UPSC Sociology Syllabus for Paper 1
FUNDAMENTALS OF SOCIOLOGY Download PDF
Sociology - The Discipline:
- Modernity and social
changes in Europe and the emergence of Sociology.
- Scope of the subject
and comparison with other social sciences.
- Sociology and common
sense.
Sociology as Science:
- Science, scientific
method, and critique.
- Major theoretical
strands of research methodology.
- Positivism and its
critique.
- Fact value and
objectivity.
- Non-positivist
methodologies.
Research Methods and Analysis:
- Qualitative and
quantitative methods.
- Techniques of data
collection.
- Variables, sampling,
hypothesis, reliability, and validity.
Sociological Thinkers:
- Karl Marx -
Historical materialism, mode of production, alienation, class struggle.
- Emile Durkheim -
Division of labour, social fact, suicide, religion, and society.
- Max Weber - Social
action, ideal types, authority, bureaucracy, protestant ethics, and the
spirit of capitalism.
- Talcolt Parsons -
Social system, pattern variables.
- Robert K. Merton -
Latent and manifest functions, conformity and deviance, reference groups.
- Mead - Self and
identity.
Stratification and Mobility:
- Concepts - equality,
inequality, hierarchy, exclusion, poverty, and deprivation.
- Theories of social
stratification - Structural functionalist theory, Marxist theory, Weberian
theory.
- Dimensions - Social
stratification of class, status groups, gender, ethnicity, and race.
- Social mobility -
open and closed systems, types of mobility, sources, and causes of
mobility.
Works and Economic Life:
- Social organisation
of work in different types of society - slave society, feudal society,
industrial capitalist society.
- Formal and informal
organisation of work.
- Labour and society.
Politics and Society:
- Sociological
theories of power.
- Power elite,
bureaucracy, pressure groups, and political parties.
- Nation, state,
citizenship, democracy, civil society, ideology.
- Protest, agitation,
social movements, collective action, revolution.
Religion and Society:
- Sociological
theories of religion.
- Types of religious
practices: animism, monism, pluralism, sects, cults.
- Religion in modern
society: religion and science, secularisation, religious revivalism,
fundamentalism.
Systems of Kinship:
- Family, household,
and marriage.
- Types and forms of
family.
- Lineage and descent.
- Patriarchy and
sexual division of labour.
- Contemporary trends.
Social Change in Modern Society:
- Sociological
theories of social change.
- Development and
dependency.
- Agents of social
change.
- Education and social
change.
- Science, technology,
and social change.
Sociology Optional Syllabus - Paper 2
INDIAN SOCIETY: STRUCTURE AND CHANGE
Introducing Indian Society:
(i) Perspectives on the Study of Indian Society:
- Indology (G.S.
Ghure).
- Structural
functionalism (M. N. Srinivas).
- Marxist sociology
(A. R. Desai).
(ii) Impact of colonial rule on Indian society:
- Social background of
Indian nationalism.
- Modernization of
Indian tradition.
- Protests and
movements during the colonial period.
- Social reforms.
Social Structure:
(i) Rural and Agrarian Social Structure:
- The idea of Indian
village and village studies.
- Agrarian social
structure—evolution of land tenure system, land reforms.
(ii) Caste System:
- Perspectives on the
study of caste systems: G. S. Ghurye, M. N. Srinivas, Louis Dumont, Andre
Beteille.
- Features of caste
system.
- Untouchability-
forms and perspectives
(iii) Tribal Communities in India:
- Definitional
problems.
- Geographical spread.
- Colonial policies
and tribes.
- Issues of
integration and autonomy.
(iv) Social Classes in India:
- Agrarian class
structure.
- Industrial class
structure.
- Middle classes in
India.
(v) Systems of Kinship in India:
- Lineage and descent
in India.
- Types of kinship
systems.
- Family and marriage
in India.
- Household dimensions
of the family.
- Patriarchy,
entitlements and sexual division of labour.
(vi) Religion and Society:
- Religious
communities in India.
- Problems of
religious minorities.
Social Changes in India:
(i) Visions of Social Change in India:
- Idea of development
planning and mixed economy.
- Constitution, law
and social change.
- Education and social
change.
(ii) Rural and Agrarian Transformation in India:
- Programmes of rural
development, Community Development Programme, cooperatives, poverty
alleviation schemes.
- Green revolution and
social change.
- Changing modes of
production in Indian agriculture.
- Problems of rural
labour, bondage, and migration.
(iii) Industrialization and Urbanisation in
India:
- Evolution of modern
industry in India.
- Growth of urban
settlements in India.
- Working class:
structure, growth, class mobilisation.
- Informal sector,
child labour.
- Slums and
deprivation in urban areas.
(iv) Politics and Society:
- Nation, democracy,
and citizenship.
- Political parties,
pressure groups, social and political elite.
- Regionalism and
decentralisation of power.
- Secularization.
(v) Social Movements in Modern India:
- Peasants and
farmers' movements.
- Women’s movement.
- Backward classes
& Dalit movements.
- Environmental
movements.
- Ethnicity and
Identity movements.
(vi) Population Dynamics:
- Population size,
growth, composition, and distribution.
- Components of
population growth: birth, death, migration.
- Population Policy
and family planning.
- Emerging issues:
ageing, sex ratios, child and infant mortality, reproductive health.
(vii) Challenges of Social Transformation:
- Crisis of development:
displacement, environmental problems, and sustainability.
- Poverty,
deprivation, and inequalities.
- Violence against
women.
- Caste conflicts.
- Ethnic conflicts,
communalism, religious revivalism.
- Illiteracy and
disparities in education.
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