State of Jammu-Kashmir - Act
Jammu and Kashmir Combined Competitive Examination Rules, 2018
JAMMU & KASHMIR
India
India
Jammu and Kashmir Combined Competitive Examination Rules, 2018
Rule JAMMU-AND-KASHMIR-COMBINED-COMPETITIVE-EXAMINATION-RULES-2018 of 2018
- Published on 23 February 2018
- Commenced on 23 February 2018
- [This is the version of this document from 23 February 2018.]
- [Note: The original publication document is not available and this content could not be verified.]
1. Short title and application.
2. Definitions.
- In these rules unless the context otherwise requires,-3. Conduct of examination.
4. Duration of examinations.
- The examination shall be held at such intervals as the Government may in consultation with the Commission from time to time determine, but at least once in a calendar year unless there are good and sufficient reasons for not doing so and preferably, as far as practicable, after 15 days from the completion of UPSC Civil Services examination at each stage.5. Indicating preference.
6. Number of vacancies to be filled up.
- The number of vacancies to be filled on the result of the examination will be specified in the notice issued by the Commission. Reservation will be made for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, RBA/Social Castes/ALC and Physically Challenged categories in respect of vacancies as may be fixed by the Government.7. Number of attempts.
- Every candidate appearing in the examination who is otherwise eligible, shall be permitted six attempts at the examination :Provided that this restriction on the number of attempts will not apply in the case of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes candidates who are otherwise eligible :Provided further that the number of attempts permissible to candidates belonging to RBA, Social Castes & ALC, who are otherwise eligible, shall be nine. The relaxation will be available to the candidates who are eligible to avail of reservation applicable to such candidates :Provided further that a physically challenged candidate will get as many attempts as are available to other non-physically challenged candidates of his or her community, subject to the condition that a physically challenged candidate belonging to the General Category shall be eligible for nine attempts. The relaxation will be available to the physically challenged candidates who are eligible to avail of reservation applicable to such candidates.Note : - (I) An attempt at a Preliminary Examination shall be deemed to be an attempt at the Combined Competitive Examination.8. Conditions of eligibility.
| I. For Males : | ||
| (a) Height | : | 165cm |
| (b) Chest girth minimum | : | 84cm Expansion 5cm |
| II. For Females : | ||
| (a) Height | : | 150cm |
| (b) Chest girth minimum | : | 79cm Expansion 5cm |
| III. For candidates from Leh/Kargil | ||
| A For Males : | ||
| (i) Height | : | 160cm |
| (ii) Chest girth | : | 79cm Expansion 5cm minimum |
| B. For Females : | ||
| (i)Height | : | 145cm |
| (ii)Chest girth minimum | : | 74cmExpansion 5cm : |
9. Documents to be furnished by the candidates for the Combined Competitive (Preliminary) Examination.
- A candidate shall not be required to submit any certificate relating to his/her age, educational qualification, certificate of belonging to reserved category and holding of a civil post in the State, at the time of filling his/her application (OMR) form for the Combined Competitive (Preliminary) Examination. The admission to the preliminary examination shall be purely provisional and if on verification at any stage, it is found that the candidate has claimed eligibility for such examination by misrepresentation, concealment of any material fact(s) or impersonation or fraud, his or her candidature shall be cancelled and he/she will be liable to prosecution/disciplinary action by the Commission.10. Securing candidature by illegal means.
- A candidate who is or has been declared by the Commission to be guilty of :-11. Seeking reservations.
- Candidates seeking reservation/ relaxation benefits available for SC/ST/RBA/Social Castes/ALC/Physically Challenged Candidates must ensure that they are entitled to such reservation /relaxation as per eligibility prescribed in the Rules. They should also be in possession of all the requisite certificates in the prescribed format in support of their claim as stipulated in the Rules for such benefits, and these certificates should be dated earlier than the due date (closing date) of the application of Combined Competitive (Preliminary) Examination.12. Documents to be furnished by the candidates for the Combined Competitive (Main) Examination.
- Besides furnishing the documents that may be required by the Commission, the applications for the main examination shall be accompanied by attested copies of the following certificates :-13. Examination.
- The Combined Competitive Examination shall comprise of two successive stages :-14. Preliminary Examination.
15. Main Examination.
16. Merit List.
17. Medical fitness.
- A candidate must be in good mental and bodily health and free from any physical defect likely to interfere with the discharge of his duties as an officer of the service. A candidate who after such medical examination as Government may prescribe is found not to satisfy these requirements will not be recommended by the Commission for appointment. The medical examination shall be conducted by the Commission before forwarding the select list to the government in accordance with the rules:Provided that Medical Board shall intimate the nature and degree of disability of physically challenged candidate in terms of "The Jammu and Kashmir Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1998" and Rules made thereunder as amended from time to time with specific recommendation, if any, in respect of each of such candidate(s) for appointment to various posts through the Combined Competitive Examination :Provided further that Government may constitute a Special Medical Board with experts in the area for conducting the medical examination of Physically Challenged candidates.Explanation. - Instructions to appear before Medical Board shall not be deemed to mean that a candidate for direct recruitment if found fit is necessarily given an appointment. The medical examination will be conducted by a Medical Board to be arranged by the Commission in accordance with Appendix- III for the candidates for J&K Police (Gazetted) Service and Appendix-IV for other candidates. The candidates will have to pay a fee as prescribed from time to time to the Medical Board.18. Determination of order of merit in the event of a tie.
- In the event of a tie, the order of merit shall be determined in accordance with the highest marks secured in the Personality Test (interview). Should the marks in the Personality Test (interview) Test of the candidates be also equal, the order of merit shall be decided in accordance with the highest marks obtained by such candidates in the aggregate of the compulsory paper. However, in case the marks obtained in compulsory papers are also equal, the order of merit shall be determined in accordance with the marks obtained in General Studies Papers. Similarly, if the marks obtained in General Studies Papers be also equal, then the order of merit shall be determined in descending order of the date of birth of the candidates.19. Record of satisfaction by the Government.
- Success in the examination confers no right to appointment unless Government is satisfied after such enquiry as may be considered necessary that the candidate is suitable in all respects for appointment to the service.20. Repeal and savings.
| 1. The writtenexamination will consist of the following papers :- | |
| Qualifying Paper : | |
| English | 300 Marks |
| Papers to be counted for merit : | |
| Paper-I | |
| Essay | 250 Marks |
| Paper-II | |
| General Studies-I | 250 Marks |
| (Indian Heritage and Culture, History and Geography of the Worldand Society) | |
| Paper-III | |
| General Studies -II | 250 Marks |
| (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice andInternational relations) | |
| Paper-IV | |
| General Studies-III | 250 Marks |
| (Technology, Economic Development, Bio-diversity, Environment,Security and Disaster Management) | |
| Paper-V | |
| General Studies-IV | 250 Marks |
| (Ethics, Integrity and Aptitude) | |
| Paper-VI | |
| Optional Subject - Paper -I | 250 Marks |
| Paper-VII | |
| Optional Subject - Paper-II | 250 Marks |
| Sub-Total (Written test) | 1750 Marks |
| Personality Test (interview) | 250 Marks |
| GrandTotal : | 2000 Marks |
2. Candidates may choose any one of the optional subjects from amongst the list of the subjects given below :-
1. The candidate will be interviewed by a panel of Members of the Commission who will have before them a record of his/her career. He/she will be asked questions on matters of general interest. The object of the interview is to assess the personal suitability of the candidate for a career in public service. The interview test is intended to judge the mental calibre of a candidate. In broad terms, this is really an assessment of not only his intellectual qualities but also social traits and his interest in current affairs. Some of the qualities to be judged are mental alertness, critical powers of assimilation, clear and logical exposition, balance of judgement, variety and depth of interest, ability for social cohesion and leadership, intellectual and moral integrity.
2. The Commission shall also be assisted during the interview by Expert(s) in Behavioural Sciences and Public Administration as may be selected/nominated by the Chairman of the Commission.
3. The technique of the interview is not that of a strict cross examination but of a natural, though directed and purposive conversation which is intended to reveal the mental qualities of the candidate.
4. The interview test is not intended to be a test either of the specialized or general knowledge of the candidates which has been already tested through their written papers. Candidates are expected to have taken an intelligent interest not only in their special subjects of academic study but also in the events which are happening around them both within and outside their own State or Country as well as in modern currents of thought and in new discoveries which should rouse the curiosity of well educated youth.
General Instructions For Preliminary As Well As Main Examination :1. It is mandatory for the candidate to appear in both the papers of Combined Competitive (Preliminary) Examination for the purpose of evaluation. Therefore, a candidate will be disqualified in case he/she does not appear in both the papers of Combined Competitive (Preliminary) Examination.
2. Candidates must write the papers in their own hand. In no circumstances, they will be allowed the help of a scribe to write the answers for them. However, blind candidates and the candidates with Locomotor Disability and Cerebral Palsy where dominant (writing) extremity is affected to the extent of slowing the performance or function (minimum of 40% impairment) will be allowed to write the examination with the help of a scribe in both the Combined Competitive (Preliminary) as well as in the Combined Competitive (Main) Examination.
3. Compensatory time of twenty minutes per hour shall be permitted for the Blind candidates and candidates with Locomotor Disability and Cerebral Palsy where dominant (writing) extremity is affected to the extent of slowing the performance or function (minimum of 40% impairment) in both the Combined Competitive (Preliminary) as well as in the Combined Competitive (Main) Examination.
4. The eligibility conditions of a scribe, his/ her conduct inside the examination hall and the manner in which and extent to which he/ she can help the blind candidate in writing the Combined Competitive Examination shall be governed by the instructions issued by the Public Service Commission in this regard. Violation of all or any of the said instructions shall entail the cancellation of the candidature of the blind candidate in addition to any other action that the Public Service Commission may take against the scribe.
5. For purpose of these rules, the candidate shall be deemed to be a blind candidate if the percentage of visual impairment is forty per cent (40%) or more. The criteria for determining the percentage of visual impairment shall be as follows :-
| All with corrections | |||
| Better eye | Worse eye | Percentage | |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Category O | 6/9-6/18 | 6/24 to 6/36 | 20% |
| Category I | 6/18-6/36 | 6/60 to nil | 40% |
| Category II | 6/60-4/60 or fieldof vision 10°-20° | 3/60 to nil | 75% |
| Category III | 3/60-1/60 or fieldof vision 10° | F. C. at 1 ft. to nil | 100% |
| Category IV | F. C. at 1 ft to Nil fieldof vision 100° | F. C. at 1 ft to Nil fieldof vision 100° | 100% |
| One-eyed Person | 6/6 | F. C. at 1 ft to Nil | 30% |
6. For availing of the concession admissible to a blind candidate, the candidate concerned shall produce a certificate in the prescribed proforma from a Medical Board constituted by the Government along with their application for the Main Examination.
7. The concession admissible to blind candidates shall not be admissible to those suffering from Myopia.
8. The Commission have discretion to fix qualifying marks in any or all the subjects of the examination.
9. If a candidate's handwriting is not easily legible, a deduction will be made on this account from the total marks otherwise accruing to him.
10. Marks will not be allotted for mere superficial knowledge.
11. Credit will be given for orderly, effective and exact expression combined with due economy of words in all subjects of the examination.
12. In the question papers, wherever required, SI units will be used.
13. Candidates should use only International form of Indian numerals (i. e. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 etc.) while answering question papers.
14. Candidates will be allowed the use of Scientific (Non-Programmable type) Calculators at the conventional (Essay) type examination of the Public Service Commission. Programmable type calculators will, however, not be allowed and the use of such calculators shall tantamount to resorting to unfair means by the candidates. Loaning or interchanging of calculators in the Examination Hall is not permitted.
It is also important to note that candidates are not permitted to use calculators for answering objective type papers (Test Booklets). They should not, therefore, bring the same inside the Examination Hall.Appendix IISyllabi for the ExaminationPart-A Preliminary Examination| Paper I-(200marks) | Duration : Two hours |
| Paper II-(200marks) | Duration : Two hours |
1. Animal Nutrition. - 1.1 Partitioning of food energy within the animal. Direct and indirect calorimetry. Carbon-nitrogen balance and comparative slaughter methods. Systems for expressing energy value of foods in ruminants, pigs and poultry. Energy requirements for maintenance, growth, pregnancy, lactation, egg, wool, and meat production.
2. Animal Physiology. - 2.1 Physiology of blood and its circulation, respiration; excretion. Endocrine glands in health and disease.
3. Animal Reproduction. - Semen quality.-Preservation and Artificial Insemination-Components of semen, composition of spermatozoa, chemical and physical properties of ejaculated semen, factors affecting semen in vivo and in vitro. Factors affecting semen production and quality, preservation, composition of diluents, sperm concentration, transport of diluted semen. Deep freezing techniques in cows, sheep, goats, swine and poultry. Detection of oestrus and time of insemination for better conception. Anoestrus and repeat breeding.
4. Livestock Production and Management :
5. Genetics and Animal Breeding. - 5.1 History of animal genetics, Mitosis and Meiosis : Mendelian inheritance ; deviations to Mendelian genetics ; Expression of genes ; Linkage and crossing over ; Sex determination, sex influenced and sex limited characters; Blood groups and polymorphism; Chromosome aberrations; Cytoplasmic inheritance, Gene and its structure; DNA as a genetic material; Genetic code and protein synthesis; Recombinant DNA technology. Mutations, types of mutations, methods for detecting mutations and mutation rate, Transgenesis.
6. Extension. - Basic philosophy, objectives, concept and principles of extension. Different Methods adopted to educate farmers under rural conditions. Generation of technology, its transfer and feedback. Problems and constraints in transfer of technology. Animal husbandry programmes for rural development.
Paper-II1. Anatomy, Pharmacology and Hygiene. - 1.1 Histology and Histological Techniques.-Paraffin embedding technique of tissue processing and H.E. staining-Freezing microtomy-Microscopy Bright field microscope and electron microscope. Cytology-structure of cell organells and inclusions; cell division-cell types-Tissues and their classificationembryonic and adult tissues-Comparative histology of organs- Vascular, Nervous, digestive, respiratory, musculo-skeletal and urogenital systems-Endocrine glands-Integuments-sense organs.
2. Animal Diseases. - 2.1 Etiology, epidemiology pathogenesis, symptoms, post-moretem lesions, diagnosis, and control of infectious diseases of cattle, sheep and goat, horses, pigs and poultry.
3. Veterinary Public Health. - 3.1 Zoonoses.-Classification, definition, role of animals and birds in prevalence and transmission of zoonotic diseasesoccupational zoonotic diseases.
4. Milk and Milk Products Technology. - 4.1 Market Milk.-Quality, testing and grading of raw milk. Processing, packaging, storing, distribution, marketing defects and their control. Preparation of the following milks : Pasteurized, standardized, toned, double toned, sterilized, homogenized, reconstituted, recombined and flavoured milks. Preparation of cultured milks, cultures and their management, yoghurt, Dahi, Lassi and Srikhand. Preparation of flavoured and sterilized milks. Legal standards. Sanitation requirement for clean and safe milk and for the milk plant equipment.
5. Meat Hygiene and Technology. - 5.1 Meat Hygiene
5.1.1Ante mortem care and management of food animals, stunning, slaughter and dressing operations; abattoir requirements and designs; Meat inspection procedures and judgment of carcass meat cuts- grading of carcass meat cuts-duties and functions of Veterinarians in wholesome meat production.5.1.2Hygienic methods of handling production of meat.- Spoilage of meat and control measures-Post-slaughter physicochemical changes in meat and factors that influence them-Quality improvement methods- Adulteration of meat and detection- Regulatory provisions in Meat trade and Industry.3. Economic Organization. - Meaning, scope and relevance of economic anthropology ; Formalist and Substantivist debate ; Principles governing production, distribution and exchange (reciprocity, redistribution and market), in communities, subsisting on hunting and gathering, fishing, swiddening, pastoralism, horticulture, and agriculture ; globalization and indigenous economic systems.
4. Political Organization and Social Control. - Band, tribe, chiefdom, kingdom and state; concepts of power, authority and legitimacy; social control, law and justice in simple Societies.
5. Religion. - Anthropological approaches to the study of religion (evolutionary, psychological and functional) ; monotheism and polytheism; sacred and profane; myths and rituals; forms of religion in tribal and peasant societies (animism, animatism, fetishism, naturism and totemism); religion, magic and science distinguished; magico-religious functionaries (priest, shaman, medicine man, sorcerer and witch).
6. Anthropological theories. - (a) Classical evolutionism (Tylor, Morgan and Frazer) :-
7. Culture, Language and Communication. - Nature, origin and characteristics of language; verbal and non-verbal communication; social contex of language use.
8. Research methods in Anthropology. - (a) Fieldwork tradition in anthropology.-
(b)Distinction between technique, method and methodology ;(c)Tools of data collection : observation, interview, schedules, questionnaire, case study, genealogy, life-history, oral history, secondary sources of information, participatory methods.(d)Analysis, interpretation and presentation of data.10. Concept of human growth and development. - Stages of growth-pre-natal, natal, infant, childhood, adolescence, maturity, senescence.
-Factors affecting growth and development genetic, environmental, biochemical, nutritional, cultural and socioeconomic.-Ageing and senescence. Theories and observations.-Biological and chronological longevity. Human physique and somatotypes. Methodologies for growth studies.12. Applications of Anthropology. - Anthropology of sports, Nutritional anthropology, Anthropology in designing of defence and other equipments, Forensic Anthropology, Methods and principles of personal identification and reconstruction, Applied human genetics-Paternity diagnosis, genetic counseling and eugenics, DNA technology in diseases and medicine, serogenetics and cytogenetics in reproductive biology.
Paper-II2. Demographic profile of India. - Ethnic and linguistic elements in the Indian population and their distribution. Indian population-factors influencing its structure and growth.
4. Emergence, growth and development in India- Contributions of the 18th, 19th and early 20th Century scholaradministrators. Contributions of Indian anthropologists to tribal and caste studies.
1. Microbiology and Plant Pathology. - Structure and reproduction/multiplication of viruses, viroids, bacteria, fungi and mycoplasma; Applications of microbiology in agriculture, industry, medicine and in control of soil and water pollution; Prion and Prion hypothesis.
Important crop diseases caused by viruses, bacteria, mycoplasma, fungi and nematodes; Modes of infection and dissemination; Molecular basis of infection and disease resistance/defence; Physiology of parasitism and control measures. Fungal toxins. Modelling and disease forecasting; Plant quarantine.2. Cryptogams. - Algae, fungi, lichens, bryophytes, pteridophytes-structure and reproduction from evolutionary viewpoint; Distribution of Cryptogams in India and their ecological and economic importance.
3. Phanerogams. - Gymnosperms : Concept of Progymnosperms. Classification and distribution of gymnosperms. Salient features of Cycadales, Ginkgoales, Coniferales and Gnetales, their structure and reproduction. General account of Cycadofilicales, Bennettitales and Cordiaitailes; Geological time scale; Type of fossils and their study techniques.
Angiosperms : Systematics, anatomy, embryology, palynology and phylogency.Taxonomic hierarchy; International Code of Botanical Nomenclature; Numerical taxomomy and chemotaxomomy; Evidence from anatomy, embryology and palynology.Origin and evolution of angiosperms; Comparative account of various systems of classification of angiosperms; Study of angiospermic families- Mangnoliaceae, Ranunculaceae, Brassicaceae, Rosaceae, Fabaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Malvaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Apiaceae, Asclepiadaceae, Verbenaceae, Solanaceae, Rubiaceae, Cucurbitaceae, Asteraceae, Poaceae, Arecaceae, Liliaceae, Musaceae and Orchidaceae.Stomata and their types; Glandular and non-glandular trichomes; Unusual secondary growth; Anatomy of C3 and C4 plants; Xylem and phloem differentiation; Wood anatomy.Development of male and female gametophytes, pollination, fertilization; Endosperm-its development and function. Patterns of embryo development; Polyembroyony, apomixes; Applications of palynology; Experimental embryology including pollen storage and test-tube fertilization.4. Plant Resource Development. - Domestication and introduction of plants; Origin of cultivated plants, Vavilov's centres of origin. Plants as sources for food, fodder, fibres, spices, beverages, edible oils, drugs, narcotics, insecticides, timber, gums, resins and dyes; latex, cellulose, starch and its products; Perfumery; Importance of Ethnobotany in Indian context; Energy plantations; Botanical Gardens and Herbaria.
5. Morphogenesis. - Totipotency, polarity, symmetry and differentiation; Cell, tissue, organ and protoplast culture. Somatic hybrids and Cybrids; Micropropagation; Somaclonal variation and its applications; Pollen haploids, embryo rescue methods and their applications.
Paper-II1. Cell Biology. - Techniques of cell biology. Prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells-structural and ultrastructural details; Structure and function of extracellular matrix (cell wall) and membranes-cell adhesion, membrane transport and vesicular transport; Structure and function of cell organelles (chloroplasts, mitochondria, ER, dictyosomes ribosomes, endosomes, lysosomes, peroxisomes; Cytoskelaton and microtubules; Nucleus, nucleolus, nuclear pore complex; Chromatin and nucleosome; Cell signalling and cell receptors; Signal transduction Mitosis and meiosis; molecular basis of cell cycle. Numerical and structural variations in chromosomes and their significance; Chromatin organization and packaging of genome; Polytene chromosomes; B-chromosomesstructure, behaviour and significance.
2. Genetics, Molecular Biology and Evolution. - Development of genetics, and gene versus allele concepts (Pseudoalleles); Quantitative genetics and multiple factors; Incomplete dominance, polygenic inheritance, multiple alleles; Linkage and crossing over of gene mapping including molecular maps (idea of mapping, function); Sex chromosomes and sex-linked inheritance; sex determination and molecular basis of sex differentiation; Mutations (biochemical and molecular basis); Cytoplasmic inheritance and cytoplasmic genes (including genetics of male sterility).
Structure and synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins; Genetic code and regulation of gene expression; Gene silencing; Multigene families; Organic evolution-evidences, mechanism and theories.Role of RNA in origin and evolution.3. Plant Breeding, Biotechnology and Biostatistics. - Methods of plant breeding-introduction, selection and hybridization (pedigree, backcross, mass selection, bulk method); Mutation, polyploidy, male sterility and heterosis breeding. Use of apomixes in plant breeding; DNA sequencing; Genetic engineering-methods of transfer of genes; Transgenic crops and biosafety aspects; Development and use of molecular markers in plant breeding; Tools and techniques-probe, southern blotting, DNA fingerprinting, PCR and FISH. Standard deviation and coefficient of variation (CV). Tests of significance (Z-test, t-test and chi-square tests). Probability and distributions (normal, binomial and Poisson). Correlation and regression.
4. Physiology and Biochemistry. - Water relations, mineral nutrition and ion transport, mineral deficiencies. Photosynthesis-photochemical reactions, photophosphorylation and carbon fixation pathways ; C3, C4 and CAM pathways; Mechanism of pholem transport, Respiration (anerobic and aerobic, including fermentation)-electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation; Photorespiration; Chemiosmotic theory and ATP synthesis; Lipid metabolism; Nitrogen fixation and nitrogen metabolism. Enzymes, coenzymes; Energy transfer and energy conservation. Importance of secondary metabolites. Pigments as photoreceptors (plastidial pigments and phytochrome). Plant movements; Photoperiodism and flowering, vernalization, senescence; Growth substances-their chemical nature, role and applications in agri-horticulture; growth indices, growth movements. Stress physiology (heat, water, salinity, metal); Fruit and seed physiology. Dormancy, storage and germination of seed. Fruit ripening-its molecular basis and manipulation.
5. Ecology and Plant Geography. - Concept of ecosystem; Ecological factors. Concepts and dynamics of community; Plant succession. Concepts of biosphere; Ecosystems; Conservation; Pollution and its control (including phytoreme-diation); Plant indicators; Environment (Protection) Act.
Forest types of India-Ecological and economic importance of forests, afforestation, deforestation and social forestry; Endangered plants, endemism IUCN categories, Red Data Books; Biodiversity and its conservation; Protected Area Network; Convention of Biological Diversity, Farmers Rights; and Intellectual Property Rights; Concept of Sustainable Development; Biogeochemical cycles. Global warming and climatic change; Invasive species; Environmental Impact Assessment; Phytogeographical regions of India.ChemistryPaper-I1. Atomic Structure. - Heisenberg's uncertainty principle Schrodinger wave equation (time independent); Interpretation of wave function, particle in onedimensional box, quantum numbers, hydrogen atom wave functions; Shapes of s, p and d orbitals.
2. Chemical bonding. - Ionic bond, characteristics of ionic compounds, lattice energy, Born- Haber cycle; covalent bond and its general characteristics, polarities of bonds in molecules and their dipole moments; Valence bond theory, concept of resonance and resonance energy; Molecular orbital theory (LCAO method); bonding H2 +, H2 He2 + to Ne2, NO, CO, HF, CN-, Comparison of valence bond and molecular orbital theories, bond order, bond strength and bond length.
3. Solid State. - Crystal systems; Designation of crystal faces, lattice structures and unit cell; Bragg's law; X-ray diffraction by crystals; Close packing, radius ratio rules, calculation of some limiting radius ratio values; Structures of NaCI, ZnS, CsCI, CaF2; Stoichiometric and nonstoichiometric defects, impurity defects, semi-conductors.
4. The Gaseous State and Transport Phenomenon. - Equation of state for real gases, intermolecular interactions, and critical phenomena and liquefaction of gases; Maxwell's distribution of speeds, intermolecular collisions, collisions on the wall and effusion; Thermal conductivity and viscosity of ideal gases.
5. Liquid State. - Kelvin equation; Surface tension and surface enercy, wetting and contact angle, interfacial tension and capillary action.
6. Thermodynamics. - Work, heat and internal energy; first law of thermodynamics.
Second law of thermodynamics; entropy as a state function, entropy changes in various processes, entropy-reversibility and irreversibility, Free energy functions; Thermodynamic equation of state; Maxwell relations; Temperature, volume and pressure dependence of U, H, A, G, Cp and Cv, a and b ; J-T effect and inversion temperature; criteria for equilibrium, relation between equilibrium constant and thermodynamic quantities; Nernst heat theorem, introductory idea of third law of thermodynamics.7. Phase Equilibria and Solutions. - Clausius-Clapeyron equation; phase diagram for a pure substance; phase equilibria in binary systems, partially miscible liquids-upper and lower critical solution temperatures; partial molar quantities, their significance and determination; excess thermodynamic functions and their determination.
8. Electrochemistry. - Debye-Huckel theory of strong electrolytes and Debye-Huckel limiting Law for various equilibrium and transport properties.
Galvanic cells, concentration cells; electrochemical series, measurement of e.m.f. of cells and its applications fuel cells and batteries.Processes at electrodes; double layer at the interface; rate of charge transfer, current density; overpotential; electroanalytical techniques : amperometry, ion selective electrodes and their use.9. Chemical Kinetics. - Differential and integral rate equations for zeroth, first, second and fractional order reactions; Rate equations involving reverse, parallel, consecutive and chain reactions; Branching chain and explosions; effect of temperature and pressure on rate constant. Study of fast reactions by stop-flow and relaxation methods. Collisions and transition state theories.
10. Photochemistry. - Absorption of light; decay of excited state by different routes; photochemical reactions between hydrogen and halogens and their quantum yields.
11. Surface Phenomena and Catalysis :
Adsorption from gases and solutions on solid adsorbents; Langmuir and B.E.T. adsorption isotherms; determination of surface area, characteristics and mechanism of reaction on heterogeneous catalysts.12. Bio-inorganic Chemistry. - Metal ions in biological systems and their role in ion-transport across the membranes (molecular mechanism), oxygen-uptake proteins, cytochromes and ferrodoxins.
13. Coordination Chemistry. - (i) Bonding in transition of metal complexes. Valence bond theory, crystal field theory and its modifications; applications of theories in the explanation of magnetism and elctronic spectra of metal complexes.
14. Main Group Chemistry. - Boranes, borazines, phosphazenes and cyclic phosphazene, silicates and silicones, Interhalogen compounds; Sulphur-nitrogen compounds, noble gas compounds.
15. General Chemistry of 'f' Block Element. - Lanthanides and actinides: separation, oxidation states, magnetic and spectral properties; lanthanide contraction.
Paper-II1. Delocalised Covalent Bonding. - Aromaticity, anti-aromaticity; annulenes, azulenes, tropolones, fulvenes, sydnones.
2. (i) Reaction mechanisms : General methods (both kinetic and non-kinetic) of study of mechanisms or organic reactions : isotopies, method cross-over experiment, intermediate trapping, stereochemistry; energy of activation; thermodynamic control and kinetic control of reactions.
3. Pericyclic reactions. - Classification and examples; Woodward-Hoffmann rules-electrocyclic reactions, cycloaddition reactions [2+2 and 4+2] and sigmatropic shifts [1, 3; 3, 3 and 1, 5], FMO approach.
4. (i) Preparation and Properties of Polymers : Organic polymerspolyethylene, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, teflon, nylon, terylene, synthetic and natural rubber.
5. Synthetic Uses of Reagents. - OsO4, HIO4, CrO3, Pb(OAc)4, SeO2, NBS, B2H6, Na-Liquid NH3, LiAIH4, NaBH4, n-BuLi, MCPBA.
6. Photochemistry : Photochemical reactions of simple organic compounds, excited and ground states, singlet and triplet states, Norrish-Type I and Type II reactions.
7. Spectroscopy. - Principle and applications in structure elucidation :
1. Engineering Mechanics, Strength of Materials and Structural Analysis.
2. Design of Structures. - Steel, Concrete and Masonry Structures.
3. Fluid Mechanics, Open Channel Flow and Hydraulic Machines :
4. Geotechnical Engineering. - Soil Type and Structure-gradation and particle size distributionconsistency limits.
Water in soil-capillary and structural-effective stress and pore water pressure-permeability concept-filed and laboratory determination of permeability-Seepage pressure-quick sand conditions-Shear strength determination- Mohr Coulomb concept.Compaction of soil-Laboratory and filed test.Compressibility and consolidation concept-consolidation theoryconsolidation settlement analysis.Earth pressure theory and analysis for retaining walls, Application for sheet piles and Braced excavation.Bearing capacity of soil-approaches for analysis-Filed tests-settlement analysis-stability of slope of earth walk. Subsuface exploration of soils-methods.Foundation-Type and selection criteria for foundation of structures- Design criteria for foundation-Analysis of distribution of stress for footings and pile-pile group action-pile load test.Ground improvement techniques.Paper-II1. Construction Technology, Equipment, Planning and Management
2. Surveying and Transportation Engineering.
3. Hydrology, Water Resources and Engineering :
4. Environmental Engineering :
5. Environmental pollution. - Sustainable development. Radioactive wastes and disposal. Environmental impact assessment for thermal power plants, mines, river valley projects. Air pollution. Pollution control acts.
Commerce and AccountancyPaper-IAccounting and FinanceAccounting, Taxation & Auditing1. Financing Accounting. - Accounting as a financial information system; Impact of behavioural sciences. Accounting Standards e. g. Accounting for Depreciation, Inventories, Research and Development Costs, Long-term Construction Contracts, Revenue Recognition, Fixed Assets, Contingencies, Foreign Exchange Transactions, Investments and Government Grants, Cash Flow Statement, Earnings per Share.
Accounting for Share Capital Transactions including Bonus Shares, Right Shares.Employees Stock Option and Buy-Back of Securities.Preparation and Presentation of Company Final Accounts.Amalgamations, Absorption and Reconstruction of Companies.2. Cost Accounting. - Nature and functions of cost accounting, Installation of Cost Accounting System, Cost Concepts related to Income Measurement, Profit Planning, Cost Control and Decision Making.
Methods of Costing : Job Costing, Process Costing, Activity Based Costing.Volume-cost-Profit Relationship as a tool of Profit Planning.Incremental Analysis/Differential Costing as a Tool of Pricing Decisions, Product Decisions, Make or Buy Decisions, Shut-Down Decisions etc.Techniques of Cost Control and Cost Reduction : Budgeting as a Tool of Planning and Control, Standard Costing and Variance Analysis.Responsibility Accounting and Divisional Performance Measurement.3. Taxation. - Income Tax : Definitions, Basis of charge; Incomes which do not form part of total income. Simple problems of Computation of Income (of individuals only) under various heads, i. e., Salaries, Income from House Property, Profits and Gains from Business or Profession, Capital Gains, Income from other sources, Income of other Persons included in Assessee's Total Income.
Set-off and Carry forward of Loss, Deductions from Gross Total Income.Salient Features/Provisions Related to VAT and Services Tax.4. Auditing. - Company Audit : Audit related to Divisible Profits, Dividends, Special investigations, Tax Audit.
Audit of Banking, Insurance, Non-Profit Organization and Charitable Societies/Trusts/Organizations.Financial Management, Financial Institutions and Markets :1. Financial Management. - Finance Function : Nature, Scope and Objectives of Financial Management : Risk and Return Relationship.
Tools of Financial Analysis : Ratio Analysis, Funds-Flow and Cash- Flow Statement.Capital Budgeting Decisions : Process, Procedures and Appraisal Methods, Risk and Uncertainty Anlysis and Methods.Cost of Capital : Concept, Computation of Specific Costs and Weighted Average Cost of Capital, CAPM as aTool of Determining Cost of Equity Capital.Financing Decisions : Theories of Capital Structure-Net Income (NI) Approach.Net Operating Income (NOI) Approach, MM Approach and Traditional Approach, Designing of Capital structure : Types of Leverages (Operating, Financial and Combined), EBIT-EPS Analysis, and other factors.Dividend Decisions and Valuation of Firm : Walter's Model, MM Thesis, Gordan's Model Lintner's Model. Factors Affecting Dividend Policy.Working Capital Management : Planning of Working Capital. Determinants of Working Capital. Components of Working Capital- Cash.Inventory and Receivables. Corporate Restructuring with focus on Mergers and Acquisitions (Financial aspect only).2. Financial Markets and Institutions. - Indian Financial System : An Overview
Money Markets : Participants, Structure and Instruments. Commercial Banks. Reforms in Banking Sector. Monetary and Credit Policy of RBI. RBI as a Regulator.Capital Market : Primary and Secondary Market, Financial Market Instruments and Innovative Debt Instruments; SEBI as a Regulator.Financial Services : Mutual Funds, Venture Capital, Credit Rating Agencies, Insurance and IRDA.Paper-IIOrganisation Theory and Behaviours, Human ResourceManagement and Industrial RelationsOrganisation Theory and Behaviour1. Organisation Theory. - Nature and Concept of Organisation; External Environment of Organisation-Technological, Social, Political, Ecomomical and Legal; Organizational Goals Primary and Secondary Goals, Single and Multiple Goals; Management by Objectives.
Evolution of Organisation theory : Classical Neo-classical and system approach.Modern Concepts of Organisation Theory : Organisational Design, Organisational Structure and Organisational Culture.Organisational Design-Basic Challenges; Differentiation and Intergration Process; Centralization and Decentralization Process; Standardization/Formalization and Mutual Adjustment. Coordinating Formal and Informal Organizations. Mechanistic and Organic Structures.Designing Organizational structures-Authority and Control; Line and Staff Functions, Specialization and Coordination. Types of Organization Structure-Functional. Matrix Structure, Project Structure. Nature and Basis of Power, Sources of Power, Power Structure and Politics. Impact of Information Technology on Organizational Design and Structure.Managing Organizational Culture.2. Organisation Behaviour. - Meaning and Concept ; Individual in organization: Personality, Theories, and Determinants; Pereception Meaning and Process.
Motivation : Concepts, Theories and Applications. Leadership- Theories and Styles. Quality of Work Life (QWL): Meaning and its impact on Performance, Ways of its Enhancement. Quality Circles (QC)-Meaning and their Importance. Management of Conflicts in Organizations. Transactional Analysis, Organizational Effectiveness, Management of Change.Human Resources Management and Industrial Relations1. Human Resources Management (HRM). - Meaning Nature and Scope of HRM, Human Resource Planning, Job Analysis, Job Description, Job Specification, Recruitment Process, Selection Process, Orientational and Placement, Training and Development Process, Performance Appraisal and 360° Feed Back, Salary and Wage Administration, Job Evaluation, Employee Welfare, Promotions, Transfers and Separations.
2. Industrial Relations (IR). - Meaning, Nature, Importance and Scope of IR, Formation of Trade Union, Trade Union Legislation, Trade Union Movement in India. Recognition of Trade Unions, Problems of Trade Unions in India. Impact of Liberalization on Trade Union Movement.
Nature of Industrial Disputes : Strikes and Lockouts, Causes of Disputes, Prevention and Settlement of Disputes.Worker's Participation in Management : Philosophy, Rationale, Present Day Status and Future Prospects.Adjudication and Collective Bargaining.Industrial Relations in Public Enterprises Absenteeism and Labour Turnover in Indian Industries and their Causes and Remedies.ILO and its Functions.EconomicsPaper-I1. Advanced Micro Economics. - (a) Marshallian and Varrasiam Approaches to Price determination.
2. Advance Macro Economics. - Approaches to Employment Income and Interest Rate determination : Classical, Keynes (IS-LM) curve, Neo-classical synthesis and New classical, Theories of Interest Rate determination and Interest Rate Structure.
3. Money-Banking and Finance. - (a) Demand for and Supply of Money : Money Multiplier Quantity Theory of Money (Fisher, Pique and Friedman) and Keyne's Theory on Demand for Money, Goals and Instruments of Monetary Management in Closed and Open Economies. Relation between the Central Bank and the Treasury. Proposal for ceiling on growth rate of money.
4. International Economics. - (a) Old and New theories of International Trade.
5. Growth and Development. - (a) (i) Theories of growth : Harrod's model ;
1. Circuits-Theory. - Circuit components; network graphs; KCL, KVL; Circuit analysis methods : nodal analysis, mesh analysis; basic network theorems and applications; transient analysis : RL, RC and RLC circuits; sinusoidal steady state analysis; resonant circuits; coupled circuits; balanced 3-phase circuits. Two-port networks.
2. Signals and Systems. - Representation of continuous-time and discrete-time signals and systems; LTI systems; convolution; impulse response; time-domain analysis of LTI systems based on convolution and differential/ difference equations. Fourier transform, Laplace transform, Z-transform, Transfer function. Sampling and recovery of signals DFT, FFT Processing of analog signals through discrete-time systems.
3. E. M. Theory. - Maxwell's equations, wave propagation in bounded media. Boundary conditions, reflection and refraction of plane waves. Transmission lines : travelling and standing waves, impedance matching, Smith chart.
4. Analog Electronics. - Characteristics and equivalent circuits (large and small-signal) of Diode, BJT, JFET and MOSFET. Diode circuits : Clipping, clamping, rectifier. Biasing and bias stability. FET amplifiers. Current mirror; Amplifiers : single and multi-stage, differential, operational feedback and power. Analysis of amplifiers; frequency-response of amplifiers. OPAMP circuits. Filters; sinusoidal oscillators : criterion for oscillation; single-transistor and OPAMP configurations. Function generators and wave-shaping circuits. Linear and switching power supplies.
5. Digital Electronics. - Boolean algebra; minimisation of Boolean functions; logic gates; digital IC families (DTL, TTL, ECL, MOS, CMOS). Combinational circuits : arithmetic circuits, code converters, multiplexers and decoders. Sequential circuits: latches and flip-flops, counters and shiftregisters. Comparators, timers, multivibrators. Sample and hold circuits, ADCs and DACs. Semiconductor memories. Logic implementation using programmable devices (ROM, PLA, FPGA).
6. Energy Conversion. - Principles of electromechanical energy conversion : Torque and emf in rotating machines. DC machines : characteristics and performance analysis; starting and speed control of motors. Transformers : principles of operation and analysis; regulation, efficiency; 3-phase transformers. 3-phase induction machines and synchronous machines : characteristics and performance analysis; speed control.
7. Power Electronics and Electric Drives : Semi-conductor power devices : diode, transistor, thyristor, triac, GTO and MOSFET-static characteristics and principles of operation; triggering circuits; phase control rectifiers; bridge converters : fully-controlled and half-controlled; principles of thyristor choppers and inverters; DC-DC converters; Switch mode inverter; basic concepts of speed control of dc and ac motor drives applications of variable-speed drives.
8. Analog Communication. - Random variables : continuous, discrete; probability, probability functions. Statistical averages; probability models; Random signals and noise : white noise, noise equivalent bandwidth; signal transmission with noise; signal to noise ratio. Linear CW modulation : Amplitude modulation : DSB, DSB-SC and SSB. Modulators and Demodulators; Phase and Frequency modulation : PM & FM signals; narrows band FM; generation & detection of FM and PM, Deemphasis, Preemphasis. CW modulation system : Superhetrodyne receivers, AM receivers, communication receivers, FM receivers, phase locked loop, SSB receiver Signal to noise ratio calculation or AM and FM receivers.
Paper-II1. Control Systems. - Elements of control systems ; block-diagram representations ; open-loop & closed-loop systems; principles and applications of feedback. Control system components. LTI systems : time-domain and transform-domain analysis. Stability : Routh Hurwitz criterion, rootloci, Bode-plots and polor plots, Nyquist's criterion; Design of leadlad compensators. Proportional, PI, PID controllers. State-variable representation and analysis of control systems.
2. Microprocessors and Microcomputers. - PC organisation; CPU, instruction set, register settiming diagram, programming, interrupts, memory interfacing, I/O interfacing, programmable peripheral devices.
3. Measurement and Instrumentation. - Error analysis; measurement of current voltage, power, energy, power-factor, resistance, inductance, capacitance and frequency; bridge measurements. Signal conditioning circuit; Electronic measuring instruments : multimeter, CRO, digital voltmeter, frequency counter, Q-meter, spectrum-analyser, distoration-meter. Transducers : thermocouple, thermistor, LVDT, strain-guage, piezo-electric crystal.
4. Power Systems : Analysis and Control. - Steady-state performance of overhead transmission lines and cables; principles of active and reactive power transfer and distribution; perunit quantities; bus admittance and impedance matrices; load flow; voltage control and power factor correction; economic operation; symmetrical components, analysis of symmetrical and unsymmetrical faults. Concepts of system stability : swing curves and equal area criterion. Static VAR system. Basic concepts of HVDC transmission.
5. Power System Protection. - Principles of overcurrent, differential and distance protection. Concept of solid state relays. Circuit brakers. Computer aided protection : introduction; line, bus, generator, transformer protection; numeric relays and application of DSP to protection.
6. Digital Communication. - Pulse code modulation (PCM), defferential pulse code modulation (DPCM), delta modulation (DM), Digital modulation and demodulation schemes : amplitude, phase and frequency keying schemes (ASK, PSK, FSK). Error control coding : error detection and correction, linear block codes, convolation codes. Information measure and source coding. Data networks, 7-layer architecture.
GeographyPaper-IPrinciples of GeographyPhysical Geography :1. Geomorphology. - Factors controlling landform development ; endogenetic and exogenetic forces ; Origin and evolution of the earth's crusts ; Fundamentals of geomagnetism; Physical conditions of the earth's interior; Geosynclines; Continental drift; Isostasy; Plate tectonics; Recent views on mountain building; Volcanicity; Earthquakes and Tsunamis; Concepts of geomorphic cycles and Land scape development; Denudation chronology; Channel morphology; Erosion surfaces; Slope development; Applied Geomorphology; Geomorphology, economic geology and environment.
2. Climatology. - Temperature and pressure belts of the world; Heat budget of the earth; Atmospheric circulation ; Atmospheric stability and instability. Planetary and local winds; Monsoons and jet streams ; Air masses and fronto ; Temperate and tropical cyclones ; Types and distribution of precipitation ; Weather and Climate; Koppen's Thornthwaite's and Trewar Tha's classification of world climate; Hydrological cycle ; Global climatic change, and role and response of man in climatic changes Applied climatology and Urban climate.
3. Oceanography. - Bottom topography of the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans ; Temperature and salinity of the oceans ; Heat and salt budgets, Ocean deposits; Waves, currents and tides ; Marine resources; biotic, mineral and energy resources; Coral reefs coral bleaching; Sea-level changes; Law of the sea and marine pollution.
4. Biogeography. - Genesis of soils; Classification and distribution of soils; Soil profile ; Soil erosion, Degradation and conservation ; Factors influencing world distribution of plants and animals; Problems of deforestation and conservation measures ; Social forestry, agro-forestry; Wildlife ; Major gene pool centres.
5. Environmental Geography. - Principle ecology; Human ecological adaptations; Influence of man on ecology and environment; Global and regional ecological changes and imbalances; Ecosystem their management and conservation; Environmental degradation, management and conservation; Biodiversity and sustainable development; Environmental policy; Environmental hazards and remedial measures; Environmental education and legislation.
Human Geography.1. Perspectives in Human Geography. - Areal differentiation ; Regional synthesis ; Dichotomy and dualism ; Environmentalism ; Quantitative revolution and locational analysis ; Radical, behavioural, human and welfare approaches ; Languages, religions and secularisation ; Cultural regions of the world; Human development indix.
2. Economic Geography. - World economic development: measurement and problems ; World resources and their distribution ; Energy crisis ; the limits to growth ; World agriculture: typology of agricultural regions ; Agricultural inputs and productivity ; Food and nutritions problems ; Food security ; famine: causes, effects and remedies ; World industries : location patterns and problems ; Patterns of world trade.
3. Population and Settlement Geography. - Growth and distribution of world population ; Demographic attributes; Causes and consequences of migration; Concepts of over-underand optimum population; Population theories, world population problems and policies, Social well-being and quality of life ; Population as social capital.
Types and patterns of rural settlements; Environmental issues in rural settlements ; Hierarchy of urban settlements ; Urban morphology ; Concept of primate city and rank-size rule ; Functional classification of towns ; Sphere of urban influence ; Rural-urban fringe ; Satellite towns; Problems and remedies of urbanization; Sustainable development of cities.4. Regional Planning. - Concept of a region ; Types of regions and methods of regionalisation ; Growth centres and growth poles ; Regional imbalances ; Regional development strategies ; Environmental issues in regional planning ; Planning for sustainable development.
5. Models, Theories and Laws in Human Geography. - System analysis in Human geography; Malthusian, Marxian and demographic transition models; Central Place theories of Christaller and Losch; Perroux and Boudeville; Von Thunen's model of agricultural location; Weber's model of industrial location; Ostov's model of stages of growth. Heart-land and Rimland theories; Laws of international boundaries and frontiers.
Paper-IIGeography of India1. Physical Setting. - Space relationship of India with neighbouring countries ; Structure and relief ; Drainage system and watersheds; Physiographic regions; Mechanism of Indian monsoons and rainfall patterns ; Tropical cyclones and western disturbances ; Floods and droughts ; Climatic regions ; Natural vegetation, Soil types and their distributions.
2. Resources. - Land, surface and ground water, energy, minerals, biotic and marine resources, Forest and wildlife resources and their conservation; Energy crisis.
3. Agriculture. - Infrastructure: irrigation, seeds, fertilizers, power; Institutional factors ; land holdings, land tenure and land reforms ; Cropping pattern, agricultural productivity, agricultural intensity, crop combination, land capability; Agro and social-forestry; Green revolution and its socioNo. economic and ecological implications; Significance of dry farming; Livestock resources and white revolution; Aqua-culture; Sericulture, Agriculture and poultry; Agricultural regionalisation; Agro-climatic zones; Agro-ecological regions.
4. Industry : Evolution of Industries. - Locational factors of cotton, jute, textile, iron and steel, aluminium, fertiliser, paper, chemical and pharmaceutical, automobile, cottage and ago-based industries; Industrial houses and complexes including public sector underkings; Industrial regionalisation; New industrial policy ; Multinationals and liberalisation; Special Economic Zones ; Tourism including ecotourism.
5. Transport, Communication and Trade. - Road, railway, waterway, airway and pipeline networks and their complementary roles in regional development; Growing importance of ports on national and foreign trade ; Trade balance; Trade Policy; Export processing zones ; Developments in communication and information technology and their impacts on economy and society; Indian space programme.
6. Cultural Setting. - Historical Perspective of Indian Society; Racial linguistic and ethnic diversities; religious minorities; Major tribes, tribal areas and their problems; Cultural regions; Growth, distribution and density of population; Demographic attributes: sex-ratio, age structure, literacy rate, work-force, dependency ratio, longevity; migration (interregional, interaregional and international) and associated problems; Population problems and policies; Health indicators.
7. Settlements. - Types, patterns and morphology of rural settlements ; Urban developments ; Morphology of Indian cities; Functional classification of Indian cities; Conurbations and metropolitan regions ; Urban sprawl; Slums and asssociated problems; Town planning; Problems of urbanisation and remedies.
8. Regional Development and Planning. - Experience of regional planning in India; Five Year Plans; Integrated rural development programmes; Panchayati Raj and decentralised planning; Command area development; Watershed management; Planning for backward area, desert, drought-prone, hill tribal area development; Multi-level planning; Regional planning and development of island territories.
9. Political Aspects. - Geographical basis of Indian federalism; State reorganisation; Emergence of new states; Regional consciousness and inter-state issues; International boundary of India and related issues; Crossborder terrorism; India's role in world affairs; Geopolitics of South Asia and Indian Ocean realm.
10. Contemporary Issues. - Ecological issues : Environmental hazards: landslides, earthquakes, Tsunamis, floods and droughts, epidemics; Issues related to environmental pollution; Changes in patterns of land use ; Principles of environmental impact assessment and environmental management; Population explosion and food security ; Environmental degradation; Deforestation, desertification and soil erosion; Problems of agrarian and industrial unrest ; Regional disparities in economic development; Concept of sustainable growth and development; Environmental awareness; Linkage of rivers; Globalisation and Indian economy.
Note : - Candidates will be required to answer one compulsory map question pertinent to subjects covered by this paper.GeologyPaper-I1. General Geology. - The Solar System, meteorites, origin and interior of the earth and age of earth; Volcanoes-causes and products, Volcanic belts. Earthquakes-causes, effects, seismic of zone of India; Island arcs, trenches and mid-ocean ridges; Continental drift; Seafloor spreading, plate tectonics. Isostasy.
2. Geomorphology and Remote Sensing. - Basic concepts of geomorphology. Weathering and soil formations; Landforms, slopes and drainage. Geomorphic cycles and their interpretation. Morphology and its relation to structures and lithology; Coastal geomorphology; Applications of geomorphology in mineral prospecting, civil engineering; hydrology and environmental studies; Geomorphology of Indian sub-continent.
Aerial photographs and their interpretation-merits and limitations; The Electromagnetic spectrum. Orbiting Satellites and Sensor Systems. Indian Remote Sensing Satellites. Satellite data products; Applications of remote sensing in geology; The Geographic Information System (GIS) and Global Positioning System (GPS)-its applications.3. Structural Geology. - Principles of geologic mapping and map reading, projection diagrams, Stress and strain ellipsoid and stress-strain relationships of elastic, plastic and viscous materials; Strain markers in deformed rocks. Behaviour of minerals and rocks under deformation conditions. Folds and faults classification and mechanics; Structural analysis of folds, foliations, lineations, joints and faults, unconformities; Time-relationship between crystallization and deformation.
4. Paleontology. - Species-definition and nomenclature; Megafossils and Microfossils. Modes of preservation of fossils ; Different kinds of microfossils ; Application of microfossils in correlation, petroleum exploration, paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic studies ; Evolutionary trend in Hominidae, Equidae and Proboscidae. Siwalik fauna.
Gondwana flora and fauna and its importance; Index fossils and their significance.5. Indian Stratigraphy. - Classification of stratigraphic sequences: lithostrati-graphic, biostratigraphic, chrono-stratigraphic and magnetostratigraphic and their interrelationships; Distribution and classification of Precambrian rocks of India; Study of stratigraphic distribution and lithology of Phanerozoic rocks of India with reference to fauna, flora and economic importance. Major boundary problems-Cambrian/ Precambrian, Permian/Triassic, Cretaceous/Tertiary and Pliocene/ Pleistocene; Study of climatic conditions, paleogeography and igneous activity in the Indian sub-continent in the geological past. Tectonic framework of India. Evolution of the Himalayas.
6. Hydrogeology and Engineering Geology. - Hydrologic cycle and genetic classification of water; Movement of subsurface water; Springs; Porosity, permeability, hydraulic conductivity, transmissivity and storage coefficient, classification of aquifers; Water-bearing characteristics of rocks; Groundwater chemistry. Salt water intrusion. Types of wells. Drainage basin morphometry; Exploration for groundwater; Groundwater recharge; Problems and management of groundwater; Rainwater harvesting; Engineering properties of rocks; Geological investigations for dams, tunnels highways, railway and bridges; Rock as construction material; Landslides causes, prevention and rehabilitation; Earthquake-resistant structures.
Paper-II1. Mineralogy. - Classification of crystals into systems and classes of symmetry ; International system of crystallographic notation ; Use of projection diagrams to represent crystal symmetry; Elements of X-ray crystallography.
Physical and chemical characters of rock forming silicate mineral groups; Structural classification of silicates ; Common minerals of igneous and metamorphic rocks ; Minerals of the carbonate, phosphate, sulphide and halide groups; Clay minerals. Optical properties of common rock forming minerals ; Pleochroism, extinction angle, double refraction, birefringence, twinning and dispersion in minerals.2. Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. - Generation and crystallisation of magmas. Crystallisation of albiteanorthite, diopside-anorthite and diopside- wollastonite-silica systems. Bowen's Reaction Principle; Magmatic differentiation and assimilation. Petrogenetic significance of the textures and structures of igneous rocks. Petrography and petrogenesis of granite, syenite, diorite, basic and ultrabasic groups, charnockite, anorthosite and alkaline rocks. Carbonatites. Deccan volcanic province.
Types and agents of metamorphism. Metamorphic grades and zones; Phase rule. Facies of regional and contact metamorphism; ACF and AKF diagrams; Textures and structures of metamorphic rocks. Metamorphism of arenaceous, argillaceous and basic rocks; Minerals assemblages. Retrograde metamorphism; Metasomatism and granitisation, migmatites. Granulite terrains of India.3. Sedimenary Petrology. - Sedimentas and Sedimentary rocks: Processes of formation; digenesis and lithification; Clastic and non-clastic rocks-their classification, petrography and depositional environment; Sedimentary facies and provenance. Sedimentary structures and their significance. Heavy minerals and their significance. Sedimentary basins of India.
4. Economic Geology. - Ore, ore mineral and gangue, tenor of ore. Classification of ore deposits; Processes of formation of mineral deposits; Controls of ore localisation; Ore texures and structures; Metallogenic epochs and provinces; Geology of the important Indian deposits of aluminium, chromium, copper, gold, iron, lead, zinc, manganese, titanium, uranium and thorium and industrial minerals; Deposits of coal and petroleum in India, National Mineral Policy; Conservation and utilization of mineral resources. Marine mineral resources and Law of Sea.
5. Mining Geology. - Methods of prospecting-geological, geophysical, geochemical and geobotanical; Techniques of sampling. Estimation of reserves of ore; Methods of exploration and mining-metallic ores, industrial minerals, marine mineral resources and building stones. Mineral beneficiation and ore dressing.
6. Geochemistry and Environmental Geology. - Cosmic abundance of elements. Composition of the planets and meteorites. Structure and composition of earth and distribution of elements. Trace elements. Elements of crystal chemistry-types of chemical bonds, coordination number. Isomorphism and polymorphism. Elementary thermodynamics.
Natural hazards-floods, mass wasting, costal hazards, earthquakes and volcanic activity and mitigation; Environmental impact of urbanization, mining, industrial and radioactive waste disposal, use of fertilizers, dumping of mine waste and fly-ash. Pollution of ground and surface water, marine pollution. Environment protection-legislative measures in India; Sea level changes: causes and impact.HistoryPaper-I1. Sources.
Archaeological sources. - Exploration, excavation, epigraphy, numismatics, monuments.Literary sources. - Indigenous : Primary and secondary ; poetry, scientific literature, literature, literature in regional languages, religious literature.Foreign account: Greek, Chinese and Arab writers.2. Pre-history and Proto-history. - Geographical factors; hunting and gathering (paleolithic and mesolithic); Beginning of agriculture (neolithic and chalcolithic).
3. Indus Valley Civilization. - Origin, date, extent, characteristics-decline, survival and significance, art and architecture.
4. Megalithic Cultures. - Distribution of pastoral and farming cultures outside the Indus, Development of community life, Settlements, Development of agriculture, Crafts, Pottery, and Iron industry.
5. Aryans and Vedic Period. - Expansions of Aryans in India :
Vedic Period: Religious and philosophic literature; Transformation from Rig Vedic period to the later Vedic period; Political, social and economical life; Significance of the Vedic Age; Evolution of Monarchy and Varna system.6. Period of Mahajanapadas. - Formation of States (Mahajanapada) : Republics and monarchies ; Rise of urban centres ; Trade routes ; Economic growth ; Introduction of coinage ; Spread of Jainism and Buddhism; Rise of Magadha and Nandas.
Iranian and Mecedonian invasions and their impact.7. Mauryan Empire. - Foundation of the Mauryan Empire, Chandragupta, Kautilya and Arthashastra ; Ashoka ; Concept of Dharma ; Edicts ; Polity, Administration, Economy ; Art, architecture and sculpture ; External contacts ; Religion ; Spread of religion ; Literature.
Disintegration of the empire ; sungas and Kanvas.8. Post-Mauryan Period (Indo-Greeks, Sakas, Kushanas, Western Kshatrapas). - Contact with outside world; growth of urban centres, economy, coinage, development of religions, Mahayana, social conditions, art, architecture, culture, literature and science.
9. Early State and Society in Eastern India, Deccan and South India. - Kharavela, The Satavahanas, Tamil States of the Sangam Age; Administration, Economy, land grants, coinage, trade guilds and urban centres; Buddhist centres; Sangam literature and culture; Art and architecture.
10. Guptas, Vakatakas and Vardhanas. - Polity and administration, Economic conditions, Coinage of the Guptas, Land grants, Decline of urban centres, Indian feudalism, Caste system, Position of women, Education and educational institutions; Nalanda, Vikramshila and Vallabhi, Literature, scientific literature, art and architecture.
11. Regional States during Gupta Era. - The Kadambas, Pallavas, Chalukyas of Badami; Polity and Administration, Trade guilds, Literature; growth of Vaishnava and Saiva religions. Tamil Bhakit movement, Shankaracharya; Vedanta; Institutions of temple and temple architecture; Palas, Senas, Rashtrakutas, Paramaras, Polity and administration; Cultural aspects. Arab conquest of Sind; Alberuni, The Chalukyas of Kalyana, Cholas, Hoysalas, Pandyas; Polity and Administration; Local Government; Growth of art and architecture, religious sects, Institution of temple and Mathas, Agraharas, education and literature, economy and society.
12. Themes in Early Indian Cultural History. - Languages and texts, major stages in the evolution of art and architecture, major philosophical thinkers and schools, ideas in Science and Mathematics.
13. Early Medieval India, 750-1200.
-Polity : Major political developments in Northern India and the peninsula, origin and the rise of Rajputs.-The Cholas : administration, village economy and society "Indian Feudalism".- Agrarian economy and urban settlements.-Trade and commerce.-Society: the status of the Brahman and the new social order.- Condition of women.-Indian science and technology.14. Cultural Traditions in India, 750-1200 :
-Philosophy : Shankaracharya and Vedanta, Ramanuja and Vishishtadvaita, Madhva and Brahma-Mimansa.-Religion : Forms and features of religion, Tamil devotional cult, growth of Bhakti, Islam and its arrival in India, Sufism.-Literature : Literature in Sanskrit, growth of Tamil literature, literature in the newly developing languages, Kalhan's Rajtarangini, Alberun's India .-Art and Architecture : Temple architecture, sculpture, painting.15. The Thirteenth Century :
-Establishment of the Delhi Sultanate : The Ghurian invasions-factors behind Ghurian success.-Economic, Social and cultural consequences.-Foundation of Delhi Sultanate and early Turkish Sultans.-Consolidation : The rule of Iltutmish and Balban.16. The Fourteenth Century :
-"The Khalji Revolution".-Alauddin Khalji: Conquests and territorial expansion, agrarian and economic measure.-Muhammad Tughluq: Major projects, agrarian measures, bureaucracy of Muhammad Tughluq.-Firuz Tugluq: Agrarian measures, achievements in civil engineering and public works, decline of the Sultanate, foreign contacts and Ibn Battuta's account.17. Society, Culture and Economy in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries :
-Society : composition of rural society, ruling classes, town dwellers, women, religious classes, caste and slavery under the Sultanate, Bhakti movement, Sufi movement.-Culture : Persian literature, literature in the regional languages of North India, literature in the languages of South India, Sultanate architecture and new structural forms, painting, evolution of a composite culture.-Economy : Agricultural Production, rise of urban economy and non-agricultural production, trade and commerce.18. The Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century-Political Developments and Economy :
-Rise of Provincial Dynasties : Bengal, Kashmir (Zainul Abedin), Gujarat.-Malwa, Bahmanids.-The Vijayanagara Empire.-Lodis.-Mughal Empire, first phase : Babur, Humayun.-The Sur Empire : Sher Shah's administration.-Portuguese colonial enterprise, Bhakti and Sufi Movements.19. The Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century- Society and culture :
-Regional cultures specificities.-Literary traditions.-Provincial architectural.-Society, culture, literature and the arts in Vijayanagara Empire.20. Akbar :
-Conquests and consolidation of empire.-Establishment of jagir and mansab systems.-Rajput policy.-Evolution of religious and social outlook. Theory of Sulh-i-kul and religious policy.-Court patronage of art and technology.21. Mughal Empire in the Seventeenth Century :
-Major administrative policies of Jahangir, Shahjahan and Aurangzeb.-The Empire and the Zamindars.-Religious policies of Jahangir, Shahjahan and Aurangzeb.-Nature of the Mughal State.-Late Seventeenth Century crisis and the revolts.-The Ahom kingdom.-Shivaji and the early Maratha Kingdom.22. Economy and society, in the 16th and 17th Centuries :
-Population Agricultural and craft production.-Towns, commerce with Europe through Dutch, English and French companies : a trade revolution.-Indian mercantile classes. Banking, insurance and credit systems.-Conditions of peasants, Condition of Women.-Evolution of the Sikh community and the Khalsa Panth.23. Culture during Mughal Empire :
-Persian histories and other literature-Hindi and religious literatures.-Mughal architecture.-Mughal painting.-Provincial architecture and painting.-Classical music.-Science and technology.24. The Eighteenth Century :
-Factors for the decline of the Mughal Empire.-The regional principalities: Nizam's Deccan, Bengal, Awadh.-Maratha ascendancy under the Peshwas.-The Maratha fiscal and financial system.-Emergence of Afghan power Battle of Panipat, 1761.-State of, political, cultural and economic, on eve of the British conquest.Paper-II1. European Penetration into India. - The Early European Settlements; The Portuguese and the Dutch; The English and the French East India Companies; Their struggle for supremacy; Carnatic Wars; Bengal-The conflict between the English and the Nawabs of Bengal; Siraj and the English; The Battle of Plassey; Significance of Plassey.
2. British Expansion in India. - Bengal-Mir Jafar and Mir Kasim; The Battle of Buxar; Mysore; The Marathas; The three Anglo-Maratha Wars; The Punjab.
3. Early Structure of the British Raj. - The Early administrative structure; From diarchy to direct contol; The Regulating Act (1773); The Pitt's India Act (1784); The Charter Act (1833); The Voice of free trade and the changing character of British colonial rule; The English utilitarian and India.
4. Economic Impact of British Colonial Rule. - (a) Land revenue settlements in British India; The Permanent Settlement; Ryotwari Settlement; Mahalwari Settlement; Economic impact of the revenue arrangements; Commercialization of agriculture; Rise of landless agrarian labourers; Impoverishment of the rural society.
5. Social and Cultural Developments. - The state of indigenous education, its dislocation; Orientalist-Anglicist controversy, The introduction of western education in India; The rise of press, literature and public opinion; The rise of modern vernacular literature; Progress of Science; Christian missionary activities in India.
6. Social and Religious Reform Movements in Bengal and Other Areas. - Ram Mohan Roy, The Brahmo Movement; Debendranath Tagore; Iswarchandra Vidyasagar; The Young Bengal Movement; Dayanada Saraswati; The social reform movements in India including Sati, widow remarriage, child marriage etc.; The contribution of Indian renaissance to the growth of modern India; Islamic revivalism-the Feraizi and Wahabi Movements.
7. Indian Response to British Rule. - Peasant movement and tribal uprisings in the 18th and 19th centuries including the Rangpur Dhing (1783), the Kol Rebellion (1832), the Mopla Rebellion in Malabar (1841-1920), the Santal Hul (1855), Indigo Rebellion (1859-60), Deccan Uprising (1875) and the Munda Ulgulan (1899-1900); The Great Revolt of 1857 -Origin, character, casuses of failure, the consequences; The shift in the character of peasant uprisings in the post-1857 period; the peasant movements of the 1920s and 1930s.
8. Factors leading to the birth of Indian Nationalism. - Politics of Association; The Foundation of the Indian National Congress; The Safety-valve thesis relating to the birth of the Congress; Programme and objectives of Early Congress; the social composition of early Congress leadership; the Moderates and Extremists; The Partition of Bengal (1905); The Swadeshi Movement in Bengal; the economic and political aspects of Swadeshi Movement; The beginning of revolutionary extremism in India.
9. Rise of Gandhi; Character of Gandhian nationalism. - Gandhi's popular appeal; Rowlatt Satyagraha; the Khilafat Movement; the Non-cooperation Movement; National politics from the end of the Non-cooperation Movement to the beginning of the Civil Disobedience Movement; the two phases of the Civil Disobedience Movement; Simon Commission; The Nehru Report; the Round Table Conferences; Nationalism and the Peasant Movements; Nationalism and Working class movements; Women and Indian youth and students in Indian politics (1885-1947); the election of 1937 and the formation of ministries; Cripps Mission; the Quit India Movement; the Wavell Plan; The Cabinet Mission.
10. Constitutional Developments in the Colonial India between 1858 and 1935.
11. Other strands in the National Movement. - The Revolutionaries: Bengal, the Punjab, Maharashtra, U.P. the Madras Presidency, Outside India.
The Left ; The Left within the Congress: Jawaharlal Nehru, Subhas Chandra Bose, the Congress Socialist Party; the Communist Party of India, other left parties.12. Politics of Separatism; the Muslim League; the Hindu Mahasabha. - Communalism and the politics of partition; Transfer of power; Independence.
13. Consolidation as a Nation; Nehru's Foreign Policy. - India and her neighbours (1947-1964); The linguistic reorganisation of States (1935-1947) ; Regionalism and regional inequality; Integration of Princely States; Princes in electoral politics; the Question of National Language.
14. Caste and Ethnicity after 1947. - Backward Castes and Tribes in post-colonial electoral politics; Dalit movements.
15. Economic development and political change. - Land reforms ; the politics of planning and rural reconstruction ; Ecology and environmental policy in post-colonial India ; Progress of Science.
16. Enlightenment and Modern ideas. - (i) Major Ideas of Enlightenment : Kant, Rousseau.
17. Origins of Modern Politics. - (i) European States System
18. Industrialization. - (i) English Industrial Revolution : Causes and Impact on Society.
19. Nation-State System. - (i) Rise of Nationalism in 19th century.
20. Imperialism and Colonialism. - (i) South and South-East Asia.
21. Revolution and Counter-Revolution. - (i) 19th Century European revolutions.
22. World Wars. - (i) 1st and 2nd World Wars as Total Wars : Societal implications.
23. The World after World War II. - (i) Emergence of Two power blocs.
24. Liberation from Colonial Rule. - (i) Latin America-Bolivar.
25. Decolonization and Underdevelopment. - (i) Factors constraining Development ; Latin America, Africa.
26. Unification of Europe. - (i) Post War Foundations ; NATO and European Community.
27. Disintegration of Soviet Union and the Rise of the Unipolar World. - (i) Factors leading to the collapse of Soviet Communism and Soviet Union, 1985-1991.
1. Constitution and Constitutionalism : The distinctive features of the Constitution.
2. Fundamental Rights-Public interest litigation; Legal Aid ; Legal services authority.
3. Relationship between Fundamental rights, Directive principles and Fundamental duties.
4. Constitutional Position of the President and relation with the Council of Ministers.
5. Governor and his powers :
6. Supreme Court and the High Courts :
7. Centre, States and local bodies :
8. Legislative powers, privileges and immunities.
9. Services under the Union and the States :
10. Emergency provisions.
11. Amendment of the Constitution.
12. Principle of Natural Justice-Emerging trends and judicial approach.
13. Delegated legislation and its constitutionality.
14. Separation of powers and constitutional governance.
15. Judicial review of administrative action.
16. Ombudsman: Lokayukta, Lokpal etc.
International Law :1. Nature and Definition of International Law.
2. Relationship between International Law and Municipal Law.
3. State Recognition and State Succession.
4. Law of the sea: Inland Waters, Territorial Sea, Contiguous Zone, Continental Shelf, Exclusive Economic Zone and High Seas.
5. Individuals: Nationality, statelessness; Human Rights and procedures available for their enforcement.
6. Territorial jurisdiction of States, Extradition and Asylum.
7. Treaties : Formation, application, termination and reservation.
8. United Nations : Its principal organs, powers and functions and reform.
9. Peaceful settlement of disputes-different modes.
10. Lawful recourse to force : aggressions, self-defence, intervention.
11. Fundamental principles of international humanitarian law-International conventions and contemporary developments.
12. Legality of the use of nuclear weapons ; ban on testing of nuclear weapons ; Nuclear non-proliferation treaty, CTST.
13. International Terrorism, State sponsored terrorism, Hijacking, International Criminal Court.
14. New International Economic Order and Monetary Law : WTO, TRIPS, GATT, IMF, World Bank.
15. Protection and Improvement of the Human Environment : International Efforts.
Paper-IILaw of Crimes1. General principles of Criminal liability : mens rea and actus reus, mens rea in statutory offences.
2. Kinds of punishment and emerging trends as to abolition of capital punishment.
3. Preparations and criminal attempt.
4. General exceptions.
5. Joint and constructive liability.
6. Abetment.
7. Criminal conspiracy.
8. Offences against the State.
9. Offences against public tranquility.
10. Offences against human body.
11. Offences against property.
12. Offences against women.
13. Defamation.
14. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.
15. Protection of Civil Rights Act, 1955 and subsequent legislative developments.
16. Plea bargaining.
Law of Torts1. Nature and definition.
2. Liability based upon fault and strict liability ; Absolute liability.
3. Vicarious liability including State Liability.
4. General defences.
5. Joint tort fessors.
6. Remedies.
7. Negligence.
8. Defamation.
9. Nuisance.
10. Conspiracy.
11. False imprisonment.
12. Malicious prosecution.
13. Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
Law of Contracts and Mercantile Law1. Nature and formation of contract/E-contract.
2. Factors vitiating free consent.
3. Void, voidable, illegal and unenforceable agreements.
4. Performance and discharge of contracts.
5. Quasi-contracts.
6. Consequences of breach of contract.
7. Contract of indemnity, guarantee and insurance.
8. Contract of agency.
9. Sale of goods and hire purchase.
10. Formation and dissolution of partnership.
11. Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881.
12. Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
13. Standard form contracts.
Contemporary Legal Developments1. Public Interest Litigation.
2. Intellectual property rights-Concept, types/ prospects.
3. Information Technology Law including Cyber Laws-Concept, purpose/prospects.
4. Competition Law-Concept, purpose/prospects.
5. Alternate Dispute Resolution-Concept, types/ prospects.
6. Major statutes concerning environmental law.
7. Right to Information Act.
8. Trial by media.
ManagementThe candidate should make a study of the concept of development of Management as science and art drawing upon the contributions of leading thinkers of management and apply the concepts to the real life of government and business decision-making keeping in view the changes in the strategic and operative environment.Paper-I1. Managerial Function and Process. - Concept and foundations of management, Evolution of Management Thoughts ; Managerial Functions-Planning, Organizing, Controlling ; Decision-making; Role of Manager, Managerial skills ; Entrepreneurship ; Management of innovation; Managing in a global environment, Flexible Systems Management ; Social responsibility and managerial ethics ; Process and customer orientation ; Managerial processes on direct and indirect value chain.
2. Organisational Behaviour and Design. - Conceptual model of organization behaviour; The individual processespersonality, values and attitude, perception, motivation, learning and reinforcement, work stress and stress management; The dynamics of Organization behaviour-power and politics, conflict and negotiation, leadership process and styles, communication; The Organizational Processes-decision-making, job design; Classical, Neoclassical and Contingency approaches to organizational design; Organizational theory and design-Organizational culture, managing cultural diversity, learning Organization; Organizational change and development; Knowledge Based Enterprise-systems and processes; Networked and virtual organizations.
3. Human Resource Management. - HR challenges; HRM functions; The future challenges of HRM; Strategic Management of human resources; Human resource planning; Job analysis; Job evaluation, Recruitment and selection; Training and development; Promotion and transfer; Performance management; Compensation management and benefits; Employee morale and productivity; Management of Organizational climate and Industrial relations; Human resources accounting and audit; Human resource information system; International human resource management.
4. Accounting for Managers. - Financial accounting-concept, importance and scope, generally accepted accounting principles, preparation of financial statements with special reference to analysis of a balance sheet and measurment of business income, inventory valuation and depreciation, financial statement analysis, fund flow analysis, the statement of cash flows; Management accounting concept, need, imporance and scope; Cost accounting-records and processes, cost ledger and control accounts, reconciliation and integration between financial and cost accounts; Overhead cost and control, Job and process costing, Budget and budgetary control, Performance budgeting, Zero-base budgeting, relevant costing and costing for decision-making, standard costing and variance analysis, marginal costing and absorption costing.
5. Financial Management. - Goal of Finance Function. Concepts of value and return. Valuation of bonds and Shares; Management of working capital : Estimation and Financing; Management of cash, receivables, inventory and current liabilities; Cost of capital ; Capital budgeting; Financial and operating leverage; Design of capital structure : theories and practices ; Shareholder value creation: dividend policy, corporate financial policy and strategy, management of corporate distress and restructuring strategy; Capital and money markets: institutions and instruments; Leasing hire purchase and venture capital; Regulation of capital market; Risk and return: portfolio theory; CAPM; APT; Financial derivatives: option, futures, swap; Recent reforms in financial sector.
6. Marketing Management. - Concept, evolution and scope; Marketing strategy formulation and components of marketing plan; Segmenting and targeting the market; Positioning and differentiating the market offering; Analyzing competition; Analyzing consumer markets; Industrial buyer behaviour; Market research; Product strategy; Pricing strategies; Designing and managing Marketing channels; Integrated marketing communications; Building customer satisfaction, Value and retention; Services and non-profit marketing; Ethics in marketing; Consumer protection; Internet marketing; Retail management; Customer relationship management; Concept of holistic marketing.
Paper-II1. Quantitative Techniques in Decision-making. - Descriptive statistics-tabular, graphical and numerical methods, introduction to probability, discrete and continuous probability distributions, inferential statistics-sampling distributions, central limit theorem, hypothesis testing for differences between means and proportions, inference about population variances, Chisquare and ANOVA, simple correlation and regression, time series and forecasting, decision theory, index numbers; Linear programmingproblem formulation, simplex method and graphical solution, sensitivity analysis.
2. Production and Operations Management. - Fundamentals of operations management; Organizing for production; Aggregate production planning, capacity planning, plant design: process planning, plant size and scale of operations, Management of facilities; Line balancing; Equipment replacement and maintenance; Production control; Supply, chain management-vendor evaluation and audit; Quality management; Statistical process control, Six Sigma; Flexibility and agility in manufacturing systems; World class manufaturing; Project management concepts, R&D management, Management of service operations; Role and importance of materials management, value analysis, make or buy decision; Inventory control, MRP; Waste management.
3. Management Information System. - Conceptual foundations of information systems ; Information theory; Information resource management ; Types of information Systems ; Systems Development-Overview of Systems and Design ; System Development management life-cycle, Designing online and distributed environments; Implementation and control of project; Trends in information technology; Managing data resources-Organising data. DSS and RDBMS; Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Expert systems, e-Business architecture, e-Governance; Information systems planning, Flexibility in information systems; User involvement; Evaluation of information systems.
4. Government Business Interface. - State participation in business, Interaction between Government, Business and different Chambers of Commerce and Industry in India; Government's Policy with regard to Small Scale Industries; Government clearances for establishing a new enterprise; Public Distribution System; Government control over price and distribution; Consumer Protection Act (CPA) and The Role of Voluntary Organizations in protecting consumers' rights; New Industrial Policy of the Government : liberalization, deregulation and privatisation; Indian planning system; Government policy concerning development of Backward areas/regions; The Responsibilities of the business as well as the Government to protect the environment; Corporate Governance; Cyber Laws.
5. Strategic Cost Management. - Business policy as a field of study; Nature and scope of strategic management, Strategic intent, vision, objectives and policies; Process of strategic planning and implementation; Environmental analysis and internal analysis; SWOT analysis; Tools and techniques for strategic analysis-Impact matrix: The experience curve, BCG matrix, GEC mode, Industry analysis, Concept of value chain; Strategic profile of a firm; Framework for analysing competition; Competitive advantage of a firm; Generic competitive strategies; Growth strategiesexpansion, integration and diversification; Concept of core competence, Strategic flexibility; Reinventing strategy; Strategy and structure; chief Executive and Board; turnaround management; Management of strategic change; Strategic alliances, Mergers and Acquisitions; Strategy and corporate evolution in the Indian context.
6. International Business. - International Business Environment : Changing composition of trade in goods and services; India's Foreign Trade: Policy and trends; Financing of International trade; Regional Economic Cooperation; FTAs; Internationalisation of service firms; International production; Operation Management in International companies; International Taxation; Global competitiveness and technological developments; Global E-Business; Designing global organisational structure and control; Multicultural management; Global business strategy; Global marketing strategies; Export Management; Export-Import procedures; Joint Ventures; Foreign Investment: Foreign direct investment and foreign portfolio investment; Cross-border Mergers and Acquisitions; Foreign Exchange Risk Exposure Management; World Financial Markets and International Banking; External Debt Management; Country Risk Analysis.
MathematicsPaper-I1. Mechanics :
2. Engineering Materials. - Basic concepts on structure of solids, common ferrous and nonferrous materials and their applications ; heat-treatment of steels ; non-metalsplastics, cermics, composite materials and nano-materials.
3. Theory of Machines. - Kinematic and dynamic analysis of plane mechanisms. Cams, Gears and empicyclie gear trains, flywheels, governors, balancing of rigid rotors, balancing of single and multicy-linder engines, linear vibration analysis of mechanical systems (single degree of freedom), Critical speeds and whirling of shafts.
4. Manufacturing Science :
1. Thermodynamics, Gas Dynamics Turbine. - 1.1 Basic concept of First-law and Second law of Thermodynamics; concept of entropy and reversibility; availability and unavailability and irreversibility.
2. Heat Transfer. - 2.1 Conduction heat transfer-general conduction equation- Laplace, Poisson and Fourier equations ; Fourier law of conduction; one dimensional steady state heat conduction applied to simple wall, solid and hollow cylinder and spheres.
3. Engines. - 3.1 Classification, themodynamic cycles of operation; determination of break power, indicated power, mechanical efficiency, heat balance sheet, interpretation of performance characteristics, petrol, gas and diesel engines.
4. Steam Engineering. - 4.1 Steam generation-modified Ranking cycle analysis ; Modern steam boilers; steam at critical and supercritical pressures; draught equipment; natural and artificial draught; boiler fuels solid, liquid and gaseous fuels. Steam turbines- Principle; types; compounding; impulse and reaction turbines; axial thrust.
5. Refrigeration and Air-conditioning. - 5.1 Vapour compression refrigeration cycle-cycle on p-H & T-s diagrams ; ecofriendly refrigerants-R 134a. 123 ; Systems like evaporators, condensers, compressor, expansion devices. Simple vapour absorption systems.
1. Human Anatomy. - Applied anatomy including blood and nerve supply of upper and lower limbs and joints of shoulder, hip and knee.
Gross anatomy, blood supply and lymphatic drainage of tongue, thyroid, mammary gland, stomach, liver, prostate, gonads and uterus.Applied anatomy of diaphragm, perineum and inguinal region.Clinical anatomy of kidney, urinary bladder, uterine tubes, vas deferens.Embryology : Placenta and placental barrier. Development of heart, gut, kidney. uterus, ovary, testis and their common congenital abnormalities.Central and Peripheral Autonomic Nervous System :Gross and clinical anatomy of ventricles of brain, circulation of cerebrospinal fluid; Neural pathways and lesions of cutaneous sensations, hearing and vision; Cranial nerves distribution and clinical significance; Components of autonomic nervous system.2. Human Physiology. - Conduction and transmission of impulse, mechanism of contraction, neuromuscular transmission, reflexes, control of equilibrium, posture and muscle tone, descending pathways, functions of cerebellum, basal ganglia, Physiology of sleep and consciousness.
Endocrine System : Mechanism of action of hormones; formation, secretion, transport, metabolism, function and regulation of secretion of pancreas and pituitary gland.Physiology of Reproductive System : Pregnancy menstrual cycle, lactation, pregnancy.Blood : Development, regulation and fate of blood cells.Cardio-vascular, cardiac output, blood pressure, regulation of cardiovascular functions.3. Biochemistry :
Organ function tests-liver, kidney, thyroid Protein synthesis.Vitamins and minerals. Restriction fragment length. polymorphism (RFLP). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Radio-immunoassays (RIA).4. Pathology. - Inflammation and repair, disturbances of growth and cancer, Pathogenesis and histopathology of rheumatic and ischaemic heart disease and diabetes mellitus. Differentiation between benign, malignant, primary and metastatic malignancies, Pathogenesis and histopathology of bronchogenic carcinoma, carcinoma breast, oral cancer, cancer cervix, leukemia, Etiology, pathogenesis and histopathology of-cirrhosis liver, glomerulonephritis, tuberculosis, acute osteomyelitis.
5. Microbiology. - Humoral and cell mediated immunity.
Diseases caused by and laboratory diagnosis of-* Meningococcus, Saimonella* Shigella, Herpes, Dengue, Polio* HIV/AIDS, Malaria, E. Histolytica, Giardia* Candida, Cryptococcus, Aspergillus.6. Pharmacology. - Mechanism of action and side effects of the following drugs :
* Antipyretics and analgesics, Antibiotics,* Antimalaria, Antikala-azar, Antidiabetics,* Antihypertensive, Antidiuretics, General and cardiac vasodilators, Antiviral, Antiparasitic, Antifungal, Immunosuppressants,* Anticancer.7. Forensic Medicine and Toxicology. - Forensic examination of injuries and wounds; Examination of blood and seminal stains; Poisoning, sedative overdose, hanging, drowning, burns, DNA and finger print study.
Paper-II1. General Medicine. - Etiology, clinical features, diagnosis and principles of management (including prevention) of-Typhoid, Rabies, AIDS, Dengue, Kala-azar, Japanese Encephalitis.
Etiology, clinical features, diagnosis and principles of management of :Ischaemic heart disease, pulmonary embolism. Bronchial asthma.Pleural effusion, tuberculosis, Malabsorption syndromes; acid peptic diseases, Viral hepatitis and cirrhosis of liver.Glomerulonephritis and pyelonephritis, renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, renovascular hypertension, complications of diabetes mellitus, coagulation disorders, leukaemia, Hypo and hyper thyrodism, meningitis and encephalitis.Imaging in medical problems, ultrasound, echo-cardiogram, CT scan, MRI.Anxiety and Depressive Psychosis and schizophrenia and ECT.2. Paediatrics. - Immunization, Baby friendly hospital, congenital cyanotic heart disease, respiratory distress syndrome, broncho- pneumonias, kernicterus. IMNCI classification and management, PEM grading and management. ARI and Diarrhea of under five and their management.
3. Dermatology. - Psoriasis, Allergic dermatitis, scabies, eczema, vitiligo, Stevan Johnson's syndrome, Lichen Planus.
4. General Surgery. - Clinical features, causes, diagnosis and principles of management of cleft palate, harelip.
Laryngeal tumour, oral and esophageal tumours.Peripheral arterial diseases, varicose veins, coarctation of aorta.Tumours of Thyroid, Adrenal, Glands.Abscess cancer, fibroadenoma and adenosis of breast.Bleeding peptic ulcer, tuberculosis of bowel, ulcerative colitis, cancer stomach.Renal mass, cancer prostatie.Haemothorax, stones of Gall bladder, Kidney, Ureter and Urinary Bladder.Management of surgical conditions of Rectum, Anus and Anal canal, Gall bladder and Bile ducts.Splenomegaly, cholecystitis, portal hypertension, liver abscess, peritonitis, carcinoma head of pancreas.Fractures of spine, Colles' fracture and bone tumors. Endoscopy.Laprascopic Surgery.5. Obstetrics and Gynaecology including Family Planning. - Diagnosis of pregnancy.
Labour management, complications of 3rd stage, Antepartum and postpartum hemorrhage, resuscitation of the newborn, Management of abnormal life and difficult labour. Management of small for date or premature newborn.Diagnosis and management of anemia. Preeclampsia and Toxaemias of pregnancy, Management of Post-menopausal Syndrome.Intra-uterine devices, pills, tubectomy and vasectomy. Medical termination of pregnancy including legal aspects.Cancer cervix.Leucorrhoea, pelvic pain; infertility, dysfunctional uterine bleeding (DUB), amenorrhoea, Fibroid and prolapse of uterus.6. Community Medicine (Preventive and Social Medicine). - Principles, methods approach and measurements of Epidemiology.
Nutrition, nutritional diseases/diorders and Nutrition Programmes.Health information Collection, Analysis and Presentation.Objectives, components and critical analysis of National programmes for control/eradication of :Malaria, Kala-azar, Filaria and Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, STDs and Dengue.Critical appraisal of Health care delivery system.Health management and administration; Techniques, Tools, Programme Implementation and Evaluation.Objectives, Components, Goals and Status of Reproductive and Child Health, National Rural Health Mission and Millennium Development Goals.Management of hospital and industrial waste.PhilosophyPaper-IHistory and Problems of Philosophy1. Plato and Aristotle : Ideas ; Substance; Form and Matter; Causation; Actuality and Potentiality.
2. Rationalism (Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz) ; Cartesian Method and Certain Knowledge; Substance ; God; Mind-Body Dualism; Determinism and Freedom.
3. Empiricism (Locke, Berkeley, Hume) : Theory of Knowledge; Substance and Qualities; Self and God; Scepticism.
4. Kant: Possibility of Synthetic a priori Judgments ; Space and Time; Categories; Ideas of Reason ; Antinomies ; Critique of Proofs for the Existence of God.
5. Hegel : Dialectical Method; Absolute Idealism.
6. Moore, Russell and Early Wittgenstein : Defence of Commonsense; Refutation of Idealism; Logical Atomism; Logical Constructions; Incomplete Symbols; Picture Theory of Meaning; Sying and Showing.
7. Logical Positivism : Verification Theory of Meaning; Rejection of Metaphysics; Linguistic Theory of Necessary Propositions.
8. Later Wittgenstein : Meaning and Use; Language-games; Critique of Private Language.
9. Phenomenology (Husserl): Method; Theory of Essences; Avoidance of Psychologism.
10. Existentialism (Kierkegaard, Sarte, Heidegger): Existence and Essence; Choice, Responsibility and Authentic Existence; Being-inthe- world and Temporality.
11. Quine and Strawson : Critique of Empiricism; Theory of Basic Particulars and Persons.
12. Carvaka : Theory of Knowlegde; Rejection of Transcendent Entities.
13. Jainism : Theory of Reality; Saptabhanginaya; Bondage and Liberation.
14. Schools of Buddhism : Prat Ityasamutpada; Ksanikavada, Nairatmyavada.
15. Nyaya-Vaiesesika : Theory of Categories; Theory of Appearance; Theory of Pramana; Self, Liberation; God; Proofs for the Existence of God; Theory of Causation; Atomistic Theory of Creation.
16. Samkhya ; Prakrit ; Purusa ; Causation; Liberation.
17. Yoga ; Citta ; Cittavrtti; Klesas ; Samadhi; Kaivalya.
18. Mimamsa: Theory of Knowlegde.
19. Schools of Vedanta : Brahman; Isvara; Atman; Jiva; Jagat; Maya; Avida; Adhyasa; Moksa; Aprthaksiddhi; Pancavidhabheda.
20. Aurobindo: Evolution, Involution; Integral Yoga.
Paper-IISocio-Political Philosophy1. Social and Political ldeals : Equality, Justice, Liberty.
2. Sovereignty : Austin, Bodin, Laski, Kautilya.
3. Individual and State : Rights; Duties and Accountability.
4. Forms of Government : Monarchy; Theocracy and Democracy.
5. Political Ideologies: Anarchism; Marxism and Socialism.
6. Humanism; Secularism; Multi-culturalism.
7. Crime and Punishment : Corruption, Mass Violence, Genocide, Capital Punishment.
8. Development and Social Progress.
9. Gender Discrimination : Female Foeticide, Land and Property Rights; Empowerment.
10. Caste Discrimination : Gandhi and Ambedkar.
Philosophy of Religion :1. Notions of God : Attributes; Relation to Man and the World. (Indian and Western).
2. Proofs for the Existence of God and their Critique (Indian and Western).
3. Problem of Evil.
4. Soul : Immortality; Rebirth and Liberation.
5. Reason, Revelation and Faith.
6. Religious Experience : Nature and Object (Indian and Western).
7. Religion without God.
8. Religion and Morality.
9. Religious Pluralism and the Problem of Absolute Truth.
10. Nature of Religious Language : Analogical and Symbolic; Cognitivist and Non-cognitive.
PhysicsPaper-I1. (a) Mechanics of Particles. - Laws of motion; conservation of energy and momentum, applications to rotating frames, centripetal and Coriolis accelerations; Motion under a central force; Conservation of angular momentum, Kepler's laws; Fields and potentials; Gravitational field and potential due to spherical bodies, Gauss and Poisson equations, gravitational self-energy; Twobody problem; Reduced mass; Rutherford scattering; Centre of mass and laboratory reference frames.
2. Waves and Optics. - (a) Waves. - Simple harmonic motion, damped oscillation, forced oscillation and resonance; Beats; Stationary waves in a string; Pulses and wave packets; Phase and group velocities; Reflection and refraction from Huygens' principle.
3. Electricity and Magnetism :
4. Electromagnetic Waves and Blackbody Radiation. - Displacement current and Maxwell's equations; Wave equations in vacuum, Poynting theorem; Vector and scalar potentials; Electromagnetic field tensor, covariance of Maxwell's equations; Wave equations in isotropic dielectrics, reflection and refraction at the boundary of two dielectrics; Fresnel's relations; Total internal reflection; Normal and anomalous dispersion; Rayleigh scattering; Blackbody radiation and Planck 's radiation law- Stefan-Boltzmann law, Wien's displacement law and Rayleigh-Jeans law.
5. Thermal and Statistical Physics. - (a) Thermodynamics. - Laws of thermodynamics, reversible and irreversible processes, entropy; Isothermal, adiabatic, isobaric, isochoric processes and entropy changes; Otto and Diesel engines, Gibbs' phase rule and chemical potential; Van der Waals equation of state of a real gas, critical constants; Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of molecular velocities, transport phenomena, equipartition and virial theorems; Dulong-Petit, Einstein, and Debye's theories of specific heat of solids; Maxwell relations and application; Clausius-Clapeyron equation. Adiabatic demagnetisation, Joule-Kelvin effect and liquefaction of gases.
1. Quantum Mechanics. - Wave-particle duality; Schroedinger equation and expectation values; Uncertainty principle; Solutions of the one-dimensional Schroedinger equation for free particle (Gaussian wave-packet), particle in a box, particle in a finite well, linear harmonic oscillator; Reflection and transmission by a step potential and by a rectangular barrier; Particle in a three dimensional box, density of states, free electron theory of metals; Angular momentum; Hydrogen atom ; Spin half particles, properties of Pauli spin matrices.
2. Atomic and Molecular Physics. - Stern-Gerlach experiment, electron spin, fine structure of hydrozen atom; L-S coupling, J-J coupling; Spectroscopic notation of atomic states; Zeeman effect; Franck-Condon principle and applications; Elementary theory of rotational, vibrational and electronic spectra of diatomic molecules; Raman effect and molecular structure; Laser Raman spectroscopy; Importance of neutral hydrogen atom, molecular hydrogen and molecular hydrogen ion in astronomy. Fluorescence and Phosphorescence; Elementary theory and applications of NMR and EPR; Elementary ideas about Lamb shift and its significance.
3. Nuclear and Particle Physics. - Basic nuclear properties-size, binding energy, angular momentum, parity, magnetic moment; Semi-empirical mass formula and applications. Mass parabolas; Ground state of a deuteron, magnetic moment and non-central forces; Meson theory of nuclear forces; Salient features of nuclear forces; Shell model of the nucleus - success and limitations; Violation of parity in beta decay; Gamma decay and internal conversion; Elementary ideas about Mossbauer spectroscopy; Q-value of nuclear reactions; Nuclear fission and fusion, energy production in stars. Nuclear reactors.
Classification of elementary particles and their interactions; Conservation laws; Quark structure of hadrons : Field quanta of electroweak and strong interactions; Elementary ideas about unification of forces; Physics of neutrinos.4. Solid State Physics, Devices and Electronics. - Crystalline and amorphous structure of matter; Different crystal systems, space groups; Methods of determination of crystal structure; X-ray diffraction, scanning and transmission electron microscopies; Band theory of solids-conductors, insulators and semi-conductors; Thermal properties of solids, specific heat, Debye theory; Magnetism: dia, para and ferromagnetism; Elements of super-conductivity, Meissner effect, Josephson junctions and applications; Elementary ideas about high temperature super-conductivity.
Intrinsic and extrinsic semi-conductors- p-n-p and n-p-n transistors ; Amplifiers and oscillators. Op-amps; FET, JFET and MOSFET; Digital electronics-Boolean identities, De Morgan's laws, Logic gates and truth tables. Simple logic circuits; Thermistors, solar cells; Fundamentals of microprocessors and digital computers.Political Science and International RelationsPaper-IPolitical Theory and Indian Politics :1. Political Theory: meaning and approaches.
2. Theories of state : Liberal, Neo-liberal, Marxist, Pluiralist, post-colonial and Feminist.
3. Justice : Conceptions of justice with special reference to Rawl's theory of justice and its communitarian critiques.
4. Equality : Social, political and economic; relationship between equality and freedom; Affirmative action.
5. Rights : Meaning and theories; different kinds of rights; Concept of Human Rights.
6. Democracy : Classical and contemporary theories; different models of democracy-representative, participatory and deliberative.
7. Concept of power : hegemony, ideology and legitimacy.
8. Political Ideologies : Liberalism, Socialism, Marxism, Fascism, Gandhism and Feminism.
9. Indian Political Thought: Dharamshastra, Arthashastra and Buddhist Traditions; Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Sri Aurobindo, M. K. Gandhi, B. R. Ambedkar, M. N. Roy.
10. Western Political Thought : Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, John S. Mill, Marx, Gramsci, Hannah Arendt.
Indian Government and Politics :1. Indian Nationalism. - (a) Political Strategies of India's Freedom Struggle : Constitutionalism to mass Satyagraha, Non-cooperation, Civil Disobedience; Militant and Revolutionary Movements, Peasant and Workers Movements.
2. Making of the Indian Constitution. - Legacies of the British rule; different social and political perspectives.
3. Salient Features of the Indian Constitution. - The Preamble, Fundamental Rights and Duties, Directive Principles; Parliamentary System and Amendment Procedures; Judicial Review and Basic Structure doctrine :
4. Grassroots Democracy. - Panchayati Raj and Municipal Government; Significance of 73rd and 74th Amendments; Grassroot movements.
5. Statutory Institutions/Commissions. - Election Commission, Comptroller and Auditor General, Finance Commission, Union Public Service Commission, National Commission for Scheduled Castes, National Commission for Scheduled Tribes, National Commission for Women; National Human Rights Commission, National Commission for Minorities, National Backward Classes Commission.
6. Federalism. - Constitutional provisions; changing nature of centre-state relations; integrationist tendencies and regional aspirations; inter-state disputes.
7. Planning and Economic development. - Nehruvian and Gandhian perspectives; Role of planning and public sector; Green Revolution, land reforms and agrarian relations; liberalization and economic reforms.
8. Caste, Religion and Ethnicity in Indian Politics:
9. Party System. - National and regional political parties, ideological and social bases of parties; Patterns of coalition politics; Pressure groups, trends in electoral behaviour; changing socio-economic profile of Legislators.
10. Social Movement. - Civil liberties and human rights movements; women's movements; environmentalist movements.
Paper-IIComparative Politics and International Relations-Comparative Political Analysis and International Politics :1. Comparative Politics. - Nature and major approaches; Political economy and political sociology perspectives; Limitations of the comparative method.
2. State in Comparative Perspective. - Characteristics and changing nature of the State in capitalist and socialist economies and advanced industrial and developing societies.
3. Politics of Representation and Participation - Political parties, pressure groups and social movements in advanced industrial and developing societies.
4. Globalisation. - Responses from developed and developing societies.
5. Approaches to the Study of International Relations - Idealist, Realist, Marxist, Functionalist and Systems theory.
6. Key Concepts in International Relations - National interest, security and power; Balance of power and deterrence; Transational actors and collective security; World capitalist economy and globalisation.
7. Changing International Political Order. - (a) Rise of super powers; Strategic and ideological Bipolarity, arms race and cold war ; Nuclear threat ;
8. Evolution of the International Economic System. - From Brettonwoods to WTO; Socialist economies and the CMEA (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance); Third World demand for new international economic order; Globalisation of the world economy.
9. United Nations. - Envisaged role and actual record; Specialized UN agencies-aims and functioning; need for UN reforms.
10. Regionalisation of World Politics. - EU, ASEAN, APEC, AARC, NAFTA.
11. Contemporary Global Concerns. - Democracy, human rights, environment, gender justice terrorism, nuclear proliferation.
India and the World-1. Indian Foreign Policy. - Determinants of foreign policy; the institutions of policy-making; Continuity and change.
2. India's Contribution to the Non-Alignment Movement Different phases; Current role.
3. India and South Asia. - (a) Regional Co-operation : SAARC-past performance and future prospects.
4. India and the Global South : Relations with Africa and Latin America. - Leadership role in the demand for NIEO and WTO negotiations.
5. India and the Global Centres of Power. - USA, EU, Japan, China and Russia.
6. India and the UN System: Role in UN Peace-keeping. - Demand for Permanent Seat in the Security Council.
7. India and the Nuclear Question. - Changing perceptions and policy.
8. Recent developments in Indian Foreign Policy. - India's position on the recent crises in Afghanistan, Iraq and West Asia, growing relations with US and Isreal; Vision of a new world order.
PsychologyPaper-IFoundations of Psychology -1. Introduction. - Definition of Psychology; Historical antecedents of Psychology and trends in the 21st centrury; Psychology and scientific methods; Psychology in relation to other social sciences and natural sciences; Application of Psychology to societal problems.
2. Methods of Psychology. - Types of research : Descriptive, evaluative, diagnostic and prognostic; Methods of Research : Survey, observation, case-study and experiments; Characteristics of experimental design and nonexperimental designs; quasi-experimental designs; Focussed group discussions, brain storming, grounded theory approach.
3. Research methods. - Major steps in psychological research (problem statement, hypothesis formulation, research design, sampling, tools of data collection, analysis and interpretation and report writing) ; Fundamental versus applied research ; Methods of data collection (interview, observation, questionnaire and case study). Research Designs (Ex-post facto and experimental). Application of statistical techniques (t-test, two-way ANOVA, correlation and regression and factor analysis) item response theory.
4. Development of Human Behaviour. - Growth and development; Principles of development, Role of genetic and environmental factors in determining human behaviour; Influence of cultural factors in socialization; Life span development- Characteristics, development tasks, promoting psychological wellbeing across major stages of the life span.
5. Sensation, Attention and Perception. - Sensation: concepts of threshold, absolute and difference thresholds, signal-detection and vigilance; Factors influencing attention including set and characteristics of stimulus; Definition and concept of perception, biological factors in perception; Perceptual organizationinfluence of past experiences, perceptual defence-factor influencing space and depth perception, size estimation and perceptual readiness; The plasticity of perception; Extrasensory perception; Culture and perception, Subliminal perception.
6. Learning. - Concepts and theories of learning (Behaviourists, Gestaltalist and Information processing models). The processes of extinction, discrimination and generalisation. Programmed learning, probability learning, self instructional learning, concepts, types and the schedules of reinforcement, escape, avoidance and punishment, modelling and social learning.
7. Memory. - Encoding and remembering; Shot-term memory, Long-term memory, Sensory memory, Iconic memory, Echoic memory: The Multistore model, levels of processing; Organization and Mnemonic techniques to improve memory; Theories of forgetting: decay, interference and retrieval failure: Metamemory; Amnesia: Anterograde and retrograde.
8. Thinking and Problem Solving. - Piaget's theory of cognitive development; Concept formation processes; Information processing, Reasoning and problem solving, Facilitating and hindering factors in problem solving, Methods of problem solving: Creative thinking and fostering creativity; Factors influencing decision making and judgement; Recent trends.
9. Motivation and Emotion. - Psychological and physiological basis of motivation and emotion; Measurement of motivation and emotion; Effects of motivation and emotion on behaviour; Extrinsic and intrinsic motivation; Factors influencing intrinsic motivation; Emotional competence and the related issues.
10. Intelligence and Aptitude. - Concept of intelligence and aptitude, Nature and theories of intelligence-Spearman, Thurstone, Gulford Vernon, Sternberg and J.P. Das; Emotional Intelligence, Social intelligence, measurement of intelligence and aptitudes, concept of I Q deviation I Q, constancy of I Q; Measurement of multiple intelligence; Fluid intelligence and crystallized intelligence.
11. Personality. - Definition and concept of personality; Theories of personality (psychoanalytical, socio-cultural, interpersonal, developmental, humanistic, behaviouristic, trait and type approaches); Measurement of personality (projective tests, pencil-paper test); The Indian approach to personality; Training for personality development; Latest approaches like big 5 factor theory; The notion of self in different traditions.
12. Attitudes, Values and Interests. - Definitions of attitudes, values and interests; Components of attitudes; Formation and maintenance of attitudes. Measurement of attitudes, values and interests. Theories of attitude changes, strategies for fostering values. Formation of stereotypes and prejudices; Changing other's behaviour, Theories of attribution; Recent trends.
13. Language and Communication. - Human language- Properties, structure and linguistic hierarchy, Language acquisition-predispotion, critical period hypothesis; Theories of Language development-Skinner and Chomsky; Process and types of communication-effective communication training.
14. Issues and Perspectives in Modern Contemporary Psychology. - Computer application in the psychological laboratory and psychological testing; Artificial intelligence; Psychocybernetics; Study of consciousnessleep-wak schedules; dreams, stimulus deprivation, meditation, hypnotic drug induced states; Extrasensory perception; Intersensory perception; Simulation studies.
Paper-IIPsychology : Issues and applications-1. Psychological Measurement of Individual Differences. - The nature of individual differences. Characteristics and construction of standardized psychological tests. Types of psychological tests. Use, misuse and limitation of psychological tests. Ethical issues in the use of psychological tests.
2. Psychological well being and Mental Disorders. - Concept of health-ill health positive health, well being casual factores in Mental disorders (Anxiety disorders, mood disorders; schizophrenia and delusional disorders; personality disorders, substance abuse disorders). Factors influencing positive health, well being; lifestyle and quality of life; Happiness disposition
3. Therapeutic Approaches. - Psychodynamic therapies. Behaviour therapies. Client centered therapy. Cognitive therapies. Indigenous therapies (Yoga, Meditation). Biofeedback therapy. Prevention and rehabilitation of the mentally ill; Fostering mental health.
4. Work Psychology and Organisational Behaviour. - Personnel selection and training. Use of Psychological tests in the industry. Training and human resource development. Theories of work motivation. Herzberg, Maslow, Adam Equity theory, Porter and Lawler, Vroom; Leadership and participatory management; Advertising and marketing; Stress and its management; Ergonomics; consumer psychology; Managerial effectiveness; Transformational leadersip; Senitivity training; Power and politics in organizations.
5. Application of Psychology to Educational Field. - Psychological principles underlying effective teaching-learning process. Learning styles. Gifted, retarded, learning disabled and their training. Training for improving memory and better academic achievement. Personality development and value education. Educational, vocational guidance and Career counselling. Use of Psychological tests in educational institutions; Effective strategies in guidance programmes.
6. Community Psychology. - Definition and concept of Community Psychology. Use of small groups in social action. Arousing Community consciousness and action for handling social problems. Group decision making and leadership for social change. Effective strategies for social change.
7. Rehabilitation Psychology. - Primary, secondary and tertiary prevention programmes-role of psychologists. Organising of services for rehabilitation of physically, mentally and socially challenged persons including old persons. Rehabilitation of persons suffering from substance abuse, juvenile delinquency, criminal behaviours. Rehabilitation of victims of violence. Rehabilitation of HIV/AIDS victims, the role of social agencies.
8. Application of Psychology to disadvantaged groups. - The concepts of disadvantaged, deprivation social, physical, cultural and economic consequences of disadvantaged and deprived groups. Educating and motivating the disadvantaged towards development; Relative and prolonged deprivation.
9. Psychological problem of social integration. - The concept of social integration. The problem of caste, class, religion and language conflicts and prejudice. Nature and manifestation of prejudice between the ingroup and outgroup. Casual factors of such conflicts and prejudices. Psychological strategies for handling the conflicts and prejudices. Measures to achieve social integration.
10. Application of Psychology in Information Technology and Mass Media. - The present scenario of information technology and the mass media boom and the role of psychologists. Selection and training of Psychology professionals to work in the field of IT and mass media. Distance learning through IT and mass media. Entrepreneurship through e-commerce. Multilevel marketing. Impact of TV and fostering value through IT and mass media. Psychological consequences of recent developments in Information Technology.
11. Psychology and Economic development. - Achievement motivation and economic development. Characteristics of entrepreneurial behaviour. Motivating and Training people for entrepreneurship and economic development; Consumer rights and consumer awareness, Government policies for promotion of entrepreneurship among youth including women entreprenures.
12. Application of Psychology to environment and related fields. - Environmental Psychology effects of noise, pollution and crowding. Population Psychology : Psychological consequence of population explosion and high population density. Motivating for small family norms. Impact of rapid scientific and technological growth on degradation of environment
13. Application of psychology in other fields. - (a) Military Psychology
Devising psycological tests for defence personnel for use in selection, Training, counseling; training psychologists to work , with defence personnel in promoting positive health; Human engineering in defence.14. Psychology of Gender. - Issues of discrimination, Management of diversity; Glass ceiling effect, Self-fulfilling prophesy, Women and Indian society.
Public AdministrationPaper-IAdministration Theory-1. Introduction. - Meaning, scope and significance of Public Administration, Wilson's vision of Public Administration, Evolution of the discipline and its present status. New Public Administration, Public Choice approach; Challenges of liberalization, Privatisation, Globalisation; Good Governance: concept and application; New Public Management.
2. Administrative Thought. - Scientific Management and Scientific Management movement; Classical Theory; Weber's bureaucratic model its critique and post- Weberian Developments; Dynamic Administration (Mary Parker Follett); Human Relations School (Elton Mayo and others); Functions of the Executive (C.I. Barnard); Simon's decision-making theory; Participative Man-agement (R. Likert, C. Argyris, D. Mc Gregor.)
3. Administrative Behaviour. - Process and techniques of decision-making; Communication; Morale; Motivation Theories content, process and contemporary; Theories of Leadership: Traditional and Mo-dem:
4. Organisations. - Theories systems, contingency; Structure and forms: Ministries and Departments, Corporations, Companies; Boards and Commissions; Ad hoc and advisory bodies; Headquarters and Field relationships; Regulatory Authorities; Public-Private Partnerships.
5. Accountability and Control. - Concepts of accountability and control; Legislative, Executive and judicial control over administration; Citizen and Administration; Role of media, interest groups, voluntary organizations; Civil society; Citizen's Charters; Right to Information; Social audit.
6. Administrative Law. - Meaning, scope and significance ; Dicey on Administrative law; Delegated legislation; Administrative Tribunals.
7. Comparative Public Administration. - Historical and sociological factors affecting administrative systems; Administration and politics in different countries; Current status of Comparative Public Administration; Ecology and administration; Riggsian models and their critique.
8. Development Dynamics. - Concept of development; Changing profile of development administration; 'Anti-development thesis'; Bureaucracy and development; Strong state versus the market debate; Impact of liberalisation on administration in developing countries; Women and development the self-help group movement.
9. Personnel Administration. - Importance of human resource development; Recruitment, training, career advancement, position classification, discipline, performance appraisal, promotion, pray and service conditions; employer-employee relations, grievance redressal mechanism; Code of conduct; Administrative ethics.
10. Public Policy. - Models of policy-making and their critique; Processes of conceptualisation, planning, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and review and their limitations; State theories and public policy formulation.
11. Techniques of Adminstrative Improvement. - Organisation and methods, Work study and work management; e-governance and information technology; Man-agement aid tools like network analysis, MIS, PERT, CPM.
12. Financial Administration. - Monetary and fiscal policies: Public borrowings and public debt Budgets types and forms; Budgetary process; Financial accountability; Accounts and audit.
Paper-IIIndian Administration-1. Evolution of Indian Administration. - Kautilya Arthashastra; Mughal administration; Legacy of British rule in politics and administration, Indianization of Public services, revenue administration, district Administration, local self Government. .
2. Philosophical and Constitutional framework of Government. - Salient features and value premises; Constitutionalism; Political culture; Bureaucracy and democracy; Bureaucracy and development.
3. Public Sector Undertakings. - Public sector in modern India; Forms of Public Sector Undertakings; Problems of autonomy, accountability and control; Impact of liberalization and privatization.
4. Union Government and Administration. - Executive, Parliament, Judiciary-structure, functions, work processes; Recent trends; Intra-governmental relations; Cabinet Secretariat; Prime Minister's Office; Central Secretariat; Ministries and Departments; Boards; Commissions; Attached offices; Field organizations.
5. Plans and Priorities. - Machinery of planning; Role, composition and functions of the Planning Commission and the National Development Council; 'Indicative' planning; Process of plan formulation at Union and State levels; Constitutional Amendments (1992) and decentralized planning for economic development and social justice.
6. State Government and Administration. - Union-State administrative, legislative and financial relations; Role of the Finance Commission; Governor; Chief Minister; Council of Ministers; Chief Secretary; State Secretariat; Directorates.
7. District Administration since Independence. - Changing role of the Collector; Union-State-local relations; Imperatives of development management and law and order administration; District administration and democratic decentralization.
8. Civil Services. - Constitutional position; Structure, recruitment, training and capacity building; Good governance initiatives; Code of conduct and discipline; Staff associations; Political rights; Grievance redressal mechanism; Civil service neutrality; Civil service activism.
9. Financial Management. - Budget as a political instrument; Parliamentary control of public expenditure; Role of finance ministry in monetary and fiscal area; Accounting techniques; Audit; Role of Controller General of Accounts and Comptroller and Auditor General of India.
10. Administrative Reforms since Independence. - Major concerns; Important Committees and Commissions; Reforms in financial management and human resource development; Problems of implementation.
11. Rural Development. - Institutions and agencies since Independence; Rural development programmes: foci and strategies; Decentralization and Panchayati Raj; 73rd Constitutional amendment.
12. Urban Local Government. - Municipal governance: main features, structures, finance and problem areas; 74th Constitutional Amendment; Global-local debate; New localism; Development dynamics, politics and administration with special reference to city management.
13. Law and Order Administration. - British legacy; National Police Commission; Investigative agencies; Role of Central and State Agencies including paramilitary forces in maintenance of law and order and countering insurgency and terrorism; Criminalisation of politics and administration; Police-public relations; Reforms in Police.
14. Significant issues in Indian Administration. - Values in public service; Regulatory Commissions; National Human Rights Commission; Problems of administration in coalition regimes; Citizen administration interface; Corruption and administration; Disaster management.
SociologyPaper-IFundamentals of Sociology1. Sociology - The Discipline. - (a) Modernity and social changes in Europe and emergence of Sociology.
2. Sociology as Science. - (a) Science, scientific method and critique.
3. Research Methods and Analysis. - (a) Qualitative and quantitative methods.
4. Sociological Thinkers. - (a) Karl Marx - Historical materialism, mode of production, alienation, class struggle.
5. Stratification and Mobility. - (a) Concepts - equality, inequality, hierarchy, exclusion, poverty and deprivation.
6. Works and Economic Life. - (a) Social organization of work in different types of society - slave society, feudal society, industrial capitalist society.
7. Politics and Society. - (a) Sociological theories of power.
8. Religion and Society. - (a) Sociological theories of religion.
9. Systems of Kinship. - (a) Family, household, marriage.
10. Social Change in Modern Society. - (a) Sociological theories of social change.
1. Probability. - Sample space and events, probability measure and probability space, random variable as a measurable function, distribution function of a random variable, discrete and continuous-type random variable, probability mass function, probability density function, vector-valued random variable, marginal and conditional distributions, stochastic independence of events and of random variables, expectation and moments of a random variable, conditional expectation, convergence of a sequence of random variable in distribution, in probability, in path mean and almost everywhere, their criteria and inter-relations, Chebyshev's inequality and Khintchine's weak law of large numbers, strong law of large numbers and Kolmogoroffs theorems, probability generating function, moment generating function, characteristic function, inversion theorem, Linderberg and Levy forms of central limit theo-rem, standard discrete and continuous probability distributions.
2. Statistical Inference. - Consistency, unbiasedness, efficiency, sufficiency, completeness, ancillary statistics, factorization theorem, exponen-tial family of distribution and its properties, uniformly minimum variance unbiased (UMVU) estimation, Rao Blackwell and Lehmann-Scheffe theorems, Cramer-Rao inequality for single Parameter. Estimation by methods of moments, maximum likelihood, least squares, minimum chisquare and modified minimum chisquare, properties of maximum likelihood and other estimators, asymptotic efficiency, prior and posterior distributions, loss function, risk function, and minimax estimator. Bayes estimators.
Non-randomised and randomised tests, critical function, MP tests, Neyman-Pearson lemma, UMP tests, monotone like-lihood ratio: similar and unbiased tests, UMPU tests for single paramet likelihood ratio test and its asymptotic distribution. Confidence bounds and its relation with tests.Kolmogorov's test for goodness of fit and its consistency, sign test and its optimality. Wilcoxon signedranks test and its consistency, Kolmogorov-Smirnov two sampletest, run test, Wilcoxon-Mann- Whitney test and median test, their consistency and asymptotic normality.Wald's SPRT and its properties, Oc and ASN functions for tests regarding parameters for Bernoulli, Poisson, normal and exponential distributions. Wald's fundamental identity.3. Linear Inference and Multivariate Analysis. - Linear statistical models, theory of least squares and analysis of variance, Gauss-Markoff theory, normal equations, least squares estimates and their precision, test of significance and interval estimates based on least squares theory in oneway, two-way and three-way classified data, regression analysis, linear regression, curvilinear regression and orthogo-nal polynomials, multiple regression, multiple and partial correlations, estimation of variance and covariance components, multivariate normal distribution, Mahalanobis's D2 and Hotelling's T2 statistics and their applications and properties, discriminant analysis, canonical correlations, principal component analysis.
4. Sampling Theory and Design of Experiments. - An outline of fixed-population and super-population approaches, distinctive features of finite population sampling, propability sampling designs, simple random sampling with and without replacement, stratified random sampling, sys-tematic sampling and its efficacy, cluster sampling, twostage and multi-stage sampling, ratio and regression methods of estimation involving one or more auxiliary variables, two-phase sampling, probability proportional to size sampling with and without replacement, the Hansen-Hurwitz and the Horvitz- Thompson estimators, non-negative variance estimation with reference to the Horvitz-Thompson estimator, non-sampling errors.
Fixed effects model (two-way classification) random and mixed effects models (two-way classification with equal observation per cell), CRD, RBD, LSD and their analyses, incom-plete block designs, concepts of orthogonality and balance, BIBD, missing plot technique, factorial experiments and 24 and 32, confounding in factorial experiments, split-plot and simple lattice designs, transformation of data Duncan's multiple range test.Paper-II1. Industrial Statistics. - Process and product control, general theory of control charts, different types of control charts for variables and attributes, X, R, s, p, np and charts, cumulative sum chart. Single, double, multiple and sequential sampling plans for attributes, OC, ASN, AOQ and ATI curves, concepts of producer's and consumer's risks, AQL, LTPD and AOQL, Sampling plans for variables, Use of Dodge-Romin tables. Concept of reliability, failure rate and reliability functions, reliability of series and parallel systems and other simple configurations, renewal density and renewal function, Failure models: exponential, Weibull, normal, lognormal. Problems in life testing, censored and truncated experiments for exponential models.
2. Optimization Techniques. - Different types of models in Operations Research, their construction and general methods of solution, simulation and Monte-Carlo methods formulation of Linear Programming (LP) problem, simple LP model and its graphical solution, the simplex procedure, the two-phase method and the M-technique with artificial variables, the duality theory of LP and its economic interpretation, sensitivity analysis, transpotation and assignment problems, rectangular games, two-person zerosum games, methods of solution (graphical and algebric).
Replacement of failing or deteriorating items, group and individual replacement policies, concept of scientific inventory management and analytical structure of inventory problems, simple models with deterministic and stochastic demand with and without lead time, storage models with particular reference to dam type.Homogeneous discrete-time Markov chains, transition probability matrix, classification of states and ergodic theorems, homogeneous continuous-time Markov chains, Pois-son process, elements of queuing theory, M/MI, M/M/K, G/ M/l and M/G/1 queues.Solution of statistical problems on computers using well-known statistical software packages like SPSS.3. Quantitative Economics and Official Statistics. - Determination of trend, seasonal and cyclical components, Box- Jenkins method, tests for stationary series, ARIMA models and determination of orders of autoregressive and moving average components, fore-casting.
Commonly used index numbers - Laspeyre's, Paasche's and Fisher's ideal index numbers, cham-base index number, uses and limitations of index numbers, index number of wholesale prices, consumer price, agricultural production and industrial production, test fot index numbers -proportionality, time-reversal, factor-reversal and circular.General linear model, ordinary least square and generalized least squares methods of estimation, problem of multi-collinearity, consequences and solutions of multi-collinearity, autocorrelation and its consequences, heteroscedasticity of disturbances and its testing, test for independence of disturbances concept of structure and model for simultaneous equations, problem of identification-rank and order conditions of identifiability, two-stage least square method of estimation.Present official statistical system in India relating to population, agriculture, industrial production, trade and prices, methods of collection of official statistics, their reliability and limitations, principal publications containing such statistics, various official agencies responsible for data collection and their main functions.4. Demography and Psychometry. - Demographic data from census, registration, NSS other surveys, their limitations and uses, definition, construction and uses of vital rates and ratios, measures of fertility, reproduction rates, morbidity rate, standardized death rate, complete and abridged life tables, construction of life tables from vital statistics and census returns, uses of life tables, logistic and other population growth curves, fitting a logistic curve, population projection, stable population, quasi-stable population, techniques in estimation of demographic parameters, standard classification by cause of death, health surveys and use of hospital statistics.
Methods of standardisation of scales and tests, Z-scores, standard scores, T-scores, percentile scores, intelligence quotient and its measurement and uses, validity and reliability of test scores and its determination, use of factor analysis and path analysis in psychometry.ZoologyPaper-I1. Non-chordata and Chordata. - (a) Classification and relationship of various phyla up to subclasses: Acoelomate and Coelomate, Protostomes and Deuterostomes, Bilateria and Radiata; Status of Protista, Parazoa, Onychophora and Hemichordata; Symmetry.
2. Ecology. - (a) Biosphere: concept of biosphere; biomes, Biogeochemical cycles, Human induced changes in atmosphere including green house effect, ecological succession, biomes and ecotones, community ecology.
3. Ethology. - (a) Behaviour : Sensory filtering, responsiveness, sign stimuli, learning, and memory, instinct, habituation, conditioning, imprinting.
4. Economic Zoology. - (a) Apiculture, sericulture, lac culture, carp culture, pearl culture, prawn culture, vermiculture.
5. Biostatistics. - Designing of experiments; null hypothesis; correlation, regression, distribution and measure of central tendency, chi square, studenttest, F-test (one-way & two-way F-test).
6. Instrumentation methods. - (a) Spectrophotometer, phase contrast and fluorescence microscopy, radioactive tracer, ultra centrifuge, gel . electrophoresis, PCR, ELISA, FISH and chromosome painting.
1. Cell Biology. - (a) Structure and function of cell and its organelles (nucleus, plasma membrane, mitochondria, Golgi bodies, endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomes and lysosomes), cell division (mitosis and meiosis), mitotic spindle and mitotic apparatus, chromosome movement chromosome type ploytene and lambrush, organization of chromatin, heterochromatin, Cell cycle regulation.
2. Genetics. - (a) Modern concept of gene, split gene, genetic regulation, genetic, code.
3. Evolution. - (a) Theories of origin of life.
4. Systematics. - Zoological nomenclature, international code, cladistics, molecular taxonomy and biodiversity.
5. Biochemistry. - (a) Structure and role of carbohydrates, fats, fatty acids, cholesterol, proteins and amino-acids, nucleic acids. Bioenergetics.
6. Physiology (with special reference to mammals). - (a) Composition and constituents of blood; blood groups and Rh factor in man ; factors and mechanism of coagulation; iron metabolism, acid-base balance, thermo regulation, anticoagulants.
7. Developmental Biology. - (a) Gametogenesis ; spermatogenesis, composition of semen, in vitro and in vivo capacitation of mammalian sperm, Oogenesis, totipotency; fertilization, morphogenesis and morphogen; blastogeneis, establishment of body axes formation, fate map, gestulation in frog and chick; genes in development in chick homeotic genes, development of eye and heart, placenta in mammals.
1. (a) Origin and Development of the language in outline.
2. Literary History and Literary criticism-Literary movements, classical background ; Socio-Cultural influences, and modern trends, Origin and development of modern literary geners including drama, novel, short story, essay.
3. Short Essay-in Arabic.
Paper-IIThis paper will require first-hand reading of the texts prescribed and will be designed to test the candidate's critical ability.Poets1. Imraul Qais : His Maullaqah : "Qifaa Nabki mim Zikraa Hawibin Wa Manzil" (Complete).
2. Zohair Bin Abi Sulma : His maullaqah :- "A min Aufaa dimnatun lam takaleami" (Complete).
3. Hassan Bin Thabit : The following live Qasaid from his Diwan : From Qasidah No.1 to Qasidah IV and the Qasidah: "Lillahi, Darru isaabatin Nadamtuhum + Yauman bijlilaqa."
4. Umar Bin Abi Rabiah: 5 Ghazals from his Diwan :
5. Farazdaq : The following 4 Qasaid from his Diwan :
6. Bashhar Bin Murd. The following two Qasaid from his Diwan :
7. Abu Nawas. First three Qasaid from his Diwan.
8. Shaqui : The following five Qasaid from his Diwan "Al- Shauqiyal".
1. Ibnul Muqalf: "Kaliala Wa Dimna" excluding Muqaddamah :-
Chapter 1
Complete "AI Asad wa-al thaus".
2. Al-Jahiz: AI-Bayan Wat Tab'in : VII Edited by Abdul Salam Mohd.
Haroon. Cairo, Egypt from pp. 31 to 85.3. Ibn Khaldun : his Muqaddamah : 39 pages; part six from the first chapter :
From "Affaslul saadis minal kitaabil awal" to "wa min Furooihi al Jabruwal muqabla"4. Mohmud Timur: Story "Amml Mutawallji" from his book "Qaalar Raavi".
5. Taufiq Al-Hakim : Drama : "Sinnul muntahiraa" from his book "Masrahiyatu Tahtiqal Hakim".
Note : - Candidates will be required to answer some questions carrying not less than 25 percent marks in Arabic also.DogriPaper-IHistory of Dogri Language and Literature(Answers must be written in Dogri)Section-AHistory of Dogri Language :1. Dogri Language: Origin and development through different stages.
2. Linguistic boundaries of Dogri and its dialects.
3. Characteristic features of Dogri Language.
4. Structure of Dogri Language :
5. Dogri Language and Scripts : Dogre/Dogra Akkhar, Devanagari and Persia.
Section-BHistory of Dogri Language :1. A brief account of Pre-independence Dogri Literature : Poetry and Prose.
2. Development of modern Dogri Poetry and main trends in Dogri Poetry.
3. Development of Dogri short-story, main trends and prominent shortstorywriters.
4. Development of Dogri Novel, main trends and contribution of Dogri Novelists.
5. Development of Dogri Drama and contribution of prominent playwrights.
6. Development of Dogri Prose: essays, Memoirs and travelogues.
7. An introduction to Dogri Folk Literature-Folk songs, folk tales 7 ballads.
Paper-IITextual Criticism of Dogri Literature.(Answers must be written in Dogri)Section-APoetry :1. Azadi Paihle Di Dogri Kavita
The following poets :Devi Ditta, Lakkhu, Ganga Ram, Ramdhan, Hardutt, Pahari Gandhi Babak Kanshi Ram and Permanand Almast.2. Modern Dogri Poetry.
Azadi Bad Di Dogri Kavita-The following poets :Kishan Smailpuri, Tara Smailpuri Mohan Lal Sapolia, Yash Sharma, K.S.Madhukar,, Padma Sachdev, Jitendra Udhampuri, Charan Singh and Prakash Premi3. Sheeraza Dogri Number 102, Ghazal Ank-
The following poets :Ram Lal Sharma, Ved Pal Deep, N.D. Jamwal, Shiv Ram Deep, Ashwini Magotra and Virendra Kesar4. Sheeraza Dogri Number 147, Ghazal Ank-
The following poets :R. N. Shastri, Jitendra Udhampuri, Champa Sharma and Darsha Darshi.5. Ramayan (Epic) by Shambhu Nath Sharma (up to Ayodhya Kand)
6. Veer Gulab (Khand Kavya) by Dinoo Bhai Pant.
SECTION-BProse :1. Ajakani Dogri Kahani
The following Short Story Writers :Madan Mohan Sharma, Narendra Khajuria and B. P. Sathe.2. Ajakani Dogri Kahani Part-II
The following Short Story Writers :Ved Rahi, Narsingh Dev Jamwal, Om Goswami, Chahttrapal, Lalit Magotra, Chaman Arora and Ratan Kesar3. Khatha Kunj Bhag-II
The following Story Writers :Om Vidyarthi, Champa Sharma and Krishan Sharma.4. Meel Patthar (collection of short stories) by Bandhu Sharma.
5. Kaiddi (Novel) by Desh Bandhu Dogra Nutan.
6. Nanga Rukkh (Novel) by O.P. Sharma Sarathi.
7. Nayaan (Drama) by Mohan Singh.
8. Satrang (A collection of one-act plays). The following playwrights :
Vishwa Nath Khajuria, Ram Nath Shastri, Jitendra Sharma, Lalit Magotra and Madan Mohan Sharma9. Dogri Lalit Nibandh
The following authors :Vishwa Nath Khajuria, Narayan Mishra, Balkrishan Shastri, Shiv Nath, Shyam Lal Sharma, Lakshmi Narayan, D.C. Prashant, Ved Ghai, Kunwar Viyogi.EnglishThe syllabus consists of two papers, designed to test a first hand and critical reading of texts prescribed from the following periods in English Literature: Paper I: 1600-1900 and Paper II: 1900-1990.(There will be two compulsory questions in each paper: (a) A shortnotes question related to the topics for general study, and (b) A critical analysis of UNSEEN passages both in prose and verse.)Paper-I(Answers must be written in English)Texts for detailed study are listed below. Candidates will also be required to show adequate knowledge of the following topics and movements :The Renaissance ; Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama ; Metaphysical Poetry ; The Epic and the Mockepic ; Neoclassicism ; Satire ; The Romantic Movement ; The Rise of the Novel ; The Victorian Age.Section-A1. William Shakespeare : King Lear and The Tempest.
2. John Donne. The following poems :
-Canonization ;-Death be not proud ;-The Good Morrow ;-On his Mistress going to bed ;-The Relic ;3. John Milton: Paradise Lost, I, II, IV, IX.
4. Alexander Pope. The Rape of the Lock.
5. William Wordsworth. The following poems :
-Ode on Intimations of Immortality.-Tintern Abbey.-Three years she grew.-She dwelt among untrodden ways.-Michael.-Resolution and Independence.-The World is too much with us.-Milton, thou shouldst be living at this hour.-Upon Westminster Bridge.6. Alfred Tennyson: In Memoriam.
7. Henrik Ibsen: A Doll's House.
Section-B1. Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels.
2. Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice.
3. Henry Fielding. Tom Jones.
4. Charles Dickens. Hard Times.
5. George Eliot. The Mill on the Floss.
6. Thomas Hardy. Tess of the d'Urbervilles.
7. Mark Twain. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
Paper-II(Answers must be written in English)Texts for detailed study are listed below. Candidates will also be required to show adequate knowledge of the following topics and movements :Modernism ; Poets of the Thirties ; The stream of consciousness Novel ; Absurd Drama ; Colonialism and Post-Colonialism; Indian Writing in English; Marxist, Psychoanalytical and Feminist approaches to literature; Post-Modernism.Section-A1. William Butler Yeats. The following poems :
-Easter 1916.-The Second Coming.-A Prayer for my daughter.-Sailing to Byzantium.-The Tower.-Among School Children.-Leda and the Swan.-Meru.-Lapis Lazuli.-The Second Coming.-Byzantium.2. T. S. Eliot. The following poems :
-The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.-Journey of the Magi.-Burnt Norton.3. W. H. Auden. The following poems :
-Partition.-Musee des Beaux Arts.-In Memory of W. B. Yeats.-Lay your sleeping head, my love.-The Unknown Citizen.-Consider.-Mundus Et Infans.-The Shield of Achilles.-September 1, 1939.-Petition.4. John Osborne: Look Back in Anger.
5. Samuel Beckett. Waiting for Godot.
6. Philip Larkin. The following poems :
-Next.-Please.- Deceptions.- Afternoons.- Days.- Mr. Bleaney.7. A.K. Ramanujan. The following poems :
-Looking for a Cousin on a Swing.-A River.-Of Mothers, among other Things.-Love Poem for a Wife 1.-Small-Scale Reflections on a Great House.-Obituary.(All these poems are available in the anthology Ten Twentieth Century Indian Poets, edited by R. Parthasarthy, published by Oxford University Press, New Delhi).Section-B1. Joseph Conrad. Lord Jim.
2. James Joyce. Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
3. D.H. Lawrence. Sons and Lovers.
4. E.M. Forster. A Passage to India.
5. Virginia Woolf. Mrs. Dalloway.
6. Raja Rao. Kanthapura.
7. V.S. Naipaul. A House for Mr. Biswa.
HindiPaper-I(Answers must be written in Hindi)Section-A1. History of Hindi Language and Nagari Lipi :
I. Grammatical and applied forms of Apbhransh, Awahatta & Arambhik Hindi.II. Development of Braj and Awadhi as Literary language during medieval period.III. Early form of Khari-boli in Siddha-Nath Sahitya, Khusero, Sant Sahitaya, Rahim etc. and Dakhni Hindi.IV. Development of Khari-boli and Nagari Lipi during 19th Century.V. Standardisation of Hindi Bhasha & Nagari Lipi.VI. Development of Hindi as a National Language during freedom movement.VII. The development of Hindi as a National Language of Union of India.VIII. Scientific & Technical Development of Hindi Language.IX. Prominent dialects of Hindi and their inter-relationship.X. Salient features of Nagari Lipi and the efforts for its reform & Standard form of Hindi.XI. Grammatical structure of Standard Hindi.Section-B2. History of Hindi Literature :
I. The relevance and importance of Hindi literature and tradition of writing History of Hindi Literature.II. Literary trends of the following four periods of history of Hindi Literature.A. Adikal-Sidh, Nath and Raso Sahitya. Prominent poets- Chandvardai, Khusaro,Hemchandra, Vidyapati.B. Bhaktikal-Sant Kavyadhara, Sufi Kavyadhara, Krishna Bhaktidhara and Ram Bhaktidhara.Prominent Poets-Kabir, Jayasi, Sur & Tulsi.C. Ritikal-Ritikavya, Ritibaddhkavya & Riti Mukta Kavya. Prominent Poets-Keshav, Bihari, Padmakar and Ghananand.D. Adhunik Kal-a. Renaissance, the development of Prose, Bharatendu Mandal.b. Prominent Writers-Bharatendu, Bal Krishna Bhatt & Pratap Narain Mishra.c. Prominent trends of modern Hindi Poetry: Chhayavad, Pragativad, Prayogvad, Nai Kavita, Navgeet and Contemporary poetry and Janvadi Kavita.Prominent Poets-Maithili Sharan Gupta, Prasad, Nirala, Mahadevi, Dinkar, Agyeya, Muktibodh, Nagarjun.3. Katha Sahitya :
A. Upanyas & RealismB. The origin and development of Hindi Novels.C. Prominent Novelists-Premchand, Jainendra, Yashpal, Renu and Bhism Sahani.D. The origin and development of Hindi short story.E. Prominent Short Story Writers-Premchand, Prasad, Agyeya, Mohan Rakesh & Krishna Sobti.4. Drama & Theatre :
A. The Origin & Development of Hindi Drama.B. Prominent Dramatists-Bharatendu, Prasad, Jagdish Chandra Mathur, Ram Kumar Verma, Mohan Rakesh.C. The development of Hindi Theatre.5. Criticism :
A. The origin and development of Hindi criticism : Saiddhantik, Vyavharik, Pragativadi. Manovishleshanvadi & Nai Alochana.B. Prominent critics-Ramchandra Shukla, Hajari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma & Nagendra.6. The other form of Hindi prose-Lalit Nibandh,Rekhachitra, Sansmaran, Yatra-vrittant.
Paper-II(Answers must be written in Hindi)The paper will require first-hand reading of the prescribed texts and will test the critical ability of the candidates.| Section-A | ||
| 1. | Kabir | Kabir Granthawali, Ed. Shyam Sundar Das (Firsthundred Sakhis) |
| 2. | Surdas | Bhramar Gitsar, Ed. Ramchandra Shukla (Firsthundred Padas) |
| 3. | Tulsidas | Ramcharit Manas (Sundar Kand) Kavitawali(Uttarkand) |
| 4. | Jayasi | Padmawat Ed. Shyam Sundar Das (Sinhal Dwip Khandand Nagmativiyog Khan) |
| 5. | Bihari | Bihari Ratnakar Ed. Jagnnath Prasad Ratnakar(First 100 Dohas) |
| 6. | Maithili Sharan Gupta | Bharat Bharati |
| 7. | Prasad | Kamayani (Chinta and Shraddha Sarg) |
| 8. | Nirala | Rag-Virag, Ed. Ram Vilas Sharma (Ram Ki ShaktiPuja & Kukurmutta) |
| 9. | Dinkar | Kurukshetra |
| 10. | Agyeya | Angan Ke Par Dwar (Asadhya Vina) |
| 11. | Mukiboth | Brahm Rakhashas |
| 12. | Nagarjun | Badal Ko Ghirte Dekha Hai, Akal Ke Bad, HarijanGatha. |
| Section-B | ||
| 1. | Bharatendu | Bharat Durdasha |
| 2. | Mohan Rakesh | Ashad Ka Ek Din |
| 3. | Ramchandra Shukla | Chintamani (Part I) (Kavita Kya Hai, ShraddhaAur Bhakti) |
| 4. | Dr. Satyendra | Nibandh Nilaya-Bal Krishna Bhatt, Premchand,Gulab Rai, Hajari Prasad Dwivedi, Ram Vilas Sharma, Agyeya, KuberNath Rai. |
| 5. | Premchand | Godan, Premchand ki Sarvashreshtha Kahaniyan,Ed. Amirt Rai, Manjusha-Prem Chand ki Sarvashreshtha Kahaniyan.Ed. Amrit Rai. |
| 6. | Prasad | Skandgupta. |
| 7. | Yashpal | Divya. |
| 8. | Phaniswar Nath Renu | Maila Anchal. |
| 9. | Mannu Bhandari | Mahabhoj. |
| 10. | Rajendra Yadav | Ed. Dunia Sammantar (All Stories) |
1. Genealogical relationship of the Kashmiri language: various theories.
2. Areas of occurrence and dialects (geographical/social).
3. Phonology and grammar.
i. Vowel and consonant system ;ii. Nouns and pronouns with various case inflections ;iii. Verbs : various types and tenses ;4. Syntactic structure :
i. Simple, active and declarative statements ;ii. Coordination ;iii. Relativisation.Section-B1. Kashmiri literature in the 14th century (Socio-cultural and intellectual background with special reference to Lal Dyad and Sheikhul Alam).
2. Nineteenth century Kashmiri literature (development of various genres : vatsun; ghazal and mathnavi.
3. Kashmiri literature in the first half of the twentieth century (with special reference to Mahjoor and Azad; various literary influences).
4. Modern Kashmiri literature (with special reference to the development of the short story, drama, novel and nazm).
Paper-II(Answers must be written in Kashmiri)Section-A1. Intensive study of Kashmiri poetry upto the nineteenth century :
2. Kashmiri poetry: 19th Century :
3. Twentieth Century Kashmiri poetry (text in Azich Kashir Shairi, published by the Deptt. of Kashmiri, University of Kashmir).
4. Literary criticism and research work : development and various trends.
Section-B1. An analytical study of the short story in Kashmiri :
2. Novels in Kashmiri: :
3. Drama in Kashmiri :
4. Kashmiri Folk Literature :
1. (a) Origin and development of the language (in outline)
2. Literary History and Literary criticism-Literary movements, classical backgrounds, Socio Cultural influences and Modern trends; Origin and development of modern literary genres, including drama, novel, short story, essay.
3. Short Essay in Persian.
Paper-IIThis paper will require first-hand reading of the texts prescribed and will be designed to test the candidate's critical ability.1. Firdausi, Shah Nama :
2. Nizammi Aruzi Samarquadi Chahar Maqala.
3. Khayyam, Rabaiyat (Radif Alif, Be, Dal).
4. Minucheheri - Qasaid (Racif Lam and Mim).
5. Maulana Rum Masunawi (1st Vol. 1st Half).
6. Sadi Shirazi Gulistan.
7. Amir Khusrau Majma-i-Dawawin Khusrau (Radif Alif and Te)
8. Hafiz,. Diwan -i-Hafiz (1st half)
9. Abdul Fazi. Ain-i-Akbari
10. Bahar Mashhadi Diwan-i-Bahar (I Vol.) (1st half)
11. Jawal Zadesh Yake Bud Yake Na Bud.
Note : - Candidates will be required to answer in Persian questions carrying not less than 25 per cent marks.PunjabiPaper-A(Answers must be written in Punjabi in Gurumukhi script)Section-A| Section-B | ||
| a. | Modern Trends | Mystic, romantic, progressive and neomystic (VirSingh, Puran Singh, Mohan Singh, Amrita Pritam, Bawa Balwant,Pritam Singh Safeer, J. S.Neki). |
| Experimentalist (Jasbir Singh Ahluwalia, AvinderRavi, Ajaib Kamal). Aesthetes (Harbhajan Singh, Tara Singh).Neo-progressive (Pash, Jagtar, Patar). | ||
| b. | Folk Literature | Folk songs, Folk tales, Riddles, Proverbs. |
| Epic | (Vir Singh, Avtar Singh Azad, Mohan Singh). | |
| Lyric | (Gurus, Sufis and Modern Lyricists- Mohan Singh,Amrita Pritam, Shiv Kumar, Harbhajan Singh). | |
| c. | Drama | (I.C. Nanda, Harcharan Singh,Balwant Gargi, S.S.Sekhon,Charan Das Sidhu). |
| Novel | (Vir Singh, Nanak Singh, Jaswant Singh Kanwal,K.S. Duggal,Sukhbir, Gurdial Singh, Dalip Kaur Tiwana, SwaranChandan). | |
| Short Story | (Sujan Singh, K. S. Virk, Prem Parkash, WaryamSandhu). | |
| d. | Socio-cultural Literary influences ; | Sanskrit, Persian and Western |
| Essay | (Puran Singh, Teja Singh, Gurbaksh Singh). | |
| Literary Criticism | (S.S. Sekhon, Attar Singh, Kishan Singh,Harbhajan Singh, Najam Hussain Sayyad). |
| Section-A | |
| Sheikh Farid | The complete Bani as included in the Adi Granth. |
| Guru Nanak | Japu Ji. Baramah. Asa di Var. |
| Bulleh Shah | Kafian. |
| Waris Shah | Heer. |
| Section B | |
| Shah Mohammad | Jangnama (Jang Singhante Firangian) |
| Dhani Ram Chatrik | Chandan Vari |
| (Poet) Sufi Khana | Nawan Jahan |
| Nanak Singh (Novelist) | Chitta Lahu Pavittar Papi Ek Mian Do Talwaran |
| Gurbaksh Singh | Zindagi-di-Ras |
| (Essayist) | Nawan Shivala Merian Abhul Yadaan. |
| Balraj Sahni (Travelogu) | Mera Roosi Safarnama Mera Pakistani Safarnama |
| Balwant Gargi (Dramatist) | Loha Kutt Dhuni-di-Agg Sultan Razia |
| Sant Singh Sekhon (Critic) | Sahityarth Parsidh Punjabi Kavi Punjabi KavShiromani. |
1. Significant features of the grammar, with particular stress on Sanjna, Sandhi, Karaka, Samasa, Kartari and Karmani vacyas (voice usages) (to be answered in Sanskrit).
2. (a) Main characteristics of Vedic Sanskrit language
3. General knowledge of:-
4. Essentials of Indian Culture with stress on :
5. Trends of Indian Philosophy :
6. Short Essay (in Sanskrit).
7. Unseen passage with the questions (to be answered in Sanskrit).
Paper-II(Question from Group 4 is to be answered in Sanskrit only. Questions from Groups 1, 2 and 3 are to be answered either in Sanskrit or in English.)Section-A| General study of the following groups :- | |
| Group 1 | (a) Raghuvamsam-Kalidasa |
| (b) Kumarasambhavam-Kalidasa | |
| (c) Kiratarjuniyam-Bharavi | |
| (d) Sisupalavadham-Magha | |
| (e) Naisadhiyacaritam-Sriharsa | |
| (f) Kadambari-Banabhatta | |
| (g) Dasakumaracaritam-Dandin | |
| (h) Sivarajyodayam-S.B. Varnekar | |
| Group 2 | (a) Isãvãsyopanisad |
| (b) Bhagavadgitã | |
| (c) Sundarakanda of Valmiki's Ramayana | |
| (d) Arthasastra of Kautilya | |
| Group 3 | (a) Svapanavasavadattam-Bhasa |
| (b) Abhijnanasakuntalam-Kalidasa | |
| (c) Mricchakatikam-Sudraka | |
| (d) Mudraraksasam-Visakhadatta | |
| (e) Uttararamacaritam-Bhavbhuti | |
| (f) Ratnavali-Sriharshavardhana | |
| (g) Venisamharam-Bhattanarayan | |
| Group 4 | Short notes in Sanskrit on the following :- |
| (a) Meghadutam-Kalidasa | |
| (b) Nitisatakam-Bhartrhari | |
| (c) Pancatantra- | |
| (d) Rajatarangini-Kalhana | |
| (e) Harsacaritam-Banabhatta | |
| (f) Amarukasatakam-Amaruka | |
| (g) Gitagovindam-Jayadeva. |
| Group 1 | (a) Raghuvamsam-Canto I, Verses 1 to 10 |
| (b) Kumarasambhavam-Canto I, Verses 1 to 10 | |
| (c) Kiratarjuniyaue-Canto I, Verses 1 to 10 | |
| Group 2 | (a) Isavasyopanisad-Verses-1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 15 and 18 |
| (b) Bhagavatgita II Chapter Verses 13 to 25 | |
| (c) Sundarakandam of Valmiki Canto 15, Verses 15 to 30 (GeetaPress Edition) | |
| Group 3 | (a) Meghadutam-Verses 1 to 10 |
| (b) Nitisatakam-Verses 1 to 10 (Edited by D.D. KosambiBharatiya Vidya Bhavan Publication) | |
| (c) Kadambari-Sukanasopadesa (only) | |
| Group 4 | (a) Svapnavasavadattam Act VI |
| (b) Abhijnansakuntalam Act IV Verses 15 to 30 (M.R. KaleEdition) | |
| (c) Uttararamacaritam Act I Verses 31 to 47 (M.R. KaleEdition). |
| Section-A | |
| Mir Amman Ghalib | Bagho-Babar Intikhab-e-Khutoot-e Ghalib |
| Mohd. Husain Azad | Nairang-e-Khayal |
| Prem Chand | Godan |
| Rajendra Singh Bedi | Apne Dukh Mujhe Dedo |
| Abul Kalam Azad | Ghubar-e-Khatir |
| Section-B | |
| Mir | Intikhab-e-Kalam-e-Mir (Ed. Abdul Haq.) |
| Mir Hasan | Sahrul Bayan |
| Ghalib | Diwan-e-Ghalib |
| Iqbal | Bal-e-Jibrail |
| Firaq | Gul-e-Naghma |
| Faiz | Dast-e-Saba |
| Akhtruliman | Bint-e-Lamhat |
1. To be passed as medically fit for admission to the J&K Police (Gazetted) Service, a candidate must be in good mental and bodily health and free from any physical defect likely to interfere with the efficient performance of the duties of his appointment.
2. The candidate's height will be measured as follows :-
He will remove his shoes and be placed against the standard with his feet together, and the weight thrown on the heels and not on the toes of outer sides of the feet. He will stand erect without rigidity and with the heel calves, buttocks and shoulders touching the standard; the chin will be depressed to bring the vertex of the heel level under the horizontal bar, and the height will be recorded in centimetres and millimeters.3. The candidate's chest will be measured as follows :-
He will be made to stand erect with his feet together and to raise his arms over his head. The tape will be so adjusted round the chest that its upper edge touches the interior angles of the shoulder blades behind and its lower edge the upper part of the nipple in front. The arms will then be lowered to hand loosely by the side, and care be taken that shoulders are not thrown upwards or backwards so as to displace the tape.The candidate will then be directed to take deep inspiration several times, and the maximum expansion of the chest will be carefully noted. The range of the expansion should not be less than 5 cm. The minimum and maximum will then be recorded in cms-84-89, 86-91 etc.In recording the measurement, the following table is given for the guidance of Medical Officer :-| Chest | |||
| Age last Birthday | Height without Shoes in cms | Girth when fullyexpanded (cm) | Range of expansionnot less that (cm) |
| 21 and upwards | 159 and under 165 | 88 | 5 |
| 165 and under 173 | 89 | 5 | |
| 173 and under 178 | 90 | 5 | |
| 178 and under 183 | 91 | 5 | |
| 183 and upwards | 93 | 5 |
4. The candidate will also be weighed, and his weight recorded in Kilograms. Fractions of Kilograms should not be noted.
5. The following conditions should be observed in connection with the test for acuteness of vision :-
Vision of Candidates :| (a) No candidate will be accepted whose visionis less than : | |
| Better eye | Worse eye |
| V-5/6 Reads 6. | V-6/12 Reads 1. |
| Spectacles will be allowed for either eye up toplus 5.0 or minus 5.0 D, provided that there are no morbidchanges in the fundus. |
6. The Urine (passed in presence of the Examiner) should be examined and the result recorded.
7. The following additional points should be observed :-
1. In the medical examination of candidates, Medical Officers are specially required to use tact and judgment and to take proper precaution to secure privacy with the object of removing any objection which may be made by individuals to stripping.
2. Should a candidate object to the exposure of his person for the detection of haemorrhoide, venereal diseases, hernia and disease of the testicles, scrotum and rectum, the candidate must, if this examination in his case is in the opinion of the Board necessary, be rejected.
3. The opinion of the Board accepting or rejecting a candidate is final and cannot be questioned on this ground. The Board is debarred from disclosing to any candidate, permanently unfit, the reasons for his rejection. In these cases, their opinion and report is to be treated as strictly confidential and for the information of Government only. Where, however the Board detects a temporary defect amendable to treatment, the candidate may be so informed in order that he may have the defect remedied and present himself for re-examination.
4. No person will be deemed qualified for admission to the service who shall not satisfy the Government that he has no disease, constitutional affection or bodily infirmity unfitting him or likely to unfit him, for that service.
5. It should be understood that the question of fitness involves the future as well as the present, and the main object of medical examination is to secure continuous effective service, and in the case of candidates for permanent appointment to prevent early pension or payment in case of premature death. It is, at the same time, to be noted that the question is one of the likelihood of continuous effective service and that the rejection of a candidate need not be advised on account of the presence of a defect which only in a small proportion of cases is found to interfere with continuous effectively service.
The candidate must make the statement required below prior to his medical examination and must sign the declaration appended thereto. His attention is specially directed to the warning contained in the note below :-1. State your name in full.
2. State your age and birth place.
3. (a) have you ever had small pox intermittent or any other fever, enlargement of suppuration of glands, spitting of blood, asthama, inflammation of lungs, heart disease, fainting attacks, rheumatism, or appendicitis.
4. When were you last vaccinated ?
5. Have you or any of your nearer relations been affected with consumption, scrofula, asthama, fits, epilepsy, or insanity ?
6. Have you suffered from any form of nervousness due to overwork or any other cause ?
7. Furnish the following particulars concerning your family:-
| I | II | III | IV |
| Father's age if livingand state of health | Father's age at deathand cause of death | Number of brothers living,their age and stateof health | Number of brothers dead,their age and cause ofdeath |
| V | VI | VII | VIII |
| Mother's age if livingand state of health | Mother's age at deathand cause of death | Number of sisters living,their age and andstate of health | Number of sisters dead,their age and cause ofdeath |
| Question | Answers | Remarks |
| 1. Has the declaration of the preceding pagebeen signed by the candidate ? | ||
| 2. Are there any evidences of malformationcongenital or acquired ? | ||
| 3. Is he free from scars and has he the fulluse of all limbs ? | ||
| 4. Are there any indications of a decidedcashetic or diathetic state of constitution ? | ||
| 5. Are there any signs of disease of thenervous system ? | ||
| 6. Is the hearing good ? Is there any sign ofany ear disease ? | ||
| 7. Has the candidate been vaccinated within thelast 12 months ? | ||
| 8. What is the candidate's vision ? R. E. V.with glass. Reads. L. E. V. with glasses. Spectacles if any R.E. L. E. | ||
| 9. Is the candidate free from stamer or otherserious defect in speech ? | ||
| 10. Are there any signs of disease of thebones, joints or parts connected therewith ? | ||
| 11. Is there any serious infection of the skin? | ||
| 12. (a) Is the heart and arteries healthy ? (b)Blood pressure- Systolic/Diastolic ? | ||
| 13. Has the candidate haemorrhoide, vericoeleor other affection of veins ? | ||
| 14. Is there any sign of disease of thedigestive organs ? | ||
| 15. Are there any signs of disease of therespiratory organs ? | ||
| 16 Is the candidate free from rapture ? | ||
| 17. Is there any indication of disease of thegenital organs ? | ||
| 18. (A) Is the urine free from :- (1) Albumen(2) Sugar (B) Is the urine otherwise normal ? | ||
| 19. Is there anything in the health of thecandidate likely to render him/her unfit for the efficientdischarge of his/her duties in the service for which he is acandidate ? | ||
| 20. Do you consider the candidate in allrespects qualified for the efficient and continuous discharge ofhis/her duties in the service for which he/she is a candidate ? | ||
| (I) Height without shoes, | ||
| (II) Girth of Chest (full inspiration) | ||
| (III) Weight | ||
| President. | ||
| Member. | ||
| Member. | ||
| Distant vision | Near vision | ||
| Better eye | Worse eye | Better eye | Worse eye |
| 6/9 | 6/9 | Sn. 0 6 | Sn. 0 |
| or | |||
| 6/6 | 6/12 |
| Grade | Higher Grade of Colour perception | Lower Grade of Colour perception |
| _____________ | _______________ | ________ |
| 1. Distance between the Lamp and Candidate | 4.9 meters | 4.9 meters |
| 2. Size of Aperture | 1.8 mm | 1.8 mm |
| 3. Time of Exposure | 5 sec. | 5 sec. |
8. The urine (passed in presence of the examiner) should be examined and the results recorded. Where a Medical Board finds sugar present in a candidate's urine by the usual chemical tests, the Board will proceed with the examination with all its other aspects and will also specially note any signs or symptoms suggestive of diabetes. If except for the glycosauria the Board finds the candidate conforms to the standard of medical fitness required, they may pass the candidate. "fit subject to the glycosauria being non-diabetic" and the Board will refer the case to a specified specialist in Medicine who has hospital and laboratory facilities at his disposal. The Medical Specialist will carry out whatever examinations clinical and laboratory he considers necessary including a standard blood sugar tolerance test and will submit his opinion to the Medical Board upon which the Medical Board will base its final opinion "fit" or "unfit". The candidate will not be required to appear in person before the Board on the second occasion. To exclude the effects of medication it may be necessary to retain, a candidate for several days in hospital under strict supervision.
9. The following additional points should be observed :-
10. Radiographic examination of the chest should be done as a routine in all cases for detecting any abnormality of the heart and lungs, which may not be apparent by ordinary physical examination.
11. When any defect is found it must be noted in the certificate and the medical examiner should state his opinion whether or not it is likely to interfere with the efficient performance of the duties which will be required of the candidate.
Note : - Candidates are warned that there is no right of appeal from a Medical Board, special or standing, appointed to determine their fitness for the above service. If however, the Government is satisfied on the evidence produced before it of the possibility of an error of judgment in the decision of the First Board, it is open to the Government to allow an appeal to a Second Board. Such evidence should be submitted within one month of the date of the communication in which the decision of the First Medical Board is communicated to the candidate, otherwise no request for an appeal to a second Medical Board, will be considered.If any medical certificate is produced by a candidate as a piece of evidence about the possibility of an error of judgment in the decision of the First Board, the certificate will not be taken into consideration unless it contains a note by the medical practitioner concerned to the effect that it has been given in full knowledge of the fact that the candidate has already been rejected as unfit for service by the Medical Board.Medical Board's Report. - The following intimation is made for the guidance of the Medical Examiner :-1. The standard of physical fitness to be adopted should make on due allowance for the age and length of service, if any, of the candidate concerned. No person will be deemed qualified for admission to the Public Service who shall not satisfy the appointing authority, as the case may be, that he/she has no disease, constitutional infection, or bodily infirmity unfitting him, or likely to unfit him/her for that service.
It should be understood that the question of fitness involves the future as well as the present and that one of the main objects of medical examination is to secure continuous effective service. It is at the same time to be noted that the question is one of the likelihood of continuous effective service, and that rejection of a candidate need not be advised on account of the presence of a defect which only in a small proportion of cases is found to interfere with continuous effective service.A lady doctor will be co-opted as a member of the Medical Board whenever a woman candidate is to be examined.The report of the Medical Board should be treated as confidential.In case where a candidate is declared unfit for appointment in the Government Service the grounds for rejection may be communicated to the candidate in broad terms without giving minute details regarding the defect pointed out by the Medical Board.In case where a Medical Board considers that a minor disability disqualifying a candidate for Government Service can be cured by treatment (medical or surgical), a statement to that effect should be recorded by the Medical Board. There is no objection to a candidate being informed of the Board's opinion to this effect by the appointing authority and when a cure has been effected it will be open to the authority concerned to ask for another Medical Board.In the case of candidates who are to be declared "Temporarily Unfit" the period specified for re-examination should not ordinarily exceed six months at the maximum. On re-examination after the specified period these candidates should not be declared temporarily unfit for a further period but a final decision with regard to their fitness for appointment or otherwise should be given.| 1. | State your name in full (in block letters) | ..................... |
| 2. | State your age and birth place | ...................... |
| 3. | (a) have you ever hadsmall-pox, intermittent or any other fever, enlargement orsuppuration of glands, spitting of blood, asthma heart disease,lung disease, fainting attacks, rheumatism, appendicitis ?(b) any other disease or accident requiringconfinement to bed and medical or surgical treatment ? | .................................................. |
| 4. | When were you last vaccinated ? | ......................... |
| 5. | Have you or any of your near relations beenaffected with consumption, scrofula, gout, asthma, fits,epilepsy, or insanity ? | ..................... |
| 6. | Have you suffered from any form of nervousnessdue to over-work or any other cause ? | ......................... |
| 7. Furnish the following particulars concerningyour family :- | |||
| I | II | III | IV |
| Father's age if livingand state of health | Father's age at deathand cause of death | Number of brothers living,their age and stateof health | Number of brothers dead,their age and cause ofdeath |
| V | VI | VII | VIII |
| Mother's age if livingand state of health | Mother's age at deathand cause of death | Numbers of sisters living,their age and stateof health | Number of sisters dead,their age and cause ofdeath |
| 8. | Have you been examined by a Medical Boardbefore ? | ...................... | |
| 9. | If answer to the above is yes, please statewhat service/services you were examined for ? | ....................... | |
| 10. | Who was the examining authority ? | ........................ | |
| 11. | When and where was the Medical Board held ? | ...................... | |
| 12. | Result of the Medical Board's Examination ifcommunicated to you or if known ? | ...................... | |
| I declare all the above answers to be, to thebest of my belief, true and correct. | |||
| Candidate's Signature........................ | |||
| Signed in my presence. | |||
| Signature of the Chairman of the Board. |
1. General development :- Good..........Fair................ Poor........................... Nutrition : Thin..............Average...............Obese........... Height (Without shoes)...............Weight................ Best Weight.................................... Any recent change in weight.......................................Temperature.............
| Girth of Chest :- | ||||
| (1) (After full inspiration) | ||||
| (2) (After full expiration) | ||||
| 2. | Skin : Any obvious disease | ...................... | ||
| 3. | Eyes :- | |||
| (1) Any disease | ....................... | |||
| (2) Night blindness | ....................... | |||
| (3) Defect in colour vision | ...................... | |||
| (4) Field of vision | ...................... | |||
| (5) Visual acuity | ..................... | |||
| Acuity of vision | Naked-eye | With Sph. | glasses Strength of glassCyl. Axix | |
| Distant Vision | RELE | |||
| Near Vision | RELE | |||
| Hypermetropia (Manifest) RE/LE |