Social Justice forms approximately 20–25% of UPSC GS Paper 2 — yet it is one of the most unevenly prepared sections among aspirants. Most aspirants know the names of welfare schemes but cannot write the analytical, data-backed, multi-dimensional answers that UPSC actually rewards. This guide by Riyasat Ali Sir at Riyasat IAS Mentorship gives you the complete framework — the data bank, the analytical approach, and the answer structure — to score full marks on every Social Justice question.
Why Social Justice Questions Are Easier to Score On — If Prepared Right
Social Justice questions have a structural advantage over other GS Paper 2 topics: they are almost always triggered by current affairs and have predictable dimensions — constitutional provisions, government schemes, ground reality data, challenges, and Way Forward. An aspirant who has a well-organised data bank for each Social Justice theme can write a complete, analytical answer in 12 minutes consistently. The challenge is building that data bank — and knowing how to deploy it analytically rather than descriptively.
The 5-Dimension Framework — Apply to Every Social Justice Answer
| Dimension | What to Cover | Example — Women’s Safety |
| 1. Constitutional and Legal Basis | What does the Constitution / relevant Act say? | Articles 14, 15, 21; Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act 2005; POCSO |
| 2. Government Schemes and Policy | What has the government done? | One Stop Centres, Sakhi Niwas, Nirbhaya Fund, PM Matru Vandana Yojana |
| 3. Ground Reality Data | What does the data show? | NCRB 2024: crimes against women; NFHS-5 nutrition data; PLFS gender pay gap |
| 4. Structural Challenges | Why is the problem persisting? | Social norms, patriarchy, underreporting, weak enforcement, resource gaps |
| 5. Way Forward | What specific reforms are needed? | Fast Track Courts expansion, mandatory sensitisation training, budget increase for victim compensation |
This 5-dimension framework applied to any Social Justice question produces a complete, high-scoring answer. The Foundation Mentorship English at Riyasat IAS Mentorship builds this framework through consistent, feedback-driven answer writing practice.
Section 1: SC/ST — Complete Data Bank and Answer Framework
Key Constitutional Provisions for SC/ST
| Article | Provision | UPSC Application |
| Article 15(4) | Special provisions for advancement of SC/ST | Basis for reservation — direct MCQ topic |
| Article 16(4) | Reservation in government employment | Creamy layer debate — regular Mains topic |
| Article 17 | Abolition of untouchability | Fundamental Right — cannot be suspended |
| Article 338 | National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) | Constitutional body — Prelims MCQ |
| Article 338A | National Commission for Scheduled Tribes (NCST) | Constitutional body — Prelims MCQ |
| Article 341/342 | Presidential lists for SC and ST | How tribes/castes are added — direct MCQ |
| Article 46 | DPSP — state shall promote educational and economic interests of SC/ST | GS Paper 2 — DPSP in social justice context |
| Fifth and Sixth Schedule | Administration of tribal areas | PESA, Scheduled Areas — regular Prelims topic |
Critical Data Points for SC/ST Questions
- NCRB 2024: Crimes against SC — 3.6% decrease; ST — 23.1% decrease (interpret cautiously — underreporting likely)
- Sub-classification allowed: Dravinder Singh Case (2024) — states can sub-classify SC groups for targeted benefits
- Creamy Layer debate: Currently not applicable to SC/ST — Indra Sawhney case (1992) exempted them
- Forest Rights Act 2006: Gram Sabha consent mandatory — Great Nicobar Project controversy
- PESA (1996): Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas — self-governance for tribal communities
- Eklavya Model Residential Schools: Tribal education infrastructure — one per block with ST population >20,000
SC/ST Mains Answer Framework
When writing SC/ST answers, always cover: (1) Constitutional protection (Article 17, Articles 341–342, Fifth/Sixth Schedule); (2) Implementation gap between legal protection and ground reality; (3) Specific scheme performance data; (4) Structural challenges (social discrimination, economic marginalisation, geographic isolation); (5) Specific Way Forward — not “government should do more”. UPSC rewards answers that name specific institutions, reforms, and legislation.
Social Justice is where data beats vagueness. Build your data bank — then score full marks. Riyasat Ali Sir personally ensures every student’s Social Justice preparation is data-rich and analytically strong. Join Now -> iasmentorship.com/admissions
Section 2: Women — Complete Data Bank and Answer Framework
Key Government Schemes for Women — Build This List
| Scheme | Ministry | What It Does | Key Data |
| Beti Bachao Beti Padhao | WCD + Health + Education | Address sex ratio, girl education | Sex ratio at birth improved to 934 (SRS 2022) |
| One Stop Centres (Sakhi) | WCD | Single window for women facing violence | 800+ centres across India |
| PM Matru Vandana Yojana | WCD | Maternity benefit — Rs. 5,000 for first child | 10 crore+ beneficiaries |
| POCSO Act (2012, amended 2019) | Home/WCD | Child sexual abuse protection | Stricter penalties, faster trials |
| Sexual Harassment at Workplace Act (2013) | Labour | Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) mandatory | SHWW Act — regular Prelims question |
| Ujjwala Yojana | Petroleum | LPG connection — eliminate indoor smoke | 10 crore+ connections |
Critical Data for Women Questions
- NFHS-5: Child marriage (18.7% under 18), anaemia (57% women), institutional delivery (88.6%)
- PLFS 2023-24: Female Labour Force Participation Rate — 41.7% (improved but structural barriers remain)
- GPI (Gender Parity Index) in higher education: >1 — women outnumber men in college enrollment
- Mahila Shakti Kendras: Block-level women empowerment centres — Prelims MCQ topic
- Fast Track Special Courts: 400+ courts for POCSO and rape cases — but disposal rate still low
- Women in Parliament: 78 seats in Lok Sabha (2024) — 14.4% — Women’s Reservation Act 2023 yet to be implemented
Women’s Issues Mains Answer Framework
Women’s questions in UPSC Mains have evolved — they no longer just ask about welfare schemes. Recent patterns: “critically examine the implementation” of a scheme, “analyse the structural barriers” to women’s empowerment, “evaluate the effectiveness” of legal protections. This requires going beyond scheme listing to structural analysis: patriarchal social norms, property rights gaps, domestic unpaid labour burden, healthcare access, digital divide. The answer that covers all five dimensions of the Social Justice framework always outscores the answer that only lists schemes.
Section 3: Minorities — Complete Data Bank and Answer Framework
Constitutional Provisions for Minorities
| Article | Provision |
| Article 25–28 | Freedom of religion — right to practice, propagate, manage religious affairs |
| Article 29 | Protection of interests of minorities — right to conserve culture, language, script |
| Article 30 | Right of minorities to establish and administer educational institutions |
| Article 350A | Instruction in mother tongue at primary level |
Key Institutions and Data for Minority Questions
- National Commission for Minorities (NCM): Article 338B — not Constitutional body (statutory) — common Prelims trap
- Waqf Board: Religious endowment institutions — Waqf Amendment Act 2024 — recent controversy
- Sachar Committee Report (2006): Muslim socio-economic conditions — still cited as baseline
- Pradhan Mantri Jan Vikas Karyakram: Infrastructure in minority-concentrated areas
- Pre-Matric and Post-Matric Scholarships: Minority student educational support
- Nai Roshni: Leadership development for minority women
Minority Issues Mains Answer Framework
Minority questions require careful analytical balance: neither dismissive of minority concerns nor simplistic in analysis. UPSC rewards answers that (1) acknowledge constitutional protections and their spirit; (2) present data on socio-economic gaps; (3) identify structural barriers (discrimination, geographic concentration, educational gaps); (4) evaluate scheme effectiveness honestly; and (5) provide reforms that are rights-based and constitutionally grounded.
The One Mistake That Kills Social Justice Scores
The single most common mistake in Social Justice answers: listing schemes without analysis. Writing “the government launched PM Matru Vandana Yojana, One Stop Centres, and Beti Bachao Beti Padhao” is description — not analysis. The examiner already knows these schemes. What earns marks is: evaluating whether these schemes are working, why implementation gaps persist, and what specific reforms would close those gaps. Every Social Justice answer must move from “what exists” to “why it is insufficient” to “what specifically must change.”
Building Your Social Justice Data Bank — The 30-Day Plan
| Week | Focus | Daily Activity |
| Week 1 | SC/ST | Constitutional provisions + NCRB data + 3 scheme details + 2 PYQ answers |
| Week 2 | Women | Key Acts + NFHS-5 + PLFS data + 3 scheme details + 2 PYQ answers |
| Week 3 | Minorities + Other vulnerable groups | Constitutional Articles 25–30 + Sachar data + 2 PYQ answers |
| Week 4 | Integration + Mock answers | 3 full Social Justice mock answers + PYQ trend analysis |
Social Justice answers at UPSC are won by aspirants who know three things simultaneously: what the Constitution promises, what the data shows has been achieved, and what structural barriers prevent full realisation. All three must appear in every answer.
Conclusion
Social Justice in UPSC GS Paper 2 is a high-scoring opportunity for aspirants who prepare it with data and analytical depth — not just scheme names. The 5-dimension framework, applied consistently across SC/ST, Women, and Minority questions, produces the structured, evidence-backed answers that UPSC examiners reward with full marks. Riyasat IAS Mentorship builds this analytical depth through structured preparation and personal feedback. Apply for admission today.
Also Read:
- UPSC Mentorship Program — Riyasat Ali Sir
- Foundation Mentorship English
- Foundation Mentorship Hindi
- UPSC GS Paper 2 Complete Guide
- Secure Prelims Program 2026
- Current Affairs for UPSC
- FAQs — Riyasat IAS Mentorship
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