Political Science And International Relations

Political Science and International Relations can prove to be a smart choice considering several factors.

  • It overlaps with almost the entire GENERAL STUDIES syllabus.
  • It has also witnessed many successful candidates.
  • Study material is easily available.
  • Helpful in preliminary exam as around 15 to 20 questions from Indian Polity and governance section are asked every year for sure.
  • Political Science integrates your prelims and mains preparation. Thus, saving time for other topics.
  • The philosophical perspectives of political thinkers help to enrich the essay's articulation.
  • Most of the topics of GS paper II of Civil Services Main examination are covered under Political Science optional itself.
  • In GS paper 4 of Civil Services Main examination (Ethics, Integrity and aptitude), most of the thinkers are Political Science scholars.
  • Again, in the UPSC- Civil Services interview, some questions are asked about international relations irrespective of your academic background

WHO SHOULD CHOOSE POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS?

  • Interest: Interest in a particular subject should be given top priority while deciding on an optional subject. If you are having interested in political science, you can go for it.
  • Background: If you are not having any educational background in a technical subject and wish to opt for a non-technical subject, you must go for political science & IR as an optional subject. Many of the topics will also overlap with your GS syllabus of civil services examination.
  • In case you choose any other optional subject, then also, you would have to read considerable amount of PSIR chapters in Indian Polity, Ethics, History, current affairs, etc.
  • If you are left with lesser time, it is advisable to opt for PSIR. It will reduce your burden and will save your time.

IS POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS A SCORING SUBJECT?

Many candidates are opting for PSIR as their optional based on the success ratio that this subject has to offer. Many candidates have been able to score 300+ in PSIR and many have managed to bag top ranks. However, UPSC does not discriminate between any of its optional subjects and one should consider his/her interest a top priority while choosing an optional.

Name of the candidate Year of passing Total marks (500) Paper I PSIR (250 MARKS) Paper II PSIR (250 MARKS)
TINA DABI CSE- 2015 299 128 171
AISHWARYA DONGRE CSE-2016 327 175 152
MIRANT PARIKH CSE-2016 307 158 149
KEERTHI KIRAN PUJAR CSE-2017 303 153 150
DHANANJAY SINGH YADAV CSE-2018 283 144 139
SATYAM GANDHI CSE-2020 275 154 121

WHY ONE SHOULD JOIN CHAHAL ACADEMY FOR PSIR?

  1. Detailed coverage of both political science paper I & II for UPSC mains exam
  2. Current Affairs updated teaching for dynamic sections of PSIR.
  3. Explanation of the interlinks between PSIR and GS papers
  4. Availability of topic-wise module with coverage of each topic
  5. Special lecture series on answer writing practice
  6. Access to the best lecturers anytime and anywhere
  7. 150+ hours of Offline/online lectures by Delhi based faculty members

Political Science Optional Coaching Fees:

Sr. Course & Features Fees
1. Online Video Lectures for Both Optional Papers 1 & 2 + Study Material in Soft Copy + Test Series Rs. 30,000/-
2. Online Video Lectures for Both Optional Papers 1 & 2 + Study Material in Soft Copy Rs. 20,000/-

SYLLABUS:

PAPER – I

Section A

POLITICAL THEORY AND INDIAN POLITICS

POLITICAL THEORY AND INDIAN POLITICS

POLITICAL THEORY

  1. Political Theory: Meaning and approaches 
  2. Theories of the state:
    • Liberal
    • Neo-liberal
    • Marxist
    • Pluralist
    • Post-colonial
    • Feminist
  3. Justice: Conceptions of justice with special reference to Rawl’s theory of justice and its communitarian critiques.
  4. Equality:
    • Social, political and economic;
    • Relationship between equality and freedom;
    • Affirmative action.
  5. Rights:
    • Meaning and theories
    • Different kinds of rights;
    • Concept of Human Rights.
  6. Democracy:
    • Classical and contemporary theories;
    • Different models of democracy – representative, participatory and deliberative.
  7. Concept of :
    • Power,
    • Hegemony,
    • Ideology and

POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES

  • Liberalism,
  • Socialism,
  • Marxism,
  • Fascism,
  • Gandhism and
  • Feminism.

INDIAN POLITICAL THOUGHT

  • Dharamshastra,
  • Arthashastra,
  • Buddhist traditions;
  • Sir Syed Ahmed Khan,
  • Sri Aurobindo,
  • M.K. Gandhi,
  • B.R. Ambedkar, M.N. Roy.

WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT

  • Plato,
  • Aristotle
  • Machiavelli,
  • Hobbes,
  • Locke,
  • John S. Mill,
  • Marx.

Section B

INDIAN GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS:

INDIAN GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

NATIONALISM AND CONSTITUTION:

Political Strategies Of India’s Freedom Struggle:

  • Constitutionalism to mass Satyagraha,
  • Non-cooperation,
  • Civil Disobedience;
  • Militant and revolutionary movements,
  • Peasant and workers’ movements.

Perspectives On Indian National Movement

  • Liberal
  • Socialist and Marxist;
  • Radical humanist and
  • Dalit.

Making Of The Indian Constitution

  • Legacies of the British rule.
  • Different social and political perspectives.

POLITICAL THEORY AND INDIAN POLITICS

Salient Features of the Indian Constitution:

  • The Preamble,
  • Fundamental Rights and Duties,
  • Directive Principles;
  • Parliamentary System and Amendment Procedures;
  • Judicial Review and Basic Structure doctrine.

Principal Organs of the Union Government: Envisaged role and actual working of the Executive, Legislature and Supreme Court.

Principal Organs of the State Government: Envisaged role and actual working of the Executive, Legislature and High Courts.

Grassroots Democracy:

  • Panchayati Raj and Municipal Government;
  • Significance of 73rd and 74th Amendments;
  • Grass root movements.

Statutory Institutions/Commissions:

  • Election Commission,
  • Comptroller and Auditor General,
  • Finance Commission,
  • Union Public Service Commission,
  • National Commission for Scheduled Castes,
  • National Commission for Scheduled Tribes,
  • National Commission for Women;
  • National Human Rights Commission,
  • National Commission for Minorities,
  • National Backward Classes Commission.

Federalism:

  • Constitutional provisions;
  • Changing nature of centre-state relations;
  • Integrationist tendencies and regional aspirations;
  • Inter-state disputes.

VARIOUS DIVERSE TOPICS

Planning and Economic Development:

  • Nehruvian and Gandhian perspectives;
  • Role of planning and public sector;
  • Green Revolution,
  • Land reforms and agrarian relations;
  • Liberalization and economic reforms.

Caste, Religion and Ethnicity in Indian Politics.

Party System:

  • National and regional political parties, ideological and social bases of parties;
  • Patterns of coalition politics;
  • Pressure groups,
  • Trends in electoral behavior;
  • Changing sociology- economic profile of Legislators.

Social Movements:

  • Civil liberties and human rights movements;
  • Women’s movements;
  • Environmentalist movements.

PAPER – II

Section A

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ANALYSIS AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL ANALYSIS AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

COMPARATIVE POLITICS:

  • Nature and major approaches
  • Political economy and political sociology perspectives
  • Limitations of the comparative method.

State in comparative perspective: Characteristics and changing nature of the State in capitalist and socialist economies, and, advanced industrial and developing societies.

Politics of Representation and Participation:

  • Political parties,
  • Pressure groups and
  • Social movements in advanced industrial and developing societies.

THEORIES AND CONCEPTS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS:

Globalisation: Responses from developed and developing societies.

Approaches to the Study of International Relations:

  • Idealist,
  • Realist,
  • Marxist,
  • Functionalist and
  • Systems theory.

Key concepts in International Relations:

  • National interest,
  • Security and power;
  • Balance of power and deterrence;
  • Transnational actors and collective security;
  • World capitalist economy and globalisation.

Changing International Political Order:

(a) Rise of superpowers; strategic and ideological Bipolarity, arms race and Cold War; nuclear threat;

(b) Non-aligned movement: Aims and achievements;

(c) Collapse of the Soviet Union; Unipolarity and American hegemony; relevance of non-alignment in the contemporary world.

GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS AND GROUPS:

Evolution of the International Economic System:

  • From Bretton woods to WTO;
  • Socialist economies and the CMEA (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance);
  • Third World demand for new international economic order;
  • Globalisation of the world economy.

United Nations:

  • Envisaged role and actual record;
  • Specialized UN agencies-aims and functioning;
  • Need for UN reforms.

Regionalisation of World Politics:

  • EU,
  • ASEAN,
  • APEC,
  • SAARC,
  • NAFTA.

Contemporary Global Concerns:

  • Democracy,
  • Human rights,
  • Environment,
  • Gender justice,
  • Terrorism,
  • Nuclear proliferation.

India and the world:

1. Indian Foreign Policy:

  • Determinants of foreign policy;
  • Institutions of policy-making;
  • Continuity and change.

2. India’s Contribution to the Non-Alignment Movement:

  • Different phases;
  • Current role.

3. India and South Asia:

(a) Regional Co-operation: SAARC – past performance and future prospects.

(b) South Asia as a Free Trade Area.

(c) India’s “Look East” policy.

(d) Impediments to regional co-operation: -river water disputes;

POLITICAL SCIENCE OPTIONAL SUBJECT RECOMMENDED BOOKLIST

  • POLITICAL THOUGHT IN MODERN INDIA: PANTHAM & DEUTCH (SAGE PUBLICATION)
  • INDIAN GOVT. AND POLITICS: FADIA & FADIA (SAHITYA BHAWAN)
  • COMPARATIVE POLITICS: J.C. JOHARI
  • A HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT- PLATO TO MARX (MUKHERJEE & RAMASWAMY)
  • AN INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY: O.P. GAUBA
  • THE GLOBALIZATION OF WORLD POLITICS: BAYLIS, SMITH & OWENS (OXFORD)

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