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1. Based upon Survey of India map with the permission of the Surveyor General of India Dehradun.
2. The territorial waters of India extend into the sea to a distance of twelve nautical miles measured from the appropriate base line.3. The external boundary and coast-line of India shown on this map agree with the Record/Master Copy certified by Survey of India.4. The interstate boundaries between Uttar Pradesh & Uttarakhand, Bihar & Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh & Chhattishgarh and Telangana & Andhra pradesh have not yet
been verified by the Governments concerned.5. The boundary of Meghalaya shown on this map as interpreted from the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganization) Act, 1971 has not yet been verified.6. The Administrative Headquarters of Chandigarh, Haryana and Punjab are at Chandigarh. The Administrative Headquarter of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana is at Hyderabad.7. The external boundary and coastline of India on the maps agree with the record/master copy certified by the Surveyor General, Map Publication, Survey of India,
Dehradun vide their letters no. TB 174/62–A–3/A-3, Dated 6/02/2015.
Final address.Pmd 5/26/2016, 12:50 PM1
POLITICAL SCIENCECLASS–XII (2016-17)
One Paper Time : 3 Hours Marks 100
Contents Periods Marks
PART A : CONTEMPORARY WORLD POLITICS
Units
1. Cold War Era 142. The End of Bipolarity 13 14
3. US Hegemony in World Politics 134. Alternative Centres of Power 11 165. Contemporary South Asia 13
6. International Organisations 1310
7. Security in Contemporary World 11
8. Environment and Natural Resources 1110
9. Globalisation 11
Total 110 50
PART B : POLITICS IN INDIA SINCE INDEPENDENCE
10. Challenges of Nation Building 1311. Era of One-Party Dominance 12 1612. Politics of Planned Development 11
13. India’s External Relations 13 6
14. Challenges to the Congress System 131215. Crisis of the Democratic Order 13
16. Rise of Popular Movements 1117. Regional Aspirations 11 1618. Recent Developments in Indian Politics 13
Total 110 50
Course Contents : PeriodsPART A : CONTEMPORARY WORLD POLITICS
1. Cold War Era 14Emergence of two power blocs after the Second World War. Arenas of the cold war.Challenges to Bipolarity : Non-Aligned Movement, Quest for new international economicorder. India and the cold war.
2. The End of Bipolarity 13New entities in world politics : Russia, Balkan states and Central Asian states, introductionof democratic politics and capitalism in post-communist regimes. India’s relations withRussia and other post-communist countries.
Political Science xii syllabus.pmd 7/6/2016, 5:44 PM1
Periods
3. US Hegemony in World Politics 13
Growth of unilateralism : Afghanistan, first Gulf War, response to 9/11 and attack onIraq. Dominance and challenge to the US in economy and ideology. India’s renegotiationof its relationship with the USA.
4. Alternative Centres of Power 11
Rise of China as an economic power in post-Maoera, creation and expansion of EuropeanUnion, ASEAN. India’s changing relations with China.
5. Contemporary South Asia in the Post-Cold War Era 13
Democratisation in Pakistan and Nepal, Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, Impact of economicglobalization on the region. Conflicts and efforts for peace in South Asia. India’srelations with its neighbours.
6. International Organisations 13
Restructuring and the future of the UN. India’s position in the restructured UN. Rise ofnew international actors : New International Economic Organisations, NGOs. Howdemocratic and accountable are the new institutions of global governance?
7. Security in Contemporary World 11
Traditional concerns of security and politics of disarmament. Non-traditional or humansecurity : global poverty, health and education. Issues of human rights and migration.
8. Environment and Natural Resources 11
Environment movement and evolution of global environmental norms. Conflicts overtraditional and common property resources. Rights of indigenous people. India’s standin global environmental debates.
9. Globalisation 11
Economic, cultural and political manifestations. Debates on the nature of consequencesof globalisation. Anti-globalisation movements. India as an arena of globalisation andstruggle against it.
PART B : POLITICS IN INDIA SINCE INDEPENDENCE
10. Challenges of Nation Building 13
Nehru’s approach to nation-building; Legacy of partition : challenge of ‘refugee’resettlement, the Kashmir problem. Organisation and reorganisation of states; Politicalconflicts over language.
11. Era of One-Party Dominance 12
First three general elections, nature of Congress dominance at the national level, unevendominance at the state level, coalitional nature of Congress. Major opposition parties.
12. Politics of Planned Development 11
Five year plans, expansion of state sector and the rise of new economic interests.Famine and suspension of five year plans. Green revolution and its political fallouts.
Political Science xii syllabus.pmd 7/6/2016, 5:44 PM2
13. India’s External Relations 13
Nehru’s foreign policy. Sino-Indian War of 1962, Indo-Pak War of 1965 and 1971.India’s nuclear programme. Shifting alliances in world politics.
14. Challenges to the Congress System 13
Political succession after Nehru. Non-Congressism and electoral upset of 1967,Congress split and reconstitution, Congress’ victory in 1971 elections, politics of‘garibi hatao’.
15. Crisis of the Democratic Order 13
Search for ‘committed’ bureaucracy and judiciary. Navnirman movement in Gujaratand the Bihar movement. Emergency : context, constitutional and extra-constitutionaldimensions, resistance to emergency. 1977 elections and the formation of Janata Party.Rise of civil liberties organisations.
16. Popular Movements in India 11
Farmers’ movements, Women’s movement, Environment and Development-affectedpeople’s movements. Implementation of Mandal Commission Report and itsaftermath.
17. Regional Aspirations 11
Rise of regional parties. Punjab crisis and the anti-Sikh riots of 1984. The Kashmirsituation. Challenges and responses in the North East.
18. Recent Developments in Indian Politics 13
Participatory upsurge in 1990s. Rise of the JD and the BJP. Increasing role of regionalparties and coalition politics.
Coalition governments:
NDA (1998–2004)
UPA (2004–2014)
NDA (2014 onwards)
Political Science xii syllabus.pmd 7/6/2016, 5:44 PM3
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Questions Paper Designs.pmd
7/6/2016, 5:47 PM
1
CONTENTSCONTENTSCONTENTSCONTENTSCONTENTSCBSE Question Papers-2016 Delhi (Solved) 1–20
CBSE Question Papers-2016 Outside Delhi (Solved) 21–38
CBSE Question Papers-2015 Delhi (Solved) 1–20
CBSE Question Papers-2015 Outside Delhi (Solved) 21–37
CBSE Question Papers-2014 Delhi (Solved) 1–17
CBSE Question Papers-2014 Outside Delhi (Solved) 18–36
Sample Question Papers—I & II (Solved) S-1–S-25
(Based on the latest guidelines issued by CBSE)
Chapter-wise Important Examination Style Questions (Solved)
PART—A CONTEMPORARY WORLD POLITICS 1–83
1. The Cold War Era 2–13
2. The End of Bipolarity 14–23
3. U.S. Hegemony in World Politics 24–32
4. Alternative Centres of Power 33–44
5. Contemporary South Asia 45–52
6. International Organisations 53–61
7. Security in the Contemporary World 62–69
8. Environment and Natural Resources 70–76
9. Globalisation 77–83
PART—B POLITICS IN INDIA SINCE INDEPENDENCE 85–169
10. Challenges of Nation-Building 86–95
11. Era of One-Party Dominance 96–104
12. Politics of Planned Development 105–112
13. India’s External Relations 113–122
14. Challenges to the Congress System 123–131
15. The Crisis of Democratic Order 132–143
16. Rise of Popular Movements 144–152
17. Regional Aspirations 153–160
18. Recent Developments in Indian Politics 161–169
l Value Based Questions (VBQs) 170–179
l Model Questions Papers for Practice M-1–M-42
Contents-2015-16 repair.pmd 6/25/2016, 2:13 PM1
C.B.S.E. QUESTION PAPERS–2016 (SOLVED)CLASS—XII (Delhi)
POLITICAL SCIENCE
SET—I
Series: ONS/1 Code No. 59/1/1
Time Allowed: 3 Hours Maximum Marks: 100
General Instructions:
(i) All questions are compulsory.
(ii) Question numbers 1–5 are of 1 mark each. The answers to these questions
should not exceed 20 words each.
(iii) Question numbers 6–10 are of 2 marks each. The answers to these questions
should not exceed 40 words each.
(iv) Question numbers 11–16 are of 4 marks each. The answers to these questions
should not exceed 100 words each.
(v) Question numbers 17–21 are of 5 marks each. The answers to these questions
should not exceed 150 words each.
(vi) Question number 21 is a map-based question. Write its answers in your
answer-book.
(vii) Question numbers 22–27 are of 6 marks each. The answers to these questions
should not exceed 150 words each.
Q. 1. Which one of the following statement about the Berlin Wall is false? 1
(a) It symbolized the division between the capitalist and the
communist world.
(b) It was built immediately after the Second World War.
(c) It was broken by the people on 9th November, 1989.
(d) It marked the unification of the two parts of Germany.
Ans. (b)
Q. 2. Why was ASEAN established? 1
Ans. ASEAN was established to accelerate economic growth and through that social
progress and cultural development.
Q. 3. Which one of the two is more essential-construction of mega dams or
an environmental movement that oppose it and why? 1
Ans. The more essential is the construction of mega dams because they help in solving
the problem of water and electricity of that area. People get employment also
thus, construction of mega dams is very helpful for the development.
1
CBSE Board papers (2016) Delhi.pmd 6/25/2016, 2:34 PM1
MBD Sure Shot CBSE Sample PapersSolved Class 12 Political Science 2017
Publisher : MBD GroupPublishers
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