness, 35 thousand new critical care-related beds are being added in 600 districts and referral facilities will be given in 125 districts.
  • The second aspect of the scheme is related to the testing network for the diagnosis of diseases. The necessary infrastructure will be developed for the diagnosis and monitoring of diseases. 730 districts of the country will get Integrated Public Health labs and 3 thousand blocks will get Block Public Health Units. Apart from that, 5 Regional National Centers for Disease Control, 20 Metropolitan units, and 15 BSL labs will further strengthen this network, said the Prime Minister.
  • The Third aspect is the expansion of existing research institutions that study pandemics. Existing 80 Viral Diagnostic and research labs will be strengthened, 15 Biosafety level 15 labs will be operationalized, 4 new National institutes of Virology and a National Institute for One Health are being established.

SOURCE:  PIB

 

ENVIRONMENT, GEOGRAPHY AND AGRICULTURE

2. CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS IN 2020 ABOVE DECADAL AVERAGE

THE CONTEXT: A report from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said the increase in CO2 from 2019 to 2020 was slightly lower than that observed from 2018 to 2019 but higher than the average annual growth rate over the last decade. 

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The Bulletin, as the WMO report is called, flagged concern that the ability of land ecosystems and oceans to act as ‘sinks’ may become less effective in future, thus reducing their ability to absorb CO2 and act as a buffer against larger temperature increases.
  • The Bulletin shows that from 1990 to 2020, radiative forcing (the warming effect on our climate) by long-lived greenhouse gases increased by 47%, with CO2 accounting for about 80% of this increase. The numbers are based on monitoring by WMO’s Global Atmosphere Watch network.
  • This is despite the approximately 5.6% drop in fossil fuel CO2 emissions in 2020due to restrictions related to the pandemic.
  • For methane, the increase from 2019 to 2020 was higher than that observed from 2018 to 2019 and also higher than the average annual growth rate over the last decade.
  • For nitrous oxides also, the increase was higher and also than the average annual growth rate over the past 10 years.
  • The concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2), the most significant greenhouse gas, reached 413.2 parts per million in 2020 and is 149% of the pre-industrial level.
  • Methane (CH4) is 262% and nitrous oxide (N2O) is 123% of the levels in 1,750 when human activities started disrupting earth’s natural equilibrium.
  • Roughly half of the CO2 emitted by human activities today remains in the atmosphere. The other half is taken up by oceans and land ecosystems.

SOURCE:TH

 

3. INDIA’S EXPECTATIONS FROM COP26

THE CONTEXT: Ahead of the 26th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP) next month in Glasgow, there have been several bilateral meetings between India and other countries. The big push at the COP will be to have more countries commit to a “net-zero” deadline by mid-century. Huge expectations include arriving at a consensus on unresolved issues of the Paris Agreement Rule Book, long-term climate finance and market-based mechanisms

WHY HASN’T INDIA AGREED TO A NET-ZERO TARGET?

  • India sees a mid-century target upon itself as opposed to the principle of “common but differentiated” responsibility that allows countries to eschew fossil fuel without compromising equitable development.
  • Net-zero means that a country must commit to a year beyond which its emissions won’t peak and a point at which it will balance out its emissions by taking out an equivalent amount of greenhouse gas from the air.
  • Even theoretically committing to a net-zero by 2050 would require India to retire its coal plants and fossil fuel use overnight and even this wouldn’t guarantee that temperature-rise stays below 1.5C by the end of the century.
  • India says countries responsible for the climate crisis haven’t made good on previous promises to fund mitigation and adaptation projects and so future net zero promises are therefore hollow.

WHAT ARE INDIA’S EXPECTATIONS FROM COP 26?

  • India was also hoping to strengthen global climate initiatives including the International Solar Alliance, Coalition Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI), leadership Group for Industry Transition (LeadIT Group), Call for Action on Adaptation and Resilience and Mission Innovation.
  • India has said it is “open to all options” provided it gets assurances that commitments in previous COPs such as developing countries getting compensated to the tune of $100 billion annually, the carbon-credit markets be reinvigorated and the countries historically responsible for the climate crisis be compensated by way of “Loss and Damages,” and clean development technologies be made available in ways that its industries can painlessly adapt to.

ABOUT LEAD IT

  • The Leadership Group for Industry Transition (LeadIT) gathers countries and companies that are committed to action to achieve the Paris Agreement.
  • It was launched by the governments of Sweden and India at the UN Climate Action Summit in September 2019 and is supported by the World Economic Forum.
  • LeadIT members subscribe to the notion that energy-intensive industry can and must progress on low-carbon pathways, aiming to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
  • The Management Board is made up of representatives from Sweden, India, and the World Economic Forum. A Technical and Expert Committee, made up of LeadIT member representatives, advises the Board.
  • The Secretariat is responsible for managing the work of the Leadership Group and is hosted by Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI).

SOURCE: TH

 

4. MAXIMUM WATER LEVEL AT MULLAPERIYAR DAM

THE CONTEXT: The Supreme Court directed the Supervisory Committee to take an immediate and firm decision on the maximum water level that can be maintained at Mullaperiyar dam amidst torrential rains in Kerala.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Kerala said the water level should not go above 139 feet. Tamil Nadu, on the other hand, informed the court that the level in the dam was 137.2 ft.
  • The Supreme Court made it clear that this was not an issue to play politics about.The court directed the Supervisory Committee to get to work as there was an immediate need to specify the maximum water level in the dam because of the rains.
  • The order came in a petition filed by Idukki resident Joe Joseph and office-bearers of the Kothamangalam block panchayat in Kerala, who had expressed their apprehensions about the supervision of water levels in the Mullaperiyar dam located along the Periyar tiger reserve, especially during the rainy season.

ABOUT MULLAPERIYAR DAM

  • It is a masonry gravity dam on the Periyar River in the Indian state of Kerala.
  • It was constructed between 1887 and 1895 and also reached in an agreement to divert water eastwards to the Madras Presidency area.
  • The dam created the PeriyarThekkady reservoir, from which water was diverted eastwards via a tunnel to augment the small flow of the Vaigai River.
  • The dam is built at the confluence of Mullayar and Periyar rivers.
  • The dam is located in Kerala on the river Periyar but is operated and maintained by the neighbouring state

SOURCE: TH

 

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

5. THE SUPERIORITY OF HYBRID IMMUNITY

THE CONTEXT: The study, posted in the preprint server medRxiv  has found that in 500 healthcare workers, the neutralising antibodies were twofold more in people immunised with Pfizer vaccine following natural infection compared with people immunised with Pfizer vaccine but without prior infection.

SOURCE: TH

 

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

6. 18TH ASEAN-INDIA SUMMIT AND 16TH EAST ASIA SUMMIT

THE CONTEXT: Prime Minister will attend the 18th ASEAN-India Summit to be held virtually on October 28, 2021. Prime Minister will also attend the 16th East Asia Summit to be held on October 27, 2021, virtually.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The 18th ASEAN-India Summit will review the status of the ASEAN-India Strategic Partnership and take stock of progress made in key areas including Covid-19 & Health, Trade & Commerce, Connectivity, and Education & Culture.
  • Important regional and international developments including post-pandemic economic recovery will also be discussed.
  • ASEAN-India Strategic Partnership stands on a strong foundation of shared geographical, historical and civilizational ties. ASEAN is central to our Act East Policy and our wider vision of the Indo-Pacific.
  • The year 2022 will mark 30 years of ASEAN-India relations.
  • The East Asia Summit is the premier Leaders-led forum in the Indo-Pacific. Since its inception in 2005, it has played a significant role in the strategic and geopolitical evolution of East Asia. Apart from the 10 ASEAN Member states, East Asia Summit includes India, China, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Russia.
  • India, being a founding member of the East Asia Summit, is committed to strengthening the East Asia Summit and making it more effective for dealing with contemporary challenges.
  • It is also an important platform for furthering practical cooperation in the Indo-Pacific by building upon the convergence between ASEAN Outlook on Indo-Pacific (AOIP) and Indo-Pacific Ocean’s Initiative (IPOI).
  • At the 16th East Asia Summit, Leaders will discuss matters of regional and international interest and concern including maritime security, terrorism, Covid-19 cooperation.
  • Leaders are also expected to accept declarations on Mental Health, Economic recovery through Tourism and Green Recovery, which are being co-sponsored by India.

SOURCE: PIB

 

PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1. Consider the following statements about Leadership Group for Industry Transition (LeadIT):

  1. It was launched by the governments of Sweden and India at the UN Climate Action Summit in 2019.
  2. It is an inter-governmental forum of countries that are committed to action to achieve the Paris Agreement.
  3. Its secretariat is hosted by Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI).

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

a) 1 only

b) 2 and 3 only

c) 1 and 3 only

d) 1, 2 and 3

 

ANSWER FOR OCTOBER 23, 2021 PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Q1. Answer: B

Explanation:

Tiger reserves of Madhya Pradesh:

  1. Kanha Tiger Reserve
  2. Pench Tiger Reserve
  3. Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve
  4. Panna Tiger Reserve
  5. Satpura Tiger Reserve
  6. Sanjay-Dhubri Tiger Reserve

Note: Achanakmar tiger reserve is located in Chhattisgarh.

Q2.Answer: D

Explanation:

Buffaloes from Banni are also called “Kutchi” or “Kundi.” The Kutch area of Gujarat is home to this kind of buffalo. The term ‘Banni’ refers not just to buffaloes, but also to pasture grass species native to this region. The ‘Maldharis,’ a Kutch-based community, is dedicated to preserving this breed of buffalo.




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