GS Paper: GS Paper I | Subject: Social Issues | Last updated: 2026-06-23
Class 1 (Sahil Goyal, Vajiram & Ravi) — the foundation of the Social Issues paper. There is no transcript for Class 1, so this note is written from the 13-page board scan + the syllabus handout, in clean prose (and checked against standard sociology where the board was a bare list). It is the conceptual base for everything that follows — OBC & reservation (lec02) and untouchability (lec03).
The GS-1 "Social Issues" syllabus (from Handout-1): (1) salient aspects of Indian society & diversity; (2) population & associated issues; (3) urbanisation — problems & remedies; (4) social empowerment; (5) communalism, regionalism & secularism; (6) effects of globalisation on Indian society; (7) role of women & women's organisations; (8) poverty & developmental issues.
The starting distinction of the whole paper: Western societies are modern; Indian society is largely traditional (religion-centred). The reason is historical — India has not undergone the process of modernisation that the West did.
Up to the 14th century the West was also traditional. Then a chain of revolutions modernised it:
Through these, Europe became modern. No such revolution ever happened in India. Under ~200 years of British rule, India received modern institutions — law, modern education, Parliament, railways, telegraph, press, post — but the British introduced them only to prolong their own rule, so the institutions modernised while the people stayed traditional. The result is the defining feature of Indian society: a mix of modern institutions and traditional minds.
Clean version (study from this):
CLARIFICATION (modern ≠ Western): To be modern is to have a scientific temper — rational thinking — not to wear Western clothes, eat pizza or speak English. India has westernised without modernising: it copied the West's culture (dress, food, language) while the mind remained traditional, with strong religious belief. (This modern-vs-traditional thread recurs through the whole paper.)
Clean version (study from this):
Clean version (study from this):
(The conceptual vocabulary the rest of the paper relies on — keep it precise:)
EXAM FOCUS (the recurring GS-1 frame): Several PYQs (2019, 2021) ask "what makes Indian society unique in sustaining its culture / maintaining continuity?" The answer always runs through (self-sufficient, change-resistant) Indian villages + the joint family + the inter-generational transfer of values + the absence of a modernising revolution. Keep the answer simple and logical (the teacher's repeated advice for this paper: no data, no quotations needed — just clear reasoning).
A caste (jati) has its own traditions and customs; India has thousands of caste groups, with strong regional variation (different castes dominate in different regions), which makes the system complex to study. For study, the teacher grouped the thousands of castes into six main caste groups:
Clean version (study from this):
Groups 1–3 are the "upper" castes; groups 4 & 5 are the "lower" castes that, in modern times, were classified as OBC; group 6 is the Scheduled Castes (SC / Dalits).
Three features of caste:
TEACHER'S NOTE (dominant castes): The agrarian/peasant castes (group 4) became "dominant castes" in the villages. Why? Through the land reforms after Independence (abolition of zamindari + tenancy reforms), the former tenant-cultivators became landowners, while the old upper-caste landlords largely lost land and migrated to cities (dissociating caste from occupation there). A caste becomes dominant in a region when it has (i) numerical strength and (ii) landownership (plus economic returns and political contacts). Dominant castes today (e.g. Jats, Yadavs, Gujjars, Marathas, Patels, Reddys) take pride in their caste, have rejected Sanskritisation (they no longer want "upper-caste" status), are very particular about caste rules (endogamy, gotra), and control the regional economy and cooperatives (e.g. the sugar cooperatives of Maharashtra under the Marathas). (Their cars often display caste names — a marker of pride and power; politicians court them for their numbers.)
Clean version (study from this):
Varna (mentioned in the Rig Veda) was a fourfold division of labour (Brahmin/Kshatriya/Vaishya/Shudra) that allowed mobility (change of varna was possible). Caste (jati) is the lived social reality — 4,000–5,000 caste groups, a division of people into a hierarchy, that is rigid and assigned by birth, with no mobility.
TEACHER'S NOTE (the British census made caste rigid): Caste was once relatively fluid. The British censuses — first in 1871, then through 1881, 1891, and especially 1931 — began listing and ranking castes by varna hierarchy (deciding which caste was "upper" and which "lower"). This froze a fluid caste system into a rigid list. In response, lower-caste groups formed caste associations (e.g. the Yadav Mahasabha unifying pastoral castes; Kurmi associations in Bihar) and petitioned the British to be re-classified as upper caste — petitions the British never accepted, keeping them "lower" in successive censuses. (After 1931, India held no caste census for decades; a caste census is planned for 2026, to make reservation and OBC welfare more effective — a measure critics warn could revive and re-harden caste.)
In the present, a person's caste has two parts:
Because caste is simultaneously rigid (ritual) and fluid (secular), the caste system is still ALIVE.
EXAM FOCUS (the standard caste PYQ pattern): Almost every caste question (2018, 2020, 2023…) really asks one thing — what keeps caste alive / why can't India become casteless? The answer: caste survives by acquiring NEW IDENTITIES (a political identity via caste-based parties and via reservation, and the "dominant caste" identity) and NEW ASSOCIATIONAL FORMS — caste-based regional political parties; urban caste associations / "samaj" (which arrange same-caste matrimony, run caste schools, hostels and coaching, and now organise via WhatsApp groups & Facebook pages); and caste panchayats in villages (distinct from the 73rd-Amendment PRIs, they enforce caste rules, above all endogamy). The state lets people change religion and occupation, but not caste, which also keeps caste static. Conclusion to write: caste keeps reinventing itself and so remains relevant; it is both fluid and static, and that is exactly why it stays alive.