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What is the syllabus for the MA political science entrance exam in JNU?

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Pratik Bahera Posted On : August 4th, 2023
Master's program from Jawaharlal Nehru University (2021)

The syllabus is based on the Bachelor’s level political science curriculum. If you are familiar with the concepts and theories that you studied during your bachelor’s, then you can easily crack the entrance examination. 

Some important topics include the following:

  • Political Theory and Thought
  • Comparative Politics and Political Analysis
  • Indian Government and Politics
  • Bureaucracy and Public Administration
  • International Relations - Theory; Indian Foreign policy; Globalization

If you are from a non-humanities background, make sure to put in extra effort and be clear with all concepts and theories. To get a fair idea, refer to the books listed below

  1. Political theory- Rajeev Bhargav
  2. Global Politics- Heywood
  3. Introduction to the constitution of India- DD basu
  4. Western Political Thoughts- Shefali Jha

It is better to go through the previous year's question papers and try to get an idea of the question pattern

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Is selective IGNOU BA and MA political science sufficient for political science optional in UPSC?

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Prithviraj Debbarma Posted On : October 21st, 2022
MCA from Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) (Graduated -2010)

One of my sister's acquaintances wrote 2016 mains with PSIR optional. She had been working in an IT firm till a month before prelims and had been preparing for a year before. 

Political Science and International Relations (PSIR) is quite fast. The study material provided by IGNOU is good for selective reading for specific topics like Justice, Equality, MN Roy, Sri Aurobindo, Theory of international relations etc. But she had an engineering background and revealed that the notes were not of premium quality.

Paper 1- Part A

Gauba is not bad. But you will need to read the book more than one time to interpret it completely. The information has been divided unevenly within the chapters making it a difficult read. One more good source is Shubra Ranjan's notes. They summarise the points in the UPSC syllabus format.

Paper 1- Part B

Complete Laxmikant.Read the interpretations given by famous analysts, their viewpoints, case laws and their history and the politics that played behind the evolution of laws and how and why the judiciary evolved. Again for this look into Shubra Ranjan notes. For the remaining topics look into Oxford publications.

Paper 2- part A

For this part, the best recommendation is Heywood’s global politics. It’s easy to understand and very well written. Combine this with IGNOU notes and you will get good results. You can also go through questions given in Baylis and Smith because sometimes they appear verbatim and quoting the exact same viewpoint can get you some extra points.

Paper 2 - Part B

Conduct internet research and make your own notes on the topics included in the syllabus. Then go through commentaries on IDSA /IPCS websites. This will give you a better understanding of and current status of relations.

Once you are done with all the study materials, focus on developing the vocabulary for PSIR. Make sure your answers are evenly distributed with theories, quotes, facts, years etc. Practice writing answers a lot. 

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