Class 11 & 12 Humanities
Complete Study Notes
Chapter-wise revision notes covering all key concepts, dates, terms, and exam-ready points. All content is original and independently written.
Core Concept
This chapter traces human origins from early hominids through the evolution of Homo sapiens, examining how early humans lived, hunted, gathered, and developed language and art.
Key Points
- Hominids are the family that includes humans and their closest fossil relatives. The earliest hominid fossils date to around 5.6 million years ago in Africa.
- Homo habilis (~2.5 mya): First tool-maker. Found in East Africa. Made simple stone tools known as the Oldowan toolkit.
- Homo erectus (~1.8 mya): First hominid to migrate out of Africa into Asia and Europe. Used fire and made more advanced Acheulian hand axes.
- Homo sapiens (~200,000 years ago): Anatomically modern humans. Originated in Africa and spread globally (Out of Africa theory).
- Neanderthals: A separate species that coexisted with early Homo sapiens. Had large brains, buried their dead, but became extinct ~40,000 years ago.
- Cave paintings at Lascaux (France) and Altamira (Spain) date to ~17,000 years ago — evidence of early symbolic thinking and art.
- Early humans were hunter-gatherers: mobile, lived in small bands, divided tasks broadly by gender, and had deep knowledge of their environment.
Key Terms
HominidHomo habilisHomo erectusHomo sapiensHunter-gathererOldowan toolsAcheulian toolsOut of Africa theoryCore Concept
Focuses on Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq) as one of the world's earliest urban civilisations, examining why cities emerged and how they were organised socially and economically.
Key Points
- Mesopotamia means "land between rivers" (Tigris and Euphrates). Its fertile alluvial plains allowed surplus agriculture which enabled city formation.
- Uruk (c. 3000 BCE) was one of the world's earliest cities with a population of around 40,000.
- Cuneiform was the world's earliest writing system — developed by Sumerians, written on clay tablets, used initially for record-keeping (grain, livestock).
- Mesopotamian economy relied on surplus grain, long-distance trade (timber, copper, tin from distant regions), and craft production.
- Temple was the economic and religious centre of Mesopotamian cities — controlled land, redistributed food, and employed workers.
- Gilgamesh: Epic tale of the king of Uruk — one of the earliest works of literature. Themes of friendship, mortality, and the search for immortality.
- Society had social stratification: rulers, priests, merchants, artisans, farmers, and slaves.
- The ziggurat was a stepped temple tower — architectural symbol of Mesopotamian cities.
Key Terms
MesopotamiaCuneiformZigguratUrukGilgamesh EpicSurplus agricultureTemple economyCore Concept
Examines the Mongol Empire — the largest contiguous land empire in history — and how nomadic peoples built and administered vast territories.
Key Points
- Genghis Khan (born Temujin, 1162–1227): United Mongol tribes by 1206 CE, launched campaigns across Asia and into Europe.
- Mongol success was due to: superior cavalry, psychological warfare, adaptable strategy, unified command, and use of conquered people's skills (engineers, administrators).
- Pax Mongolica ("Mongol Peace"): A period of relative stability across the empire (13th–14th century) that facilitated trade along the Silk Road.
- The empire was divided into four khanates after Genghis Khan's death: Golden Horde (Russia), Chagatai (Central Asia), Ilkhanate (Persia), and Yuan (China).
- Kublai Khan (Genghis's grandson) ruled China as the Yuan dynasty; hosted Marco Polo.
- Mongols were initially shamanistic but later adopted Islam (Ilkhanate, Golden Horde) and Buddhism (Yuan).
- The Black Death (plague) may have spread along Mongol trade routes, killing ~one-third of Europe's population in the 14th century.
Key Terms
Genghis KhanKhanatePax MongolicaKublai KhanSilk RoadYasa (Mongol law)Core Concept
Explores the social and economic structure of medieval Europe, particularly the feudal system and the role of the Church, nobility, and peasantry.
Key Points
- Medieval European society was organised into three orders: those who pray (clergy), those who fight (nobility/knights), and those who work (peasants/serfs).
- Feudalism: A hierarchical system where the king granted land (fiefs) to lords in exchange for military service; lords in turn granted land to knights; peasants (serfs) worked the land in exchange for protection.
- Manor: The basic economic unit of feudal Europe — a lord's estate worked by serfs. Largely self-sufficient.
- Serfdom: Serfs were bound to the land, owed labour services and fees to the lord, but were not slaves — they had some legal protections.
- The Catholic Church was the most powerful institution — it owned vast lands, collected tithes, controlled education, and could excommunicate rulers.
- Crusades (1095–1291): Church-sanctioned military campaigns to recover Jerusalem from Muslim rule. Had lasting impact on East-West trade and culture.
- Growth of towns and trade from the 11th century weakened feudalism by creating a merchant class (bourgeoisie) outside the three-order structure.
Key Terms
FeudalismFiefSerfManorTitheExcommunicationCrusadesBourgeoisieCore Concept
Covers the Renaissance (14th–17th century) — a flowering of art, literature, science, and humanism in Europe that marked the transition from medieval to modern thought.
Key Points
- Renaissance (French for "rebirth") began in Italian city-states like Florence, Venice, and Milan due to their wealth, urban culture, and access to classical texts.
- Humanism: A philosophical outlook that placed human beings — not God — at the centre of inquiry. Stressed reason, dignity, and classical learning.
- Key Renaissance figures: Leonardo da Vinci (art + science), Michelangelo (sculpture/painting), Dante (literature), Erasmus (Christian humanism).
- Printing press (Gutenberg, c.1450): Revolutionised the spread of knowledge — books became affordable, literacy expanded, and the Bible was translated into vernacular languages.
- Protestant Reformation (Martin Luther, 1517): Challenged Catholic Church corruption. Luther's 95 Theses questioned indulgences; led to new Protestant denominations.
- Counter-Reformation: The Catholic Church's response — Council of Trent (1545–63), Jesuits, Inquisition — to reform from within and combat Protestantism.
- The Renaissance also saw the Scientific Revolution: Copernicus (heliocentric model), Galileo (telescope), Vesalius (human anatomy).
Key Terms
RenaissanceHumanismPrinting PressProtestant Reformation95 ThesesCounter-ReformationHeliocentric modelCore Concept
Examines European colonisation of the Americas and Australia — how indigenous peoples were dispossessed, their cultures suppressed, and their populations devastated.
Key Points
- European colonisation of the Americas began with Columbus's voyage in 1492. The Spanish conquered the Aztec (Mexico) and Inca (Peru) empires in the 16th century.
- Encomienda system: Spanish colonial system that granted colonisers the right to indigenous labour in exchange for religious instruction — effectively forced labour.
- Indigenous populations collapsed due to epidemic diseases (smallpox, measles) against which they had no immunity — some regions lost 90% of their population.
- In North America, British and French settlers pushed indigenous peoples westward through wars, treaties (often broken), and the reservation system.
- Trail of Tears (1838): Forced removal of Cherokee and other nations from their homelands in the American Southeast to Oklahoma — thousands died during the journey.
- In Australia, British colonisation (from 1788) decimated Aboriginal populations through disease, violence, and land dispossession. Terra Nullius (land belonging to nobody) was the legal fiction used to claim the continent.
- Indigenous peoples resisted colonisation: Aztec resistance, Native American uprisings, Aboriginal guerrilla warfare — but were ultimately suppressed by superior military technology.
Key Terms
EncomiendaTerra NulliusTrail of TearsReservation systemEpidemic diseaseColonisationCore Concept
Compares how China and Japan responded to Western imperialism and modernity in the 19th and 20th centuries — China's initial resistance and Japan's successful modernisation through the Meiji Restoration.
Key Points
- China: The Qing dynasty faced Western pressure (Opium Wars, 1839–42 and 1856–60). China was forced to sign unequal treaties, open ports, and cede Hong Kong to Britain.
- The Boxer Uprising (1900): Chinese nationalist movement against foreign influence and Christian missionaries. Suppressed by an 8-nation alliance.
- May Fourth Movement (1919): Intellectual movement that blamed Confucian tradition for China's weakness; demanded science, democracy, and Marxism.
- Japan's Meiji Restoration (1868): After Commodore Perry's US ships forced Japan to open in 1853, reformers overthrew the Tokugawa shogunate and restored Emperor Meiji. Rapid modernisation followed.
- Japan's Meiji reforms: Western education, industrialisation, modern army/navy, railways, telegraph, and a constitutional monarchy (1889).
- Japan defeated China (1895) and Russia (1905) — the first time an Asian nation defeated a European power — signalling successful modernisation.
- Japan's modernisation was top-down (state-led), while China's was resisted until revolution finally brought the Republic in 1912.
Key Terms
Meiji RestorationOpium WarsUnequal TreatiesBoxer UprisingMay Fourth MovementTokugawa ShogunateCore Concept
The Harappan (Indus Valley) civilisation (~2600–1900 BCE) was one of the world's earliest urban cultures, known for city planning, standardised weights, and extensive trade.
Key Points
- Spread across parts of present-day Pakistan, India, and Afghanistan. Major sites: Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Dholavira, Lothal, Kalibangan, Rakhigarhi.
- Known for: grid-pattern city planning, underground drainage systems, standardised baked bricks, and the Great Bath at Mohenjo-daro.
- Lothal had a dockyard — evidence of maritime trade with Mesopotamia.
- Economy: agriculture (wheat, barley, cotton), craft production (beads, pottery, metal work), and long-distance trade.
- Harappan script remains undeciphered — prevents full understanding of their social and political organisation.
- No clear evidence of palaces or temples — suggests a society possibly governed by merchants/priests rather than warrior kings.
- Decline (~1900 BCE): Possibly due to climate change, river shifts (Ghaggar-Hakra/Saraswati drying up), floods, or external migration.
- Archaeologists: John Marshall (first excavations), R.D. Banerji (Mohenjo-daro), Daya Ram Sahni (Harappa).
Key Terms
HarappaMohenjo-daroGreat BathGrid patternLothal dockyardHarappan scriptStandardised weightsKey Points
- The period saw the rise of the Mahajanapadas (16 great kingdoms) and the eventual dominance of Magadha under the Nanda and Maurya dynasties.
- Mauryan Empire (321–185 BCE): Chandragupta Maurya founded it; Ashoka (268–232 BCE) expanded and then embraced Buddhism after the Kalinga War.
- Ashoka's Dhamma: A moral code based on tolerance, non-violence, respect for all religions — propagated through edicts inscribed on pillars and rocks.
- Punch-marked coins were early currency — evidence of a monetised economy and long-distance trade.
- The Sangam texts (Tamil literature) provide evidence for early South Indian kingdoms, trade, and society.
- Gupta Empire (320–550 CE): Often called India's "Golden Age" — advances in mathematics (Aryabhata), astronomy, literature (Kalidasa), and art.
- Sources used by historians: inscriptions (epigraphy), coins (numismatics), texts (Arthashastra, Edicts of Ashoka), and archaeological remains.
Key Terms
MahajanapadasMauryan EmpireAshoka's DhammaEdictPunch-marked coinsGupta EmpireArthashastraKey Points
- The Mahabharata (composed c. 400 BCE–400 CE) is a key source for understanding family, kinship, marriage norms, and caste in ancient India.
- Varna system: Four broad social categories — Brahmin (priests), Kshatriya (warriors), Vaishya (traders), Shudra (labourers). Jati (caste) was more localised and occupational.
- Gotra: A patrilineal clan — people of the same gotra were considered descendants of a common ancestor and could not intermarry (exogamy).
- The practice of cross-cousin marriage was common in South India but forbidden in North India — showing regional variation in social norms.
- Women in ancient India: Had property rights (stridhana), but were largely excluded from Vedic rituals and public life. Manu Smriti imposed restrictions.
- The jajmani system: A patron-client relationship where upper-caste families received services from lower-caste families in exchange for goods/protection.
Key Terms
VarnaJatiGotraExogamyStridhanaMahabharataManu SmritiKey Points
- This period saw the rise of Buddhism and Jainism as alternatives to Brahminical orthodoxy — both rejected caste hierarchy and Vedic ritual.
- Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha, c. 563–483 BCE): Attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree at Bodhgaya. Preached the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path.
- Four Noble Truths: Life involves suffering → suffering is caused by desire → desire can be ended → Eightfold Path is the way.
- Vardhamana Mahavira (c. 540–468 BCE): 24th Tirthankara of Jainism. Advocated extreme non-violence (ahimsa), truth (satya), and non-attachment.
- Stupas: Hemispherical structures built over the relics of the Buddha. Famous examples: Sanchi Stupa (Madhya Pradesh), Amaravati Stupa.
- Bhakti movement early roots: Personal devotion to a deity (Shiva or Vishnu) as the path to salvation — challenged caste divisions.
- Rock-cut architecture: Ajanta (Buddhist paintings), Ellora (Hindu, Buddhist, Jain temples).
Key Terms
Four Noble TruthsEightfold PathStupaAhimsaTirthankaraSanchiAjantaBhaktiKey Points
- Al-Biruni (973–1048 CE): Central Asian scholar who came to India with Mahmud of Ghazni. Wrote Kitab-ul-Hind — a detailed, relatively objective account of Indian religion, philosophy, science, and society.
- Al-Biruni knew Sanskrit and tried to understand India from within — praised Indian knowledge but noted differences with Islamic thought.
- Ibn Battuta (1304–1368): Moroccan traveller who visited India during Muhammad bin Tughlaq's reign. Wrote Rihla (The Journey). Observed caste system, slavery, markets, cities, and the postal system (dak chowki).
- Francois Bernier (1620–1688): French physician who lived in Mughal court. Compared India unfavourably with Europe — criticised the lack of private property, which he saw as cause of India's poverty. Influenced European Enlightenment thinkers.
- Each traveller brought their own cultural lens — their accounts must be read critically for biases.
Key Terms
Al-BiruniKitab-ul-HindIbn BattutaRihlaBernierDak ChowkiKey Points
- Bhakti movement: A devotional movement emphasising personal love for God, accessible to all regardless of caste or gender. Grew from South India (Alvars, Nayanars) and spread northward.
- Key Bhakti saints: Kabir (weaver, questioned both Hindu and Muslim orthodoxy), Mirabai (Rajput princess, devotee of Krishna), Tukaram (Maharashtra), Ramanuja, Shankaracharya.
- Alvars: Tamil Vaishnava poet-saints. Nayanars: Tamil Shaiva poet-saints. Their poetry is compiled in texts like the Divya Prabandham.
- Sufi movement: Mystical dimension of Islam emphasising love of God, personal devotion, and tolerance. Opposed rigid legalism.
- Sufi orders (silsilas): Chishti (most popular in India — Moinuddin Chishti at Ajmer), Suhrawardi, Qadiri, Naqshbandi.
- Sufis used khanqahs (hospices) as centres of teaching. Dargahs (shrines of Sufi saints) became centres of popular devotion across communities.
- Both Bhakti and Sufi traditions challenged caste hierarchy and promoted emotional, direct access to the divine — without intermediaries.
Key Terms
BhaktiSufiAlvarNayanarSilsilaKhanqahDargahKabirChishtiKey Points
- Vijayanagara Empire (1336–1646): Founded by Harihara and Bukka Raya in the Deccan (present-day Karnataka). Capital: Hampi.
- At its peak under Krishnadeva Raya (1509–29), the empire was one of the richest in the world. He was also a poet (wrote Amuktamalyada in Telugu).
- Hampi's architecture: Virupaksha Temple, Vittala Temple (famous for musical pillars), Lotus Mahal, elephant stables.
- Economy: horse trade from Arabia/Persia was crucial; also cotton, spices, and precious stones. Portuguese supplied horses at Goa.
- City had elaborate water management systems: tanks, canals, aqueducts to sustain the population in an otherwise arid region.
- The empire fell after the Battle of Talikota (1565), when a coalition of Deccan Sultanates defeated and sacked Vijayanagara. Hampi was abandoned.
- Key source: Amuktamalyada (by Krishnadeva Raya), accounts of foreign travellers like Domingo Paes and Fernao Nuniz (Portuguese).
Key Terms
VijayanagaraHampiKrishnadeva RayaVittala TempleBattle of TalikotaDomingo PaesKey Points
- The Mughal agrarian system was documented in Ain-i-Akbari (written by Abul Fazl, Akbar's minister) — a detailed administrative and statistical record.
- Zamindars: Intermediaries between the peasant and the state. They collected revenue, had armed retainers, and held local power. Not all zamindars were large landlords.
- Peasants (raiyat/muzarian): Classified as khud-kashta (peasants cultivating their own land) and pahi-kashta (migrant peasants cultivating others' land).
- Akbar's revenue system: The zabti (measurement) system under Todar Mal — assessed land on the basis of area and average yield over 10 years, fixed revenue in cash.
- Women in agrarian society: Crucial economic participants — worked in fields, weaving, pottery. Women's property rights were limited but they could hold mehar (dower) in Muslim law.
- Forests were not "empty" — forest-dwellers (adivasis) had complex relationships with settled agriculture, trading forest products and sometimes challenging Mughal authority.
Key Terms
Ain-i-AkbariZamindarZabti systemTodar MalKhud-kashtaPahi-kashtaKey Points
- The Mughals maintained detailed court chronicles (tawarikh) — written by court historians (vakil) to legitimise the emperor's rule and record events.
- Key chronicles: Baburnama (by Babur — unusually personal and candid), Humayunnama (by Gulbadan Begum — a woman!), Akbarnama and Ain-i-Akbari (by Abul Fazl).
- Akbar's court was characterised by sulh-i-kul (absolute peace/tolerance) — religious pluralism, Persian as court language, incorporation of Hindu Rajput elites.
- The Mughal court had elaborate rituals of power: jharokha-darshan (emperor appearing at window for public viewing), weighing ceremony (tuladan), and audience in the Diwan-i-Aam and Diwan-i-Khas.
- Jahangir was famous for his memoir Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri and his patronage of miniature painting.
- Mughal painting fused Persian, Indian, and later European styles — key painters: Bichitr, Manohar, Abul Hasan.
Key Terms
TawarikhBaburnamaAin-i-AkbariSulh-i-kulJharokha-darshanDiwan-i-AamDiwan-i-KhasKey Points
- The British colonial revenue systems fundamentally changed Indian agrarian society.
- Permanent Settlement (1793, Bengal): Lord Cornwallis fixed land revenue permanently with zamindars — zamindars became landlords, peasants became tenants. Aimed at creating a stable revenue base and a loyal class.
- Ryotwari system (South India, Bombay): Revenue settled directly with individual peasants (ryots). Revenue was reassessed periodically and was often excessive.
- Mahalwari system (North India): Revenue settled with village communities (mahal), collectively responsible for payment.
- Indigo revolt (1859, Bengal): Peasants refused to grow indigo for British planters who paid below market prices. Led to the Indigo Commission and eventually the end of forced indigo cultivation.
- Paharias and Santhals in the Rajmahal Hills — the British settled Santhals (as "civilised" peasants) to displace the forest-dwelling Paharias, leading to the Santhal Uprising (1855–56).
Key Terms
Permanent SettlementRyotwariMahalwariIndigo RevoltSanthal UprisingZamindariKey Points
- The Revolt of 1857 began as a sepoy mutiny on 10 May 1857 at Meerut, triggered by the introduction of the Enfield rifle with greased cartridges (said to contain cow and pig fat).
- Immediate cause: Greased cartridges offending both Hindu and Muslim sepoys. Underlying causes: British expansion (Doctrine of Lapse), disruption of traditional economic structures, racist attitudes of British officers.
- Key leaders: Bahadur Shah Zafar (nominal Mughal emperor, Delhi), Rani Lakshmibai (Jhansi), Nana Sahib (Kanpur), Begum Hazrat Mahal (Lucknow), Kunwar Singh (Bihar).
- The revolt spread across northern and central India but failed in Bombay, Madras, and Punjab.
- The revolt was suppressed by 1858. Its aftermath: End of the East India Company — direct Crown rule (Raj) was established. Bahadur Shah Zafar was exiled to Rangoon.
- The revolt has been interpreted variously: as a sepoy mutiny (British view), as India's first war of independence (Savarkar), or as a limited regional uprising (modern historians).
Key Terms
Sepoy MutinyEnfield RifleBahadur Shah ZafarRani LakshmibaiDoctrine of LapseCrown RuleKey Points
- British colonial cities like Bombay, Calcutta, Madras grew around colonial trade and administration — quite different from earlier Indian cities.
- Cities were spatially segregated: "White Town" (European quarter) vs. "Black Town" (Indian quarter) — with better infrastructure, sanitation, and housing for Europeans.
- The Hill Stations (Shimla, Darjeeling, Ooty) were created as European retreats — spaces of recreation and governance away from the Indian "heat."
- Indo-Saracenic architecture: Colonial architectural style blending Indian (Mughal/Rajput) and Western Gothic/Classical elements — e.g., Victoria Terminus (Mumbai), Government House (Calcutta).
- Census operations from 1872 onwards attempted to document and classify Indian society — creating rigid social categories.
- Maps and surveys (Great Trigonometrical Survey) were colonial tools for controlling and administering territory.
Key Terms
White TownBlack TownHill StationIndo-SaracenicVictoria TerminusCensusKey Points
- Gandhi returned to India from South Africa in 1915 and transformed Indian nationalism into a mass movement.
- Satyagraha: Gandhi's method of non-violent resistance — "truth-force." First used in South Africa, then in Champaran (1917, indigo farmers), Kheda (1918, peasants), and Ahmedabad (1918, mill workers).
- Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22): Boycott of British goods, courts, schools. Called off after Chauri Chaura (February 1922), where a mob burned a police station — Gandhi refused to continue a movement that had turned violent.
- Civil Disobedience Movement (1930): Began with the Dandi March (March 12, 1930) — Gandhi walked 241 miles to break the salt law. Mass civil disobedience followed; ended with Gandhi-Irwin Pact (1931).
- Quit India Movement (1942): "Do or Die" — demanding immediate British withdrawal. Gandhi and Congress leaders were arrested; the movement became leaderless but showed mass nationalism.
- Gandhi also worked on social issues: against untouchability (Harijan campaign), Hindu-Muslim unity, women's participation, and village self-reliance (Swaraj).
Key Terms
SatyagrahaNon-CooperationDandi MarchCivil DisobedienceQuit IndiaChauri ChauraHarijanKey Points
- The Partition of India (August 1947) divided British India into the independent nations of India and Pakistan — one of the largest forced migrations in history.
- Causes: Two-Nation Theory (Jinnah — Hindus and Muslims are two separate nations), British policy of divide and rule, communal violence of 1946–47 (Great Calcutta Killings, Noakhali), Congress-League deadlock.
- The Radcliffe Line (drawn by Cyril Radcliffe) divided Punjab and Bengal within 5 weeks — without adequate knowledge of the ground, leading to enormous suffering.
- Around 10–15 million people were displaced; an estimated 2 lakh to 2 million were killed in communal violence.
- Women suffered particular violence — abduction, rape, forced conversion. The Indian and Pakistani governments later negotiated the recovery of abducted women.
- Partition is studied through oral histories and literary accounts — because official records are incomplete. Writers like Saadat Hasan Manto (Toba Tek Singh) captured its human tragedy.
Key Terms
PartitionTwo-Nation TheoryRadcliffe LineJinnahDirect Action DayOral HistoryKey Points
- The Constituent Assembly first met on December 9, 1946. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee. The Constitution was adopted on November 26, 1949 and came into force on January 26, 1950.
- The Assembly had 299 members — though not elected by universal suffrage, it included representatives from all provinces and princely states.
- Major debates in the Assembly: separate electorates (rejected — rejected caste/religion-based constituencies), language (Hindi vs. other languages), minority rights, and fundamental rights.
- The Constitution drew from multiple sources: USA (fundamental rights, judicial review), UK (parliamentary system), Ireland (Directive Principles), Canada (federalism), Australia (concurrent list).
- Key features: fundamental rights, directive principles, federal structure, universal adult franchise, secularism, independent judiciary.
- Ambedkar warned that political democracy alone is insufficient without social and economic democracy — the Constitution provides a framework, but citizens must work to realise it.
Key Terms
Constituent AssemblyB.R. AmbedkarFundamental RightsDirective PrinciplesUniversal Adult FranchiseSecularismKey Points
- Political theory is the systematic study of political ideas, institutions, and values — asking what is just, fair, or desirable in political life.
- It differs from political science (empirical study of politics) — political theory is more normative (concerned with what ought to be).
- Key questions: What is freedom? What is justice? What obligations do we have to the state? What rights do citizens have?
- Major traditions: Liberal (individual rights, limited government), Marxist (class struggle, economic equality), Feminist (gender equality), Republican (civic participation).
- Political theory is relevant because political ideas shape constitutions, laws, and social movements.
Key Terms
Political TheoryNormativeEmpiricalLiberalismMarxismKey Points
- Negative freedom: Absence of external constraints or interference. "Freedom from" — e.g., freedom from arbitrary arrest. Associated with Isaiah Berlin.
- Positive freedom: The ability to actually realise one's potential, requiring enabling conditions (education, resources). "Freedom to."
- Freedom is not absolute — it must coexist with others' freedom. J.S. Mill's Harm Principle: liberty should only be restricted to prevent harm to others.
- Sources of constraint: State power, social pressure, economic deprivation, tradition/custom.
- Freedom requires both the removal of obstacles and the expansion of opportunities.
- Censorship restricts freedom of expression — but states sometimes justify it for national security, public order, or morality.
Key Terms
Negative freedomPositive freedomHarm PrincipleIsaiah BerlinJ.S. MillCensorshipKey Points
- Equality does not mean treating everyone identically — it means treating equals equally and proportioning treatment to relevant differences.
- Natural equality: All humans are born with equal moral worth. Civil equality: Equal rights before the law. Political equality: Equal right to vote/participate. Social equality: No discrimination based on caste/gender/race. Economic equality: Reducing vast wealth differences.
- Formal equality (equal treatment) vs. Substantive equality (equal outcomes — recognising past disadvantage requires active support).
- India's Constitution provides for affirmative action (reservations for SC, ST, OBC) as a form of substantive equality to address historical injustice.
- Feminist critique: traditional equality frameworks ignored gendered structures — equal treatment in an unequal society can perpetuate inequality.
Key Terms
Formal EqualitySubstantive EqualityAffirmative ActionCivil EqualitySocial EqualityKey Points
- Justice: Giving to each what they deserve — but views differ on what constitutes "desert."
- John Rawls' Theory of Justice: Designed from behind a "veil of ignorance" — if you didn't know your position in society, you would choose: (1) equal basic liberties for all, (2) inequalities allowed only if they benefit the least advantaged (difference principle).
- Distributive justice: How society's benefits and burdens should be fairly distributed.
- Egalitarian view: Resources should be distributed equally. Libertarian view (Nozick): Only free exchange matters; taxation for redistribution is theft.
- Indian context: Reservations are based on the principle of compensatory justice — compensating for historical injustice against marginalised communities.
Key Terms
John RawlsVeil of IgnoranceDifference PrincipleDistributive JusticeCompensatory JusticeKey Points
- Rights are entitlements or claims that individuals have — often against the state or other individuals.
- Natural rights (Locke): Life, liberty, and property — exist prior to the state. Legal rights: Granted by law and enforced by the state.
- Human rights: Universal rights held by all humans by virtue of their humanity — regardless of nationality, caste, gender, or religion. Codified in the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948).
- Three generations of rights: (1) Civil & political (freedom, vote), (2) Economic & social (education, work), (3) Solidarity rights (development, peace, environment).
- Rights and duties are correlative — if I have a right to education, others have a duty not to obstruct it, and the state has a duty to provide it.
Key Terms
Natural RightsHuman RightsUDHR 1948Civil RightsSocial RightsJohn LockeKey Points
- Citizenship is full and equal membership of a political community, entailing both rights (legal, political, social) and duties (pay taxes, obey laws, serve the community).
- T.H. Marshall's model: Three stages — civil rights (18th c.), political rights (19th c.), social rights (20th c.).
- Tensions in citizenship: Between universal citizenship (all are equal citizens) and recognition of difference (women, minorities, indigenous peoples have additional needs).
- Global citizenship: The idea that individuals have responsibilities beyond national boundaries — towards refugees, environment, global poverty.
- India grants citizenship by birth, descent, registration, or naturalisation (Citizenship Act, 1955).
Key Terms
CitizenshipT.H. MarshallCivil RightsPolitical RightsSocial RightsGlobal CitizenshipKey Points
- Nation: A community with shared identity (language, culture, history, religion) — distinct from a state (a political entity with territory and government).
- Nationalism: The political belief that nations have the right to self-determination and should form their own states.
- Ethnic nationalism: Based on shared ethnicity/ancestry — can be exclusive. Civic nationalism: Based on shared political values — more inclusive.
- India's nationalism was civic and plural — the freedom movement included people of different religions, regions, castes, united by opposition to colonialism and commitment to democratic values.
- The dark side of nationalism: chauvinism (aggressive superiority), xenophobia, and ethnic cleansing — shown by cases like Nazi Germany, the Balkans.
- Tagore's critique: Questioned aggressive nationalism — argued for a humanity beyond the nation.
Key Terms
NationStateNationalismSelf-determinationCivic NationalismEthnic NationalismChauvinismKey Points
- Secularism: The principle of separation between religion and the state — the state does not promote or discriminate based on religion.
- Western model (strict separation): Complete separation — state does not interfere in religion, religion does not influence state (e.g., France — laïcité).
- Indian model (principled distance): The state can intervene in religion to reform social practices (e.g., abolishing untouchability, allowing Hindu women to inherit), but maintains equal respect for all religions.
- India's Constitution: Art. 25–28 guarantee freedom of religion; India declared a secular state by the 42nd Amendment (1976).
- Criticisms of secularism: Communalists (religion should guide the state), religious minorities (state intervention in religion is unwelcome), majority communities (unfair concessions to minorities).
Key Terms
SecularismLaïcitéPrincipled Distance42nd AmendmentArt. 25–28Key Points
- Negative peace: Absence of direct violence/war. Positive peace: Presence of social justice, cooperation, and conditions that prevent violence.
- Sources of violence: Inter-state war, civil war, terrorism, structural violence (poverty, discrimination that denies life opportunities).
- Johan Galtung: Coined structural violence — harm caused not by direct force but by unjust social structures (e.g., hunger, denial of healthcare).
- Approaches to peace: Realism (peace through power balance), Liberalism (peace through democracy + trade + international institutions), Pacifism (non-violence as a principle — Gandhi).
- Global institutions for peace: United Nations, International Court of Justice, arms control treaties.
Key Terms
Negative PeacePositive PeaceStructural ViolenceJohan GaltungPacifismKey Points
- Development was long equated with economic growth (GDP). The Human Development Index (UNDP, 1990) broadened it to include life expectancy, education, and income.
- Amartya Sen's capability approach: Development = expansion of human capabilities and freedoms — not just income growth.
- Development projects (dams, mining, SEZs) often displace communities — the people affected bear the costs but rarely share the benefits. This raises questions of justice and consent.
- Sustainable development: Meeting present needs without compromising future generations' ability to meet theirs (Brundtland Commission, 1987).
- Conflict between development and environment: industrial growth consumes natural resources and generates pollution, threatening ecological balance.
Key Terms
HDICapability ApproachAmartya SenSustainable DevelopmentBrundtland CommissionKey Points
- The Cold War (1945–1991): Ideological, political, and military rivalry between the USA (capitalist democracy) and USSR (communist). No direct military conflict — hence "cold."
- Key features: arms race, nuclear deterrence, proxy wars (Korea, Vietnam, Angola), space race, espionage.
- NATO (1949): US-led Western military alliance. Warsaw Pact (1955): Soviet-led Eastern bloc military alliance.
- Cuban Missile Crisis (1962): Closest the world came to nuclear war — USSR placed missiles in Cuba; USA demanded removal. Resolved diplomatically (Khrushchev-Kennedy). Led to the Hot Line between Washington and Moscow.
- Non-Aligned Movement (NAM): Founded by Nehru (India), Tito (Yugoslavia), Nasser (Egypt), Nkrumah (Ghana), Sukarno (Indonesia) at Bandung (1955) and formalised at Belgrade (1961). Aimed to stay out of Cold War blocs.
- India's foreign policy: Panchsheel (Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence) — mutual respect, non-aggression, non-interference, equality, peaceful coexistence.
Key Terms
Cold WarNATOWarsaw PactCuban Missile CrisisNAMPanchsheelProxy WarKey Points
- The USSR collapsed in 1991 — 15 independent republics emerged. Russia became the primary successor state.
- Causes of Soviet collapse: economic stagnation, military overreach (Afghanistan war 1979–89), Gorbachev's reforms (Glasnost = openness, Perestroika = restructuring), rise of nationalist movements in republics.
- Berlin Wall fell in November 1989 — symbol of Cold War division. Germany reunified in 1990.
- Shock therapy: The rapid transition from planned to market economy in former Soviet states — caused massive unemployment, poverty, and economic disruption.
- CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States): Loose association formed by former Soviet republics in 1991.
- Consequences for India: Loss of a reliable ally and arms supplier; India had to restructure foreign policy toward the USA and diversify.
Key Terms
GlasnostPerestroikaBerlin WallShock TherapyCISGorbachevKey Points
- After the Cold War, the USA became the world's sole superpower — unipolar world.
- US hegemony rests on three pillars: military dominance (largest defence budget, global bases), economic dominance (dollar as global reserve currency, WTO, World Bank, IMF), cultural dominance (Hollywood, fast food, English language — "soft power").
- Gulf War I (1991): US-led coalition expelled Iraq from Kuwait. Demonstrated US military reach.
- 9/11 attacks (2001): Al-Qaeda attacked the USA — led to the "War on Terror," invasion of Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003).
- Constraints on US hegemony: NATO allies, the UN Security Council (Russia/China veto), non-state actors, and domestic public opinion.
- India's strategy: "Riding pillion" — working with the USA where interests converge, maintaining independence on other issues.
Key Terms
UnipolarityHegemonySoft PowerGulf War9/11War on TerrorKey Points
- European Union (EU): Evolved from the European Coal and Steel Community (1951) → EEC (1957, Treaty of Rome) → EU (1992, Maastricht Treaty). Single market, common currency (Euro, 1999), free movement of people.
- The EU is a unique supranational entity — members cede some sovereignty to common institutions (European Parliament, European Commission, European Court of Justice).
- China's rise: After Deng Xiaoping's market reforms (1978), China achieved sustained ~10% annual growth. Now world's second-largest economy. Increasing global influence through trade, infrastructure (Belt and Road Initiative), and military.
- ASEAN (1967): Association of South East Asian Nations — 10 members, promotes regional trade and stability. The ASEAN way = consensus, non-interference.
- These alternative centres make the world increasingly multipolar — challenging US dominance.
Key Terms
European UnionMaastricht TreatyEuroDeng XiaopingASEANMultipolarityBelt and RoadKey Points
- SAARC (1985): South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation — India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, Afghanistan. Plagued by India-Pakistan tensions.
- India-Pakistan conflicts: Wars of 1947, 1965, 1971 (Bangladesh liberation), 1999 (Kargil). Core dispute: Kashmir.
- Bangladesh (1971): Emerged from East Pakistan with Indian military support after Pakistani army atrocities. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman led the independence movement.
- Sri Lanka civil war (1983–2009): Sinhalese government vs. LTTE (Tamil Tigers) demanding a separate Tamil state. Ended with military defeat of LTTE.
- Nepal: Maoist insurgency (1996–2006) → peace deal → abolition of monarchy (2008) → federal republic.
- China's increasing presence in South Asia (ports in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh) concerns India — "String of Pearls" theory.
Key Terms
SAARCKashmir DisputeKargil WarLTTEBangladesh LiberationString of PearlsKey Points
- United Nations (est. 1945): 193 member states. Principal organs: General Assembly (all members, one vote), Security Council (5 permanent + 10 non-permanent members), Secretariat, International Court of Justice, ECOSOC, Trusteeship Council.
- P5 veto: USA, UK, France, Russia, China can veto any Security Council resolution — a major constraint on UN action.
- India's demand for permanent UNSC membership — India argues its population, democracy, and peacekeeping contributions justify a seat.
- UN reform debates: Expanding the UNSC, making the General Assembly more effective, reforming the veto.
- Other key bodies: IMF, World Bank (economic), WTO (trade), WHO (health), UNESCO (culture/education), UNHCR (refugees).
Key Terms
UN Security CouncilP5 VetoGeneral AssemblyIMFWTOPeacekeepingKey Points
- Traditional security: Protection of the state from external military threats. Strategies: deterrence, defence, balance of power, alliances.
- Non-traditional security: Threats beyond military — terrorism, climate change, pandemics, economic crises, cyber attacks, human trafficking.
- Human security (UNDP 1994): Security of individuals — freedom from fear (violence) and freedom from want (poverty, disease). Shifts focus from state to individual.
- WMDs (Weapons of Mass Destruction): Nuclear, biological, chemical. Key treaties: NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty), CTBT (Comprehensive Test Ban), CWC (Chemical Weapons Convention).
- India's position: Signed CWC, refuses to sign NPT (considers it discriminatory — only P5 keep nuclear weapons).
Key Terms
Human SecurityWMDNPTCTBTDeterrenceTerrorismKey Points
- The global commons: Resources outside any nation's jurisdiction — Antarctic, deep seabed, outer space, atmosphere. Governed by international agreements.
- Climate change: Burning of fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases → global warming → sea level rise, extreme weather. Developed nations historically responsible for most emissions.
- Common but Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR): The principle that all nations share responsibility for climate, but developed nations bear greater obligation due to historical emissions.
- Key agreements: Rio Earth Summit (1992), Kyoto Protocol (1997 — binding targets for developed nations), Paris Agreement (2015 — nationally determined contributions).
- North-South divide: Developing nations argue they have the right to develop; they should not be penalised for emissions they didn't cause. Developed nations want all countries to cut emissions.
Key Terms
Global CommonsCBDRKyoto ProtocolParis AgreementGreenhouse GasesRio SummitKey Points
- Globalisation: The increasing interconnection of economies, cultures, and political systems across the world — driven by trade, technology, capital flows, and migration.
- Economic globalisation: Trade liberalisation (WTO), foreign direct investment, multinational corporations, global supply chains.
- Cultural globalisation: Spread of Western (especially American) culture — music, film, fast food. Critics: cultural homogenisation vs. proponents: cultural exchange.
- India's liberalisation (1991): LPG reforms (Liberalisation, Privatisation, Globalisation) under Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh — opened India to global trade and investment.
- Critics of globalisation: Left critique (increases inequality, exploits workers, harms environment), Right/nationalist critique (undermines sovereignty and cultural identity).
- Anti-globalisation movements: Protests at WTO Seattle (1999), the World Social Forum (alternative to World Economic Forum).
Key Terms
GlobalisationLPG Reforms 1991WTOMNCWorld Social ForumCultural HomogenisationKey Points
- India at independence (1947) faced three key challenges: national unity (integrating 550+ princely states), democracy (establishing working institutions), and development (poverty alleviation).
- Integration of princely states: Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (Iron Man of India) negotiated or pressured 550+ states to join India. Hyderabad and Junagadh acceded through police action.
- Partition's consequences: Refugee crisis (10M+ displaced), communal violence, economic disruption, loss of key industries to Pakistan.
- Jawaharlal Nehru's vision: Democratic socialism, secularism, non-alignment, planned economic development, scientific temper.
- States Reorganisation Commission (1953): Recommended reorganisation of states on linguistic basis. Led to creation of Andhra Pradesh (1953 — first linguistic state) and other states.
Key Terms
PartitionSardar PatelPrincely StatesLinguistic ReorganisationStates Reorganisation CommissionKey Points
- From 1947 to 1977, the Indian National Congress dominated Indian politics — winning every general election at the national level.
- This dominance was based on: Congress's freedom movement legacy, Nehru's charisma, a broad coalition of castes and communities, and a weak and fragmented opposition.
- First General Elections (1951–52): Congress won 364/489 Lok Sabha seats despite only 45% vote share — due to first-past-the-post system.
- Congress was not a single-ideology party — it was a coalition of factions (right, centre, left) united by nationalism and leadership.
- Major opposition parties: Communist Party of India (left), Hindu Mahasabha/Jana Sangh (right), Socialist Party (centre-left).
- Congress system (Rajni Kothari's concept): Congress at the centre, opposition parties functioning as pressure groups within a Congress-dominated political space.
Key Terms
One-Party DominanceCongress SystemRajni KothariFirst-Past-the-PostJana SanghKey Points
- India chose a mixed economy model — private enterprise for consumer goods, state control of heavy industry ("commanding heights").
- Planning Commission (1950): Five-Year Plans modelled partly on Soviet planning. First Plan (1951–56): Agriculture and infrastructure. Second Plan (Nehru-Mahalanobis): Heavy industrialisation.
- Key debate: Bombay Plan (business leaders) supported state-led industrialisation for nation-building. Gandhian economists preferred village industry and agriculture.
- Land reforms were a major agenda: abolition of zamindari, tenancy reforms, land ceilings — but implementation was uneven, often blocked by Congress's own rural elites.
- Green Revolution (1960s–70s): High-yielding variety seeds + irrigation + fertilisers → food self-sufficiency but increased regional inequality (benefited Punjab/Haryana mainly).
Key Terms
Mixed EconomyPlanning CommissionFive Year PlanMahalanobis ModelGreen RevolutionLand ReformsKey Points
- India's foreign policy under Nehru: Non-Alignment, anti-colonialism, support for Afro-Asian solidarity.
- Sino-Indian War (1962): China attacked India across disputed borders in Aksai Chin and Arunachal. India was militarily unprepared and suffered a humiliating defeat. Ended Nehru's "Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai" era.
- Indo-Pakistani Wars: 1947 (Kashmir), 1965 (inconclusive), 1971 (Bangladesh — India's decisive victory).
- Tashkent Agreement (1966): After 1965 war, Lal Bahadur Shastri and Ayub Khan signed peace — Shastri died the next day.
- Simla Agreement (1972): Indira Gandhi and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto agreed to resolve disputes bilaterally — converted ceasefire line in Kashmir into the Line of Control (LoC).
- India's nuclear programme: Peaceful nuclear explosion (Pokhran I, 1974), full tests in Pokhran II (1998, under Vajpayee).
Key Terms
Non-Alignment1962 WarTashkent AgreementSimla AgreementLine of ControlPokhranKey Points
- After Nehru's death (1964), Lal Bahadur Shastri became PM (died 1966). Then Indira Gandhi came to power in 1966.
- Congress split (1969): Indira broke with the old Congress bosses ("Syndicate") and formed Congress (R) — won 1971 elections with "Garibi Hatao" slogan.
- 1971 elections: Indira won a massive mandate; shortly after, India won the Bangladesh War — Indira at peak power.
- Naxalite movement (1967, Naxalbari, West Bengal): Armed peasant uprising inspired by Maoist ideas — spread to Andhra Pradesh, Bihar. State suppressed it but it resurfaced periodically.
- Nav Nirman movement (1974, Gujarat): Student protest against corruption and price rise — spread to Bihar under Jayaprakash Narayan (JP), demanding "Total Revolution."
Key Terms
Indira GandhiCongress SplitGaribi HataoNaxaliteJP MovementTotal RevolutionKey Points
- Emergency (June 25, 1975 – March 21, 1977): Indira Gandhi declared a state of emergency citing "internal disturbance" — real reason was Allahabad HC judgment setting aside her 1971 election (found guilty of electoral malpractice).
- During Emergency: Fundamental rights suspended, press censored, political opponents arrested (including JP, Vajpayee, Advani), forced sterilisation programme under Sanjay Gandhi, 42nd Amendment (gave Parliament unlimited power).
- Aftermath: Indira called elections in 1977 — Congress lost comprehensively. Janata Party formed government under Morarji Desai — India's first non-Congress government.
- The Emergency is seen as India's greatest constitutional crisis — but also proof of democratic resilience (voters peacefully removed the authoritarian government).
- 44th Amendment (1978): Janata government restored fundamental rights, removed "internal disturbance" as grounds for Emergency, added "armed rebellion."
Key Terms
Emergency 1975Fundamental Rights Suspension42nd AmendmentJanata Party44th AmendmentSanjay GandhiKey Points
- The 1970s–90s saw many non-party social movements that expanded democracy beyond electoral politics.
- Chipko Movement (1973, Uttarakhand): Peasant women hugged trees to prevent logging — one of India's first environmental movements. Leader: Sunderlal Bahuguna. Inspired the phrase "ecology is permanent economy."
- Anti-Arrack Movement (1992, Andhra Pradesh): Women in Nellore district protested against liquor — linked alcohol to domestic violence and poverty. Led to state government banning arrack.
- Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA): Led by Medha Patkar, protesting the Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada — displaced tribal and farming communities. Raised questions of development vs. displacement.
- Dalit Panthers (1972, Maharashtra): Inspired by the Black Panther Party; militant assertion of Dalit rights against caste discrimination and atrocities.
- These movements broadened democracy by raising issues of environment, gender, and caste that formal politics ignored.
Key Terms
Chipko MovementAnti-Arrack MovementNarmada Bachao AndolanMedha PatkarDalit PanthersSunderlal BahugunaKey Points
- India's diversity generates regional aspirations — demands for autonomy, statehood, or independence.
- Punjab crisis (1980s): Akali Dal demanded Anandpur Sahib Resolution (greater autonomy). Sikh militants occupied the Golden Temple. Operation Blue Star (June 1984): Army stormed the temple — killed militants but deeply wounded Sikh sentiment. Indira Gandhi assassinated by Sikh bodyguards (October 1984). Anti-Sikh riots followed.
- Kashmir: Acceded to India in 1947. Enjoyed special status under Article 370 (autonomous legislature, separate constitution). Insurgency began in 1989. Article 370 abrogated in 2019.
- Northeast India: Multiple insurgencies (Nagaland, Mizoram, Assam). Mizo accord (1986) — Mizoram became a state. Assam accord (1985) — addressed illegal immigration issue.
- The Indian state has responded to regional demands through: creation of new states, special powers, peace agreements, and sometimes military force.
Key Terms
Anandpur Sahib ResolutionOperation Blue StarArticle 370Mizo AccordAFSPAInsurgencyKey Points
- After the Congress's decline, India moved from one-party dominance to a multi-party coalition era.
- Mandal Commission (1980, implemented 1990): Recommended 27% reservation for OBCs in government jobs. V.P. Singh's implementation triggered massive protests and counter-protests.
- Ayodhya dispute: The Babri Masjid demolition (December 6, 1992) sparked nationwide communal violence — a watershed in Indian politics, strengthening the BJP's Hindu nationalist agenda.
- 1991 LPG reforms: End of licence raj, opening to foreign investment — transformed India's economy.
- Rise of BJP: From 2 seats (1984) to 85 (1989) to 120 (1991) to 183 (1998) — formed government under Vajpayee. Dominated politics further under Modi from 2014.
- India's politics since 1990s: Coalition governments, regional parties' increased importance, OBC political assertion, identity politics, and economic liberalisation shaping the agenda.
Key Terms
Mandal CommissionOBC ReservationBabri MasjidLPG ReformsCoalition EraBJPKey Points
- Geography studies the earth's surface — its physical features, climate, vegetation, and the human activities that shape and are shaped by it.
- Two major branches: Physical geography (landforms, climate, soils, water bodies) and Human geography (population, settlement, agriculture, industries, transport).
- Key approaches: Systematic geography (studies one element across regions, e.g., all climates), Regional geography (comprehensive study of one region).
- Locational approach: Where things are and why. Ecological approach: Relationship between humans and environment.
- Geography's relationship with other disciplines: ecology, economics, anthropology, history — it is inherently interdisciplinary.
Key Terms
Physical GeographyHuman GeographySystematic GeographyRegional GeographyEcological ApproachKey Points
- The universe began with the Big Bang (~13.8 billion years ago). The solar system formed about 4.6 billion years ago from a nebula (cloud of gas and dust).
- Earth formed by accretion — dust and gas particles colliding and clumping together. Initially very hot due to meteor impacts and radioactive decay.
- Earth's four spheres: Lithosphere (rock), Hydrosphere (water), Atmosphere (air), Biosphere (life).
- Geological time scale: Eons → Eras → Periods → Epochs. Key eras: Precambrian (oldest, ~88% of Earth's history), Palaeozoic (fish, amphibians), Mesozoic (dinosaurs), Cenozoic (mammals, humans).
- The early atmosphere had no free oxygen — photosynthetic bacteria (cyanobacteria) added oxygen over billions of years.
Key Terms
Big BangNebulaAccretionGeological Time ScaleLithosphereBiosphereKey Points
- Earth's interior has three main layers: Crust (outer, thin — 35 km continental, 5 km oceanic), Mantle (middle, 2900 km, semi-molten rock/magma), Core (inner — outer core liquid iron-nickel, inner core solid iron-nickel).
- Seismic waves are used to study the interior: P-waves (primary/compressional, travel through solids and liquids), S-waves (secondary/shear, travel only through solids).
- S-waves don't pass through the outer core → proves the outer core is liquid.
- Shadow zone: Area of Earth's surface where neither P- nor S-waves are received after an earthquake — between 105° and 145° from the epicentre.
- The Mohorovicic discontinuity (Moho) separates the crust from the mantle. The Gutenberg discontinuity separates the mantle from the outer core.
- Volcanism and earthquakes are concentrated at tectonic plate boundaries.
Key Terms
CrustMantleCoreP-wavesS-wavesShadow ZoneMoho DiscontinuityGutenberg DiscontinuityKey Points
- Continental Drift Theory (Alfred Wegener, 1912): All continents were once joined as a supercontinent called Pangaea (~250 mya), surrounded by the ocean Panthalassa. Pangaea split into Laurasia (north) and Gondwanaland (south), which then broke into today's continents.
- Evidence for continental drift: Jigsaw fit of continents (especially Africa and South America), similar fossils on different continents (Glossopteris flora, Mesosaurus), matching geological formations, evidence of glaciation in tropical regions.
- Sea Floor Spreading (Harry Hess, 1960s): New oceanic crust forms at mid-ocean ridges as magma wells up; old crust sinks at subduction zones. Explains how continents move.
- Plate Tectonics Theory: Earth's lithosphere is divided into ~7 major and several minor plates. Plates move due to convection currents in the mantle.
- Types of plate boundaries: Convergent (collision — forms mountains and trenches), Divergent (plates move apart — forms ridges and rift valleys), Transform (plates slide past each other — causes earthquakes, e.g., San Andreas Fault).
Key Terms
PangaeaContinental DriftWegenerSea Floor SpreadingPlate TectonicsConvergent BoundaryDivergent BoundaryTransform BoundaryKey Points
- A mineral is a naturally occurring inorganic substance with a definite chemical composition and crystal structure. A rock is an aggregate of minerals.
- Three types of rocks: Igneous (formed from cooled magma — granite, basalt), Sedimentary (formed from compacted sediments — sandstone, limestone, coal), Metamorphic (formed when igneous/sedimentary rocks are transformed by heat/pressure — marble from limestone, quartzite from sandstone).
- Rock cycle: Rocks transform between types through geological processes — no type is permanent.
- Key minerals: Quartz (most abundant in continental crust), Feldspar (most abundant mineral in Earth's crust), Mica, Olivine, Pyroxene.
- Economic importance: Coal (energy), iron ore (steel), limestone (cement), bauxite (aluminium).
Key Terms
Igneous RockSedimentary RockMetamorphic RockRock CycleFeldsparQuartzKey Points
- Geomorphic processes: Physical and chemical processes that shape the Earth's surface.
- Endogenic processes (internal): Driven by Earth's internal heat — tectonism, volcanism, earthquakes. Build up the land surface.
- Exogenic processes (external): Driven by sun's energy and gravity — weathering, erosion, deposition. Wear down the land surface.
- Weathering: Breakdown of rocks in place (no transport). Types: Physical/Mechanical (freeze-thaw, exfoliation), Chemical (oxidation, hydration, carbonation), Biological (root action, burrowing).
- Mass movement: Downslope movement of material under gravity — slow (creep) or fast (landslide, mudflow).
- Erosion: Removal and transport of weathered material by agents like water, wind, glaciers.
Key Terms
EndogenicExogenicWeatheringErosionMass MovementCarbonationKey Points
- Fluvial landforms (by rivers): Upper course — V-shaped valleys, waterfalls, rapids. Middle course — meanders, ox-bow lakes, floodplains. Lower course — deltas, estuaries.
- Glacial landforms: Erosional — cirques (bowl-shaped hollows), arêtes (knife ridges), horns (pyramidal peaks like the Matterhorn), U-shaped valleys. Depositional — moraines (till deposits), drumlins, eskers.
- Aeolian landforms (by wind): Erosional — deflation hollows, yardangs. Depositional — sand dunes (barchans, longitudinal), loess deposits.
- Coastal landforms: Erosional — cliffs, sea arches, sea stacks, wave-cut platforms. Depositional — beaches, spits, bars, tombolos.
- Karst topography (in limestone areas, dissolved by carbonic acid): Sinkholes, caves, stalagmites, stalactites, limestone pavement.
Key Terms
MeanderDeltaCirqueMoraineBarchanKarstStalactiteStalagmiteKey Points
- Atmosphere composition: Nitrogen (78%), Oxygen (21%), Argon (0.93%), CO₂ (0.04%), traces of other gases + water vapour and dust.
- Layers of atmosphere (bottom to top): Troposphere (weather occurs, temperature decreases with altitude, 0–12 km), Stratosphere (ozone layer, temperature increases, 12–50 km), Mesosphere (temperature decreases, 50–80 km), Thermosphere/Ionosphere (temperature increases rapidly, aurora borealis, 80–700 km), Exosphere (outermost, merges with space).
- Ozone layer (stratosphere): Absorbs harmful ultraviolet radiation. Depleted by CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). Montreal Protocol (1987) banned CFCs.
- Tropopause: Boundary between troposphere and stratosphere. Lapse rate: Rate of temperature decrease with altitude in troposphere (~6.5°C per 1000 m on average).
Key Terms
TroposphereStratosphereOzone LayerThermosphereLapse RateTropopauseCFCsKey Points
- Insolation: Solar radiation received by the Earth. Varies with latitude (angle of incidence), seasons, duration of day, and atmosphere.
- Albedo: The proportion of solar radiation reflected back — fresh snow has ~90% albedo; dark ocean ~6%. Higher albedo = more reflection = less warming.
- Heat balance: Earth maintains a long-term energy balance — the energy received equals the energy radiated back. Without this, Earth would continuously heat up or cool down.
- Greenhouse effect: Atmosphere traps outgoing longwave radiation, warming the surface. CO₂, methane, water vapour are greenhouse gases. Essential for life but intensified by human activity → global warming.
- Temperature inversions: Normally temperature decreases with altitude, but in a temperature inversion, a warmer layer sits above a cooler layer — traps pollution, prevents convection, causes fog.
Key Terms
InsolationAlbedoHeat BalanceGreenhouse EffectTemperature InversionKey Points
- Pressure belts: Equatorial Low (ITCZ — hot air rises), Subtropical High (30°N/S — air descends, deserts), Sub-polar Low (60°N/S — cold meets warm), Polar High (90°N/S — cold dense air).
- Wind systems: Trade winds (blow from subtropical highs toward equatorial low — NE in N. hemisphere, SE in S. hemisphere), Westerlies (30°–60°), Polar winds.
- Coriolis effect: Due to Earth's rotation, winds deflect to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere.
- Jet streams: Fast-flowing, narrow air currents in upper troposphere (~300 km/h). The subtropical jet stream affects India's winter; the tropical easterly jet affects the monsoon.
- Cyclones: Low-pressure systems with converging winds. Tropical cyclones form over warm oceans (Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea). Extra-tropical cyclones form along fronts at mid-latitudes.
- Monsoon: Seasonal reversal of wind direction. Indian monsoon caused by differential heating of land and sea and the movement of the ITCZ.
Key Terms
ITCZTrade WindsWesterliesCoriolis EffectJet StreamCycloneMonsoonKey Points
- Humidity: Amount of water vapour in the air. Absolute humidity = actual water vapour content. Relative humidity = water vapour as % of maximum possible at that temperature.
- Dew point: Temperature at which air becomes saturated and condensation begins.
- Types of precipitation: Rain (liquid), snow (ice crystals), sleet (frozen rain), hail (ice balls formed in thunderstorms), fog/dew (condensation at surface).
- Types of rainfall: Convectional (heating → rising air → cooling → rain — equatorial regions, afternoon thunderstorms), Orographic/Relief (moist air rises over mountains → cools → rains on windward side; dry on leeward — rain shadow), Cyclonic/Frontal (warm and cold air masses meet).
- Clouds: Cirrus (high, wispy), Cumulus (puffy), Stratus (layer), Nimbus (rain-bearing). Cumulonimbus = thunderstorm cloud.
Key Terms
Relative HumidityDew PointConvectional RainfallOrographic RainfallRain ShadowCumulonimbusKey Points
- Köppen's Climate Classification: Five main types — A (Tropical), B (Dry/Arid), C (Warm Temperate), D (Cold/Boreal), E (Polar).
- Key climate types: Tropical Rainforest (A f — hot, wet year-round, Amazon/Congo), Savanna (Aw — wet/dry seasons), Desert (BWh/BWk — very dry), Mediterranean (Cs — dry summer, wet winter), Humid Continental (D — cold winters), Tundra (ET — permanently cold).
- Climate change: Long-term shift in global or regional climate patterns. Human activities (burning fossil fuels, deforestation) are accelerating warming.
- Consequences: Rising sea levels, melting glaciers, extreme weather events, shifting agricultural zones, species extinction.
- Natural climate variability: El Niño (warming of Pacific → weakens Indian monsoon), La Niña (cooling → strengthens monsoon).
Key Terms
Köppen ClassificationTropical RainforestMediterranean ClimateEl NiñoLa NiñaGlobal WarmingKey Points
- Oceans cover ~71% of the Earth's surface. The five oceans: Pacific (largest), Atlantic, Indian, Southern (Antarctic), Arctic (smallest).
- Ocean relief: Continental shelf (shallow, 0–200m), Continental slope, Continental rise, Abyssal plain (4000–6000m), Ocean trenches (deepest — Mariana Trench, 11,034m).
- Ocean temperatures: Surface water is warmer; decreases with depth. A thermocline separates warm surface water from cold deep water.
- Ocean salinity: Average ~35 parts per thousand. Varies with evaporation (high salinity in subtropics), precipitation (low salinity at equator), river input, ice melting.
- Dead Sea is the saltiest water body (~340 ppt); Baltic Sea is among the least saline (~7–8 ppt).
Key Terms
Continental ShelfAbyssal PlainThermoclineSalinityMariana TrenchKey Points
- Ocean currents: Continuous directional flow of ocean water. Driven by wind, temperature/salinity differences (thermohaline circulation), Earth's rotation (Coriolis).
- Major currents: Gulf Stream (warm, N. Atlantic — moderates Europe's climate), Labrador Current (cold, converges with Gulf Stream — creates fog and Grand Banks fishing), Kuroshio (warm, N. Pacific).
- Warm currents flow from equator toward poles; cold currents flow from poles toward equator.
- Upwelling: Cold, nutrient-rich water rises to the surface (e.g., Peru coast) — creates some of the world's richest fishing grounds.
- Tides: Periodic rise and fall of sea level due to gravitational pull of moon (stronger) and sun. Spring tides (high tides) when sun, moon, Earth are aligned (new/full moon). Neap tides (low tides) when sun and moon are at right angles (quarter moon).
- Waves: Generated by wind. Measure: wavelength, amplitude, frequency. Tsunamis are NOT wind-driven — caused by underwater earthquakes/volcanic eruptions.
Key Terms
Gulf StreamThermohaline CirculationUpwellingSpring TideNeap TideTsunamiKey Points
- Biosphere: The zone of Earth where life exists — from the deep ocean floor to the lower atmosphere.
- Ecosystem: A community of living organisms interacting with each other and their non-living environment. Key components: producers (plants), consumers (animals), decomposers (fungi/bacteria).
- Biodiversity: The variety of life — genetic, species, and ecosystem diversity. Tropical regions (Amazon, Congo, SE Asia) have the highest biodiversity.
- Food chain and food web: Energy flows from producers → primary consumers → secondary consumers → tertiary consumers. Only ~10% of energy transfers to the next level.
- Threats to biodiversity: Habitat destruction, overexploitation, invasive species, pollution, climate change. Current extinction rate is 100–1000x the natural background rate.
- Biomes: Large-scale ecological zones defined by climate and vegetation: tropical rainforest, savanna, desert, temperate forest, taiga, tundra.
Key Terms
BiosphereEcosystemBiodiversityFood WebBiome10% Energy RuleKey Points
- Human geography studies the relationship between human societies and their physical environments — how people adapt to, use, and transform space.
- Determinism: Physical environment determines human culture and behaviour (Ratzel). Possibilism: Humans have choices within environmental limits (Vidal de la Blache). Modern view: Neo-determinism / Stop and Go determinism — environment sets conditions, technology mediates.
- Fields: Population geography, settlement geography, economic geography, cultural geography, political geography, historical geography.
Key Terms
DeterminismPossibilismNeo-determinismRatzelVidal de la BlacheKey Points
- World population crossed 8 billion in 2022. Uneven distribution: 90% of people live in 10% of the land. Dense areas: East Asia, South Asia, Western Europe, NE USA. Sparse areas: deserts, high mountains, Arctic.
- Factors affecting distribution: Availability of water, fertile soil, mild climate, flat terrain, economic opportunity.
- Arithmetic density = total population / total area. Physiological density = population / arable land (better indicator of population pressure on food resources).
- Population growth rate: Natural increase = Birth rate − Death rate. Doubling time = 70 / growth rate (Rule of 70).
- Demographic Transition Model: Stage 1 (high birth + death rates, pre-industrial), Stage 2 (death rate falls, birth rate still high — population explosion), Stage 3 (birth rate falls), Stage 4 (both low — stable population).
Key Terms
Arithmetic DensityPhysiological DensityDemographic TransitionNatural IncreaseDoubling TimeKey Points
- Population pyramid: Age-sex diagram showing population structure. Wide base + narrow top = young, growing population (developing countries). Narrow base + wider middle = ageing population (developed countries).
- Sex ratio: Number of females per 1000 males. India's overall sex ratio (2011): 943. Child sex ratio (0–6 years): 919 — reflects female foeticide.
- Literacy rate: India (2011): 74%. Male: 82.1%, Female: 65.5% — gender gap in education.
- Occupational structure: Primary (agriculture), Secondary (manufacturing), Tertiary (services). Developed nations have more tertiary; developing nations more primary.
- Dependency ratio: (population under 15 + over 65) / working population × 100. Lower is better.
Key Terms
Population PyramidSex RatioDependency RatioOccupational StructureLiteracy RateKey Points
- Human Development Index (HDI): Developed by Mahbub ul Haq and Amartya Sen for UNDP (1990). Combines: Life expectancy, Education (mean + expected years of schooling), GNI per capita (PPP).
- HDI ranges 0–1. Countries classified: Very High (>0.8), High (0.7–0.8), Medium (0.55–0.7), Low (<0.55).
- Four pillars of Human Development (UNDP): Equity, Sustainability, Productivity, Empowerment.
- Beyond HDI: Gender Inequality Index (GII), Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), Human Poverty Index.
- India's HDI (2022): ~0.633 — Medium Human Development category. Despite economic growth, India faces challenges in education quality, health access, and gender equality.
Key Terms
HDIMahbub ul HaqLife ExpectancyGNI per capitaGIIMPIKey Points
- Primary activities involve direct extraction of natural resources: agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, pastoralism.
- Types of agriculture: Subsistence (for own consumption — nomadic herding, shifting cultivation/jhum/slash-and-burn), Commercial (for market — plantation, mixed farming, extensive grain farming).
- Plantation agriculture: Large estates growing single cash crop (tea, coffee, rubber, sugarcane) — colonial legacy, labour-intensive, export-oriented.
- Intensive vs. Extensive farming: Intensive = more inputs per unit of land (high yields). Extensive = large land with low inputs (American wheat belt).
- Mining: Open-cast (surface), shaft (underground), quarrying. Minerals classified as metallic (iron, copper, gold) and non-metallic (coal, sulphur, mica).
Key Terms
Subsistence AgriculturePlantationShifting CultivationIntensive FarmingExtensive FarmingOpen-cast MiningKey Points
- Secondary activities involve processing raw materials into finished goods — manufacturing and construction.
- Factors of industrial location: Raw material availability (heavy industries near mines), power supply, labour, transport, market access, capital, government policy.
- Types of industries: Agro-based (food processing, cotton textiles), Mineral-based (iron & steel, cement), Forest-based (paper, furniture), Marine-based (fish processing).
- Major industrial regions: Ruhr (Germany — coal + steel), Great Lakes-St. Lawrence (USA/Canada), Southern England, Kobe-Osaka (Japan), Shanghai (China).
- High-tech industries: Rely on R&D, skilled workers, cluster near universities. Silicon Valley (USA), Bangalore (India).
Key Terms
ManufacturingIndustrial LocationAgro-based IndustryHigh-tech IndustryRuhrSilicon ValleyKey Points
- Tertiary activities: Services — trade, transport, banking, education, health, tourism, retail, communication.
- Quaternary activities: Knowledge-based — research, IT, education, management consulting, media. The "knowledge economy."
- Quinary activities: Highest-level decision-making — senior government officials, research scientists, CEOs.
- Tourism: One of the world's largest industries. Medical tourism, eco-tourism, cultural tourism. India's tourism potential — cultural heritage, wildlife, beaches.
- Outsourcing/BPO: Countries like India attract call centres and IT services due to English-speaking skilled workforce and lower labour costs — globalisation of services.
Key Terms
TertiaryQuaternaryQuinaryBPOKnowledge EconomyOutsourcingKey Points
- Transport connects places and enables movement of people and goods. Modes: road, rail, water, air, pipeline.
- Road transport: Most flexible, suitable for short distances and door-to-door delivery. Dense road networks in developed nations. Pan American Highway (longest road network in world).
- Rail transport: Best for heavy cargo over medium-long distances. Trans-Siberian Railway (Moscow to Vladivostok, 9,332 km) — world's longest. India's rail network is 4th largest in the world.
- Water transport: Cheapest for bulk cargo. Inland waterways (rivers, canals) + ocean shipping. Panama and Suez Canals — critical shortcuts.
- Air transport: Fastest, most expensive — used for passengers, high-value cargo, perishables.
- Communication: Internet, satellite, fibre-optic cables have revolutionised global connectivity. Digital divide = gap between connected and unconnected populations.
Key Terms
Trans-Siberian RailwayPanama CanalSuez CanalDigital DivideFibre OpticKey Points
- Trade: Exchange of goods and services between countries. Governed by the principle of comparative advantage (a country should produce and export what it is relatively more efficient at producing).
- Balance of trade: Difference between exports and imports. Favourable = exports > imports. Unfavourable = imports > exports.
- WTO (World Trade Organisation): Governs international trade rules, reduces tariffs, resolves disputes.
- Major trading blocs: EU, NAFTA/USMCA, ASEAN, SAARC, BRICS.
- India's major exports: IT services, pharmaceuticals, textiles, gems & jewellery, engineering goods. Imports: crude oil (largest), gold, electronics.
- Trade is increasingly invisible (services) — IT, finance, tourism, education — in addition to visible (goods).
Key Terms
Comparative AdvantageBalance of TradeWTOTariffTrade BlocKey Points
- Settlements classified as rural (villages — primary activities dominant) and urban (cities — secondary + tertiary dominant).
- Rural settlement patterns: Compact (nucleated — houses close together), Dispersed (scattered), Linear (along roads/rivers).
- Urbanisation: Movement of population from rural to urban areas. Urban primacy: Dominance of one large city (primate city) in a country's urban system.
- Megacities: Cities with population >10 million. Tokyo (largest), Mumbai, Delhi, Shanghai, Beijing, São Paulo.
- Problems of urbanisation: Slums, traffic congestion, pollution, inadequate infrastructure, social inequality.
- Smart cities: Urban areas using digital technology and data to improve efficiency and quality of life — India's Smart Cities Mission (100 cities).
Key Terms
UrbanisationPrimate CityMegacityNucleated SettlementUrban PrimacySmart CityKey Points
- India (2011 census): Population = 1.21 billion. Area = 3.28 million sq km. Density = 382 persons/sq km.
- Highest density states: Bihar (1106), West Bengal (1028), Kerala (860). Lowest: Arunachal Pradesh (17), Mizoram (52).
- Population growth phases: Stagnant (pre-1921), Steady increase (1921–1951), Rapid increase (1951–1981), Declining growth rate (1981–present).
- 1921 = "Great Divide" — population growth began consistently. Decadal growth rate peaked in 1961–71 (24.8%) and has been declining since.
- Sex ratio: 940 (2011). States with highest sex ratio: Kerala (1084), Tamil Nadu (996). Lowest: Haryana (879), J&K (889).
- Literacy rate (2011): 74%. Highest: Kerala (94%). Lowest: Bihar (63.8%).
Key Terms
Census 2011Great Divide 1921Decadal Growth RateSex RatioDensityKey Points
- Migration: Movement of people from one place to another. Emigration = leaving a country. Immigration = entering a country.
- Types: Internal (within country — rural-urban, rural-rural, urban-urban), International (between countries).
- Push factors: Poverty, unemployment, natural disasters, conflict, crop failure, lack of social services. Pull factors: Employment, better wages, education, healthcare, safety.
- India's major migration streams: Bihar/UP → Delhi/Mumbai (labour), South India → Gulf countries (remittances), educated professionals → USA/UK (brain drain).
- Consequences: Positive — remittances, skill transfer, cultural exchange. Negative — brain drain, urban congestion, breakdown of family structures, communal tensions.
- Refugees: People forced to flee due to persecution/conflict. India hosts refugees from Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Tibet, Myanmar.
Key Terms
Push-Pull TheoryBrain DrainRemittancesRural-Urban MigrationRefugeeKey Points
- India's HDI has improved steadily but remains in the medium category (~132nd globally as of recent years).
- Kerala model: High HDI despite low income — due to investment in education and healthcare. Contrast: Bihar, UP, Rajasthan have low HDI despite larger economies.
- India's key challenges: Gender discrimination (low female literacy, child marriage), malnutrition, infant mortality, access to healthcare in rural areas.
- Government programmes: Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (universal elementary education), NRHM (rural health), MGNREGA (employment guarantee), Ayushman Bharat (health insurance).
Key Terms
Kerala ModelMGNREGASarva Shiksha AbhiyanAyushman BharatInfant Mortality RateKey Points
- India is predominantly rural — 65–68% population in villages (2011 census). However, urbanisation is rapid.
- India has 7,935 towns/cities (Census 2011). Mega cities: Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad.
- Towns classified by population: Class I (>1 lakh), Class II (50,000–1 lakh), up to Class VI (<5000).
- Urban agglomeration: Continuous urban spread beyond official city limits. Greater Mumbai UA is the largest.
- Problems of Indian cities: Inadequate housing (slums — Dharavi in Mumbai is Asia's largest slum), traffic, water scarcity, waste management, air pollution.
Key Terms
Urban AgglomerationCensus TownSlumClass I CityUrbanisation RateKey Points
- India's total land area: 328.7 million hectares. Net sown area: ~141 million ha. India has the largest net sown area in the world (but China has more total cultivable land).
- Land use categories: Net sown area, fallow land, current fallow, forests, non-agricultural use, barren/uncultivable land.
- Indian agriculture challenges: Fragmented land holdings (average 1.08 ha), over-dependence on monsoon, soil degradation, water logging, salinity.
- Major crops: Kharif (summer — rice, cotton, jowar, bajra, maize — sown June, harvested Sept–Oct), Rabi (winter — wheat, mustard, gram, linseed — sown Nov, harvested March–April), Zaid (summer: watermelon, cucumber).
- Land reforms post-independence: Abolition of zamindari, tenancy reforms, ceiling on land holdings — partially implemented.
Key Terms
Net Sown AreaKharifRabiZaidLand CeilingFallow LandKey Points
- India receives annual rainfall equivalent to 4,000 billion cubic metres (BCM) — but much is lost to evaporation and runoff. Utilisable water ≈ 1,123 BCM.
- Sources of irrigation: Canals (23%), Wells/Tubewells (62% — dominant), Tanks (4%), Other sources.
- Groundwater crisis: Over-extraction of groundwater in Punjab, Haryana, and parts of Rajasthan — water table is falling dangerously.
- Inter-state water disputes: Cauvery (Karnataka vs. Tamil Nadu), Krishna (AP vs. Maharashtra vs. Karnataka), Narmada (Gujarat vs. Madhya Pradesh vs. Rajasthan).
- Rainwater harvesting: Traditional systems — kunds (Rajasthan), baolis (step-wells), tanks (Karnataka) — being revived.
- India's rivers: Himalayan rivers (snow-fed, perennial — Ganga, Brahmaputra, Indus), Peninsular rivers (rain-fed, seasonal — Godavari, Krishna, Cauvery, Mahanadi).
Key Terms
Tubewell IrrigationGroundwater DepletionCauvery DisputeRainwater HarvestingPerennial RiversKey Points
- India is rich in certain minerals: coal, iron ore, manganese, mica, bauxite — but deficient in oil and natural gas.
- Coal: India has 4th largest coal reserves. Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal are major producers. Gondwana coal (250–300 mya) = 98% of India's coal.
- Iron ore: Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka. India is among top iron ore exporters.
- Mica: India = world's largest producer. Jharkhand leads.
- Petroleum: Mumbai High (offshore, ~40% of India's production), Assam, Rajasthan. India imports ~85% of its crude oil needs.
- Energy sources: Conventional (thermal power 70%, hydro 12%, nuclear) and Non-conventional (solar, wind, biogas, tidal). India is expanding renewable energy rapidly — solar parks in Rajasthan, Gujarat; wind farms in Tamil Nadu.
Key Terms
Gondwana CoalMumbai HighThermal PowerRenewable EnergyMicaIron OreKey Points
- Iron and Steel: Located near raw materials (coal + iron ore). Major plants: Jamshedpur (Tata Steel — oldest, near Jharkhand coalfields), Bhilai (Chhattisgarh — Soviet-aided), Rourkela (Odisha — German-aided), Bokaro (Jharkhand — Soviet-aided), Durgapur (West Bengal — British-aided).
- Cotton Textiles: Mumbai was historically India's cotton textile capital ("Cottonopolis"). Now spread to Ahmedabad, Coimbatore, Surat, Kanpur.
- Sugar Industry: India = world's 2nd largest sugar producer. UP (largest), Maharashtra. Shifting southward due to higher sugar content in Deccan cane.
- IT Industry: Bangalore ("Silicon Valley of India"), Hyderabad (Cyberabad), Chennai, Pune, Noida-Gurgaon NCR. India = world leader in software exports.
- Pharmaceutical Industry: India = world's 3rd largest pharma producer by volume. Hyderabad (bulk drugs), Ahmedabad, Mumbai.
Key Terms
JamshedpurBhilaiCottonopolisIT IndustryBangalorePharmaceuticalKey Points
- India adopted planning from 1951 — Five Year Plans guided development. The 12th Plan (2012–17) was the last; replaced by NITI Aayog in 2015.
- NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India): Replaced the Planning Commission. Advisory body — no power to allocate funds directly. Focus on cooperative federalism, long-term vision documents.
- Indira Gandhi Canal (Rajasthan Canal): Largest irrigation project in India — brought water to Thar Desert from Harike Barrage (confluence of Beas and Sutlej). Transformed Rajasthan's agriculture but also caused waterlogging/salinity in parts.
- Sustainable development in India: Integrating environmental protection with economic growth. Key issues: deforestation, overgrazing, groundwater depletion, urban air pollution.
- Chipko Movement, Silent Valley controversy, Narmada Bachao Andolan — examples of environmental movements shaping India's development planning.
Key Terms
NITI AayogFive Year PlansIndira Gandhi CanalSustainable DevelopmentDeforestationKey Points
- Roads: India has the 2nd largest road network in the world (~6.4 million km). National Highways = 2% of road length but carry 40% of traffic. Golden Quadrilateral: 4-lane highway linking Delhi-Mumbai-Chennai-Kolkata (5,846 km).
- Railways: Indian Railways = 4th largest rail network in the world. 67,956 km of track. Major route: Konkan Railway (coastal Maharashtra-Goa-Karnataka — difficult terrain, many tunnels/bridges).
- Waterways: India has 14,500 km of navigable inland waterways. Major: NW-1 (Ganga, Allahabad to Haldia), NW-2 (Brahmaputra), NW-3 (Kerala backwaters).
- Air transport: Air India (national carrier), IndiGo/SpiceJet (domestic). Major international airports: Indira Gandhi International (Delhi), Chhatrapati Shivaji International (Mumbai).
- Oil and gas pipelines: Important for energy transport. HVJ Pipeline (Hazira-Vijaipur-Jagdishpur).
Key Terms
Golden QuadrilateralKonkan RailwayNational HighwayInland WaterwayNW-1Key Points
- India's major exports: Petroleum products (refined), gems & jewellery, pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, IT/software services, textiles/garments, chemicals.
- India's major imports: Crude petroleum (largest), gold, coal, electronic goods, machinery, fertilisers.
- India's major trading partners: USA (largest export destination), China (largest source of imports), UAE, Saudi Arabia, Germany.
- Trade imbalance: India consistently has a trade deficit (imports > exports in goods); partly offset by IT service exports and remittances.
- Major ports: Jawaharlal Nehru Port (Mumbai — largest container port), Chennai, Vizag, Kolkata (with Haldia), Kandla, Cochin, Mundra (Gujarat — largest port by cargo).
Key Terms
Trade DeficitJNPTMundra PortRemittancesGems and JewelleryKey Points
- Sociology: The scientific study of human society, social relationships, institutions, and collective behaviour. The term was coined by Auguste Comte (1838) — the "father of sociology."
- Sociology emerged in the 19th century in response to the massive social changes brought by the Industrial Revolution (urbanisation, factory work, social dislocation) and the French Revolution (ideas of liberty, equality, democracy).
- Society: A group of people living together in an organised way, sharing common territory, culture, and institutions.
- Sociology is different from common sense — it applies systematic methods, questions assumptions, and seeks evidence-based explanations.
- Key founders: Auguste Comte (positivism), Emile Durkheim (social facts, collective conscience), Karl Marx (class conflict, historical materialism), Max Weber (interpretive sociology, bureaucracy, ideal types).
Key Terms
SociologyAuguste ComteEmile DurkheimKarl MarxMax WeberSocial FactPositivismKey Points
- Social group: A collection of people who interact, share identity, and have some sense of belonging. Primary groups (face-to-face, emotional — family, friends) vs. Secondary groups (impersonal, formal — workplace, political party).
- Status: A position in society with associated rights and duties. Ascribed status (given by birth — caste, gender). Achieved status (earned through effort — occupation, education).
- Role: Expected behaviour associated with a status. Role conflict = when a person's multiple roles make competing demands.
- Social stratification: Ranking of individuals or groups in a hierarchy based on wealth, power, or prestige. Major forms: caste, class, gender, race.
- Social mobility: Movement between strata. Horizontal mobility (same level, different group). Vertical mobility (up or down the hierarchy). Caste society has low mobility; class society has more.
Key Terms
Social GroupPrimary GroupSecondary GroupAscribed StatusAchieved StatusSocial StratificationSocial MobilityKey Points
- Social institution: A stable cluster of norms, roles, statuses, and groups that organise significant aspects of social life. Key institutions: Family, Education, Religion, Economy, Polity.
- Family: Basic social unit. Functions: reproduction, socialisation, economic cooperation, emotional support. Nuclear family (parents + children), Joint/Extended family (several generations).
- Marriage: Socially recognised union. Monogamy (one spouse), Polygamy (multiple spouses — polygyny: one man + many women; polyandry: one woman + many men). Endogamy (marrying within group), Exogamy (marrying outside group).
- Religion: Durkheim defined it as a unified system of beliefs about the sacred, practiced by a community. Functions: social solidarity, moral regulation, meaning-making. Marx: "opium of the people" — religion as ideological tool of oppression.
- Education: Formal (schools, universities) and informal (family, community). Functions: socialisation, skills transmission, social selection, social control.
Key Terms
Social InstitutionNuclear FamilyJoint FamilyMonogamyEndogamyExogamyDurkheim on ReligionKey Points
- Culture: The totality of learned, socially transmitted customs, knowledge, material objects, and behaviour shared by members of a group. Includes material culture (technology, art) and non-material culture (values, norms, beliefs).
- Norms: Rules of behaviour. Values: Shared beliefs about what is good/desirable. Sanctions: Rewards/punishments for conforming/violating norms.
- Socialisation: The lifelong process through which individuals learn culture and develop their social identity. Primary socialisation (in family, childhood). Secondary socialisation (school, peers, media, workplace).
- Agents of socialisation: Family (most important), peer groups, schools, media, religion, government.
- Ethnocentrism: Judging other cultures by the standards of one's own. Cultural relativism: Understanding other cultures on their own terms — the anthropological ideal.
- Counter-culture: Groups that actively oppose mainstream culture. Subculture: Groups with distinct norms/values within the mainstream culture.
Key Terms
CultureNormsValuesSocialisationEthnocentrismCultural RelativismSubcultureKey Points
- Sociology uses systematic methods to study society. Key debate: Positivism vs. Interpretivism. Positivists (Comte, Durkheim) want sociology to be like natural science — objective, quantitative. Interpretivists (Weber) argue social life requires understanding meaning from the actor's perspective.
- Quantitative methods: Surveys, questionnaires, statistics — measure social phenomena numerically. Good for large samples, generalisability.
- Qualitative methods: Interviews, ethnography, participant observation — explore depth of meaning. Good for understanding subjective experience.
- Participant observation: Researcher joins the group being studied. Overt (group knows) vs. covert (group doesn't know). Example: M.N. Srinivas's field study of Rampura village.
- Survey: Collecting standardised data from a sample. Must be representative and unbiased.
- Sampling: Selecting a subset of the population to study. Random sampling = every member has equal chance of selection.
Key Terms
PositivismInterpretivismParticipant ObservationSurveyQualitativeQuantitativeRandom SamplingKey Points
- Colonial rule fundamentally changed India's social structure — not just politically but economically and socially.
- Colonialism's structural impact: Introduced capitalism, new land tenure systems (permanent settlement), railways and telegraph (integrated markets), English education (created new elite), new legal systems, census-based categorisation of caste.
- Industrialisation: Created an urban working class, weakened traditional artisans (de-industrialisation of Indian handicrafts), created a new middle class.
- Urbanisation: Colonial cities like Calcutta, Bombay, Madras were primate cities — centres of trade and administration. Created new social identities and opportunities.
- Post-independence structural changes: Land reforms, constitutional provisions (reservations, fundamental rights), Green Revolution, and liberalisation (1991) have further transformed India's social structure.
Key Terms
Structural ChangeColonialismDe-industrialisationPermanent SettlementUrbanisationKey Points
- Sanskritisation (M.N. Srinivas): A process by which lower castes imitate the rituals, practices, and lifestyle of upper castes in order to claim higher social status. Example: lower-caste communities adopting vegetarianism, temple worship, and Brahmin customs.
- Westernisation (M.N. Srinivas): Changes in technology, institutions, ideology, and values that result from contact with Western culture. Includes adoption of English, Western dress, democratic values, scientific thinking.
- Modernisation: Broader process of social change involving industrialisation, urbanisation, secularism, rationalism, democratic participation, and individual rights.
- Social Reform Movements (19th–20th century): Ram Mohan Roy (Brahmo Samaj — against sati, child marriage), Dayananda Saraswati (Arya Samaj — back to Vedas), Jyotirao Phule (anti-caste), B.R. Ambedkar (Dalit liberation).
- Tension between tradition and modernity is central to Indian society — some see them as opposed, others as compatible.
Key Terms
SanskritisationWesternisationModernisationM.N. SrinivasBrahmo SamajArya SamajKey Points
- Caste system: Hierarchical social system based on birth, occupational specialisation, endogamy, and ritual purity/pollution. The varna system (4 broad categories) and jati (1000s of localised castes) coexist.
- Caste in contemporary India: Has weakened in some respects (ritual restrictions, untouchability abolished by Art. 17) but remains powerful in marriage, politics (vote bank), and social discrimination.
- Tribal communities: 8.6% of India's population (2011). Scheduled Tribes have special protections (Fifth and Sixth Schedule areas, reservations). Challenges: land alienation, displacement by development projects, poverty.
- Family and kinship changes: Nuclear family increasingly common in urban India. However, family networks remain important for support and marriage. Changing gender roles within family.
- Marriage changes: Decline of child marriage, rise of inter-caste/inter-religious marriages (still relatively rare), increasing divorce rates in urban India, court/love marriages.
Key Terms
CasteJatiVarnaUntouchabilityScheduled TribeNuclear FamilyKey Points
- From a sociological perspective, the market is not just an economic mechanism — it is a social institution embedded in social relationships, power, trust, and culture.
- Markets are shaped by social factors: caste networks in business communities (Marwaris, Chettiars), gender exclusion, class access to capital.
- Tribal communities and markets: Historically tribal economies were barter-based; colonial integration into markets led to exploitation, indebtedness, and land alienation.
- Weekly markets (haats) in rural India: Important social spaces — not just economic exchange, but also social interaction, information sharing.
- Liberalisation (1991) expanded market penetration into everyday life — rise of consumerism, advertising, branding. New opportunities but also new inequalities.
Key Terms
Market as Social InstitutionConsumerismHaatLiberalisation 1991Caste in BusinessKey Points
- India has multiple, overlapping axes of inequality: caste, class, gender, tribe, and region — often reinforcing each other.
- Dalit communities: Formerly "untouchables" — face persistent discrimination despite constitutional protections. Atrocities (manual scavenging, bonded labour, caste violence) remain serious issues. SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act provides legal protection.
- Gender inequality: Manifests in female foeticide, domestic violence, lower wages, educational gap, limited political representation, sexual harassment. The Women's Reservation Bill (33% seats in legislature) was a long-debated issue.
- Adivasi/Tribal exclusion: Displaced by mining and dam projects, denied forest rights, marginalised in education and governance.
- Disability: About 2.2% of India's population has some form of disability. Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act (2016) aims to ensure inclusion.
Key Terms
DalitSocial ExclusionGender InequalityAtrocity ActAdivasiIntersectionalityKey Points
- India is one of the most culturally diverse nations — multiple religions, languages (22 official, 780+ spoken), ethnicities, and regional identities.
- India is both a multi-cultural (diverse cultures coexist) and multi-national (diverse peoples with distinct identities) society.
- Communalism: The political mobilisation of religious identity against another community. Communal violence has occurred repeatedly in post-independence India — 1984 anti-Sikh riots, 1992–93 riots after Babri Masjid, 2002 Gujarat riots.
- Regionalism: Strong identity with one's region — sometimes leading to demands for statehood (Gorkhaland, Telangana created 2014) or autonomy. Can be positive (protecting regional culture) or disruptive (secessionism).
- Secularism in India: Not absence of religion but equal treatment of all religions. India's diversity makes secularism a crucial but contested ideal.
- Integration vs. pluralism debate: Should India emphasise a single national identity, or celebrate and protect diverse identities? Indian constitution attempts both — unity and diversity.
Key Terms
CommunalismRegionalismSecularismMulti-culturalismSecessionismCultural DiversityKey Points
- Mass media: Channels of communication that reach large audiences — print (newspapers, magazines), broadcast (radio, television), digital (internet, social media).
- Media plays crucial roles: information, entertainment, socialisation, agenda-setting (deciding what issues are important), surveillance (holding power accountable).
- Media and power: Media ownership is increasingly concentrated in large corporations. This raises questions about whose interests media serves.
- In India: Doordarshan (state broadcaster, 1959), private satellite channels from 1991 onwards — huge expansion. Print media remains strong in regional languages.
- Social media: Democratises communication (anyone can publish) but also spreads misinformation, enables surveillance, and can amplify extremism. India has the world's largest WhatsApp user base.
- Digital divide: Unequal access to digital technology and internet — urban vs. rural, educated vs. uneducated, men vs. women.