by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 6, 2026 | Courses
Conversion Politics and the Challenge to Indian Secularism, Between Manufactured Narratives and Genuine Grievance Recent months have witnessed a flurry of media reports detailing the arrests of Muslims from diverse social and professional backgrounds across North...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 6, 2026 | Courses
Amaravati’s Second Dawn, Political Victory, Fiscal Reality, and the Challenge of Equitable Development In a decisive political victory for Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, Parliament recently passed a law formally recognizing Amaravati as the...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 6, 2026 | Courses
The Plastic Paradox, Why India’s Waste Management Rules Are Hitting a Wall On March 31, 2026, the Indian government announced the latest amendments to the Plastic Waste Management Rules, a policy framework first introduced in 2016 and periodically updated since....
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 6, 2026 | Courses
The WTO at a Crossroads, MC14’s Failure and the Unravelling of Global Trade Multilateralism The World Trade Organization (WTO) was conceived as the guardian of a rules-based global trading order—a bulwark against the kind of destructive protectionism and...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 6, 2026 | Courses
Powering Viksit Bharat, The SHANTI Act and India’s Nuclear Energy Transformation In her 2025-26 Budget speech, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced an audacious target: India’s installed nuclear power generation capacity would rise from its current 8,180 MW...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 4, 2026 | Courses
The Awareness Participation Paradox, Why 63% Know but Only 9.5% Invest in India’s Securities Markets In mid-January 2026, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) released its landmark Investor Survey 2025, a comprehensive study based on data from over...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 4, 2026 | Courses
From Family Empires to Corporate Giants, The Chaebol-Keiretsu Legacy and the Evolution of East Asian Capitalism In the annals of modern economic history, few stories are as compelling as the meteoric rise of South Korea and Japan from the ashes of war to become global...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 4, 2026 | Courses
The Unending War, Why Ceasefires Are Only the Beginning of a Longer, Darker Struggle In the relentless churn of 24-hour news cycles, wars are presented as dramatic narratives with clear beginnings, explosive climaxes, and, ideally, neat endings marked by ceasefire...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 4, 2026 | Courses
From Crisis Response to Structural Resilience, The Role of Indian Industry in Navigating a Shock-Prone World The global economic landscape has fundamentally altered. The era of rare, predictable, single-origin shocks is over. Today, disruptions are frequent,...
by admin_ NCSCIAS | Apr 4, 2026 | Courses
The New Moon Race, Artemis II, Geopolitics, and India’s Calculated Ascent In the early hours of April 2 (IST), the skies above NASA’s Kennedy Space Center lit up as the colossal Space Launch System (SLS) rocket carrying the Artemis II mission roared to life. Aboard...