172 Total Terms
0 Revised
Revision Progress
GS Filter:

A

Constitutional provision under the Tenth Schedule that disqualifies legislators who defect from their party by voting against party directions or voluntarily giving up party membership.

Arbitrage GS3

The practice of simultaneously buying and selling an asset in different markets to profit from a price difference; or ...

B

C

An economic model that eliminates waste by keeping materials in use as long as possible through recycling, reuse, and regeneration, in contrast to the traditional linear take-make-dispose model.

The adherence to the core principles and transformative spirit of the Constitution — not merely its text but its fundamental values of liberty, equality, fraternity, and dignity — even when these conflict with popular or social morality.

The relatively well-off and socially advanced sections within OBC communities who are excluded from the benefits of reservation, based on the principle that reservation should reach only those who genuinely need it.

D

The ability of a government (or economy) to service its existing and future debt obligations without requiring debt restructuring or defaulting, while maintaining growth and essential public spending.

A GDP measurement method that separately deflates both outputs and intermediate inputs to get accurate real value-added at industry level

E

A composite index (formerly published by the World Bank) ranking countries on the regulatory environment faced by small and medium enterprises across the business lifecycle, from starting a business to resolving insolvency.

Constitutional provisions (Articles 352-360) empowering the President to proclaim different types of emergencies that temporarily alter the federal balance and suspend certain rights to protect national security, state constitutional breakdown, or financial stability.

10% reservation in government jobs and higher education for Economically Weaker Sections among general category citizens, introduced by the 103rd Constitutional Amendment Act of 2019.

F

A system of government where power is constitutionally divided between a central authority and constituent units

Constitutional schedule (under Articles 244 and 244A) governing the administration and control of Scheduled Areas and Scheduled Tribes in states other than Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram.

G

Green GDP GS3

A modified measure of economic output that adjusts conventional GDP by subtracting the costs of environmental degradation and depletion of natural resources.

Adversarial activities conducted below the threshold of conventional armed conflict — using hybrid tools like cyber attacks, disinformation, economic coercion, and proxy forces — to achieve strategic objectives while avoiding direct military confrontation.

H

A legal writ requiring that a person under detention be brought before a court so the lawfulness of their detention can be examined — a fundamental safeguard of personal liberty against arbitrary arrest.

I

J

A landmark 2023 law that decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 central Acts, replacing imprisonment with fines for minor regulatory violations to ease business compliance and reduce court pendency

A judicial philosophy where courts interpret constitutional provisions expansively to protect rights, fill legislative vacuums, and direct executive action — sometimes going beyond strict textual interpretation.

The philosophy and theoretical framework of law; the study of legal principles and the body of legal knowledge develop...

K

L

The legal right or standing of a person or entity to bring a case before a court — the requirement that a petitioner must have a sufficient personal interest in the matter being litigated.

Lokpal GS2

India's national ombudsman body established under the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act 2013 to independently inquire into allegations of corruption against high public functionaries including the Prime Minister.

M

Guidelines issued by the Election Commission of India governing the conduct of political parties, candidates, and the government from the announcement of elections until the declaration of results.

A Bill defined under Article 110 dealing only with specified financial matters, which can only be introduced in Lok Sabha and over which Rajya Sabha has limited powers — it can only make recommendations, which Lok Sabha may accept or reject.

The tendency of an insured or guaranteed party to take on excessive risk because they do not bear the full consequences of their actions.

N

A set of fundamental procedural fairness principles — primarily the right to a fair hearing and the rule against bias — that must be observed by any authority exercising power affecting individual rights.

Bank loans or advances where the principal or interest payment is overdue for more than 90 days, indicating the borrower has defaulted — a key indicator of banking sector health.

A ballot option on EVMs allowing voters to formally reject all candidates without boycotting the election, introduced by a Supreme Court direction in 2013 and first used in the November 2013 state assembly elections.

O

P

Special rights and immunities enjoyed by Parliament, its houses, and individual members that are necessary for the free and effective discharge of their legislative and deliberative functions.

The Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act 1996, which extends panchayati raj institutions to Fifth Schedule tribal areas with special modifications to protect tribal rights and Gram Sabha powers.

A government scheme offering financial incentives to manufacturers based on incremental sales above a base year threshold, aimed at boosting domestic manufacturing, attracting investment, and reducing import dependence across 14 key sectors.

Contractual arrangements between government and private entities for building and operating infrastructure, varying in risk allocation and asset ownership

A legal mechanism allowing any public-spirited person to approach the Supreme Court or High Court to enforce constitutional and legal rights on behalf of disadvantaged groups, without the affected party needing to file the petition themselves.

Q

A computation paradigm that uses quantum mechanical phenomena — superposition and entanglement — to process information in ways that can exponentially outperform classical computers for specific problem types.

R

Repo Rate GS3

The rate at which the Reserve Bank of India lends short-term money to commercial banks against government securities — the primary monetary policy tool for controlling inflation and liquidity.

S

India's constitutional model of positive secularism in which the state maintains principled equidistance from all religions — neither promoting nor discriminating against any faith — while being free to regulate religious affairs in the public interest.

A geographically demarcated area within a country where business and trade laws differ from the rest of the country, typically offering tax incentives, streamlined regulations, and superior infrastructure to attract foreign investment and promote exports.

A rare and particularly difficult economic condition combining stagnant economic growth (or recession) with high inflation and high unemployment simultaneously — a combination that traditional economic policy tools struggle to address.

Sunset Clause GS2 GS4

A legislative provision that automatically terminates a law or regulation after a fixed period unless explicitly renewed by Parliament.

T

The idea that a Constitution is not merely a static legal document but an aspirational instrument mandating ongoing social transformation towards equality, dignity, and justice — especially relevant to societies emerging from deep historical inequalities.

U

V

W

A person — typically an employee or public servant — who exposes wrongdoing, corruption, illegal activity, or misuse of power within an organisation, usually at significant personal risk.

The power of superior courts (Supreme Court and High Courts) to issue prerogative writs — Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Prohibition, Certiorari, and Quo Warranto — for enforcement of fundamental rights and correction of errors in subordinate courts and authorities.

Z

Zero Hour GS2

An informal parliamentary practice unique to India where Members of Parliament can raise matters of urgent public importance immediately after Question Hour without prior notice to the Speaker — so named because it begins at 12:00 noon.