Overview

Previous Year UPSC-CSE Questions By the end you will be able to draft model answers for the following UPSC questions. Each question carries a collapsible framework showing how to approach it in the exam.

  1. UPSC Mains 2020 GS-ISince the decade of the 1920s, the national movement acquired various ideological strands and thereby expanded its social base. Discuss.
    How to structure the answer in the exam

    Directive verb: Discuss · Approach: Trace the strands of the 1920s-30s and show how each widened the movement's base.

    Introduction: Open with the 1920s-30s as the decades nationalism broadened into many strands.

    Body (sub-themes to develop):

    • Gandhian mass satyagraha (Non-Cooperation, Civil Disobedience).
    • The constitutional strand: the Swarajists and the Round Table negotiations.
    • Social broadening: the Depressed Classes via the Poona Pact, peasants, workers and women.
    • The revolutionary and socialist strands running alongside.

    Conclusion: Conclude that the period turned a narrow nationalism into a broad, multi-strand movement.

  2. UPSC Prelims 1997 GS Paper IThe Poona Pact which was signed between the British Government and Mahatma Gandhi in 1932 provided for
    1. a the creation of dominion status for India
    2. b separate electorates for the Muslims
    3. c separate electorate for the Harijans
    4. d joint electorate with reservation for Harijans
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Single correct

    Approach: Recall what the Poona Pact substituted for the Communal Award.

    Trap to watch: The Award gave separate electorates to the Harijans; the Poona Pact replaced this with a joint electorate plus reserved seats, not separate electorates.

    Key facts to recall:

    • Poona Pact 1932
    • Joint electorate retained
    • Reserved seats for the Depressed Classes (Harijans)

    Answer signal: Joint electorate with reservation for Harijans, so option (d).

  3. UPSC Prelims 2009 GS Paper IConsider the following statements:
    1. The discussions in the Third Round Table Conference eventually led to the passing of the Government of India Act of 1935.
    2. The Government of India Act of 1935 provided for the establishment of an All India Federation to be based on a Union of the provinces of British India and the Princely States.

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    1. a 1 only
    2. b 2 only
    3. c Both 1 and 2
    4. d Neither 1 nor 2
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Single correct

    Approach: Test both statements against the road to the 1935 Act.

    Trap to watch: Both are correct: the conferences led to the 1935 Act, which did provide (on paper) for an All-India Federation of provinces and princely states.

    Key facts to recall:

    • Third RTC fed into the 1935 Act
    • 1935 Act provided for an All-India Federation
    • Provinces of British India and the Princely States

    Answer signal: Both 1 and 2, so option (c).

  4. UPSC Prelims 1996 GS Paper IThe meeting of Indian and British political leaders during 1930-32 in London has often been referred to as the First, Second and Third Round Table Conferences. It would be incorrect to refer to them as such because
    1. a the Indian National Congress did not take part in two of them
    2. b Indian parties other than the Indian National Congress participating in the Conference represented sectional interests and not the whole of India
    3. c the British Labour Party had withdrawn from the Conference, thereby making the proceedings of the Conference partisan
    4. d it was an instance of Conference held in three sessions and not that of three separate conferences
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Single correct

    Approach: Identify the technical reason the 'three conferences' label is loose.

    Trap to watch: It is true the Congress missed two, but the question asks why the very label is incorrect: it was one conference held in three sessions.

    Key facts to recall:

    • One Round Table Conference, three sessions (1930-32)
    • Congress only attended the second
    • Sessions, not separate conferences

    Answer signal: It was one conference in three sessions, so option (d).

Between 1931 and 1934 the freedom struggle moved from the streets to the conference table and the fast. The Round Table Conferences in London tried, and failed, to settle the Indian constitution; the Communal Award of 1932 granted separate electorates to the Depressed Classes; and Gandhi's fast forced the Poona Pact, which gave them reserved seats within a joint electorate instead. Civil Disobedience, resumed after the talks broke down, was finally withdrawn in 1934.

Introduction: From Truce to Final Exhaustion (1931-1934)

Why This Phase of Negotiation Matters

Why this matters: the Gandhi-Irwin truce of 1931 took the struggle off the streets and into a different arena, the conference table in London and the prison fast at Yerwada. The years 1931 to 1934 were a phase of negotiation, deadlock and slow exhaustion between two great mass movements.

What is the significance of these years: they proved that no constitutional settlement was possible without the Congress, they brought the Depressed Classes into the political framework through the Poona Pact, and they ended the second phase of Civil Disobedience. The sequence is traced below.

The Negotiations and the Movement at a Glance

Distinguishing the sequence clarifies a crowded period. Gandhi went to the Second Round Table Conference, the talks deadlocked over the minorities, the Communal Award and Gandhi's fast produced the Poona Pact, the Third Conference met without the Congress, and Civil Disobedience was finally withdrawn.

What ties the sequence together is a movement running down even as the negotiations failed, as the timeline below shows.

Negotiation and Exhaustion, 1931 to 1934The second phase of Civil Disobedience, between the talks and the truceSep-Dec 1931Second RTCGandhi alone; deadlockAug 1932Communal AwardSeparate electoratesSep 1932Poona PactGandhi’s fast; joint seatsNov-Dec 1932Third RTCCongress stays away1934CD withdrawnThe movement is suspendedAfter the deadlock and the Award, the second civil-disobedience phase slowly burned out.
Figure 1. Negotiation and exhaustion, 1931 to 1934.

The Second Round Table Conference and the Communal Deadlock (1931)

Gandhi in London and the Deadlock over the Minorities

What is the significance of the Second Round Table Conference: it brought Gandhi to London as the voice of the nation. Under the Gandhi-Irwin Pact, the Congress attended the conference of September to December 1931, with Gandhi as its sole representative, claiming to speak for all of India.

Distinguishing the deadlock: the conference broke down over the question of the minorities. The British and the minority leaders pressed for separate electorates for Muslims, the Depressed Classes and others, while Gandhi insisted that the Congress alone represented the whole nation, and no agreement could be reached.

The Communal Award and the Poona Pact (1932)

The Communal Award and Gandhi's Fast

What is the significance of the Communal Award: it forced the question of the Depressed Classes to a crisis. In August 1932 the British Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald, announced the Communal Award, which granted separate electorates not only to Muslims and others but, for the first time, to the Depressed Classes.

Distinguishing Gandhi's response: he accepted separate electorates for the religious minorities but bitterly opposed them for the Depressed Classes, holding that they would split Hindu society permanently. In September 1932 he began a fast unto death in Yerwada jail, and the before-and-after of that fast is shown below.

From the Communal Award to the Poona PactHow a fast at Yerwada turned separate electorates into reserved seatsCommunal Award (Aug 1932)Ramsay MacDonald’s awardSeparate electorates for theDepressed ClassesAbout 71 reserved seatsSet apart from the Hindu foldGandhi’s fastYerwada, Sep 1932Poona Pact (24 Sep 1932)Gandhi and Ambedkar agreeJoint electorate retainedReserved seats insteadAbout 148 reserved seatsWithin a single electorateThe full social-reform debate between Gandhi and Ambedkar is taken up in Part 18.
Figure 2. From the Communal Award to the Poona Pact.

The Poona Pact: Joint Electorates and Reserved Seats

Observable outcomes followed within days. As Gandhi's life hung in the balance, the leaders reached the Poona Pact, signed on 24 September 1932 between caste-Hindu leaders and B. R. Ambedkar on behalf of the Depressed Classes, with Madan Mohan Malaviya among the signatories.

Distinguishing its terms from the Award, set out below, the Pact replaced separate electorates with a joint electorate and reserved seats. The Depressed Classes were to vote within the general electorate but with seats reserved for them, raised from about seventy-one to roughly a hundred and forty-eight in the provincial legislatures.

  • Separate electorates dropped: the Award’s separate electorates were given up.
  • Joint electorate kept: the Depressed Classes voted within the general electorate.
  • Reserved seats instead: seats were reserved for the Depressed Classes.
  • More seats: the reserved seats rose from about 71 to roughly 148 in the provinces.
  • Within the Hindu fold: the settlement kept the Depressed Classes politically within Hindu society.

The Resumption and Final Withdrawal of Civil Disobedience (1932-1934)

The Second Phase and Its Exhaustion

What is the significance of the second phase: it showed the limits of repeated mass struggle. When Gandhi returned from London to find the talks failed and the government armed with sweeping ordinances, the Congress resumed Civil Disobedience early in 1932, but the government met it with mass arrests and the banning of the Congress.

Distinguishing why it faded: the second phase never reached the height of 1930. Faced with severe repression and a tiring movement, Gandhi suspended mass Civil Disobedience and finally withdrew it in 1934, turning instead to the constructive programme and to individual satyagraha.

The Third Round Table Conference and the Road to the 1935 Act

The Three Conferences Compared and Their Outcome

Observable outcomes can be read across the three conferences, compared below. The Third Round Table Conference of late 1932 met without the Congress and with only a handful of delegates, and was the least productive of the three.

Distinguishing the result: barren as the conferences seemed, their proceedings and the work of a Joint Committee became the basis of the Government of India Act 1935, which provided for provincial autonomy and an All-India Federation of the provinces and the princely states. The three conferences are set out below.

The Three Round Table ConferencesThree sessions in London, only one of which the Congress joinedFirst Conference1930 to 1931Congress boycotted it(Gandhi was in jail);the talks lacked themain national partySecond Conference1931Gandhi attended assole Congressrepresentative; endedin communal deadlockThird Conference1932Congress did notattend; the leastproductive; led to the1935 ActWithout the Congress, no Round Table Conference could settle the constitution.
Figure 3. The three Round Table Conferences.
Table 1. The three Round Table Conferences compared.
Conference Year The Congress Outcome
First 1930-31 Boycotted (Gandhi in jail) No national settlement possible
Second 1931 Gandhi, sole representative Communal deadlock over minorities
Third 1932 Did not attend Least productive; fed into the 1935 Act

Significance: Negotiation, the Depressed Classes and Exhaustion

What the Phase Achieved and Why It Ended

Contemporary linkages run from this phase into both the constitutional and the social history of India. The conferences proved that the British could not frame a constitution without the Congress, and they led, however indirectly, to the Government of India Act of 1935. The Poona Pact brought the Depressed Classes into the political framework, a turning point whose social meaning is examined in Part 18.

The larger significance is that the movement had reached exhaustion. Two great waves of mass struggle had not won freedom, and the next years would be a phase of constitutional work and office, before the Second World War reopened the whole question. The next part turns aside to the revolutionary stream of the 1920s and 1930s, which ran alongside the Gandhian movement.

Prelims MCQ practice

Each question below tests one specific concept on the topic. Click to reveal the answer and a full option-wise explanation.

Q1. At which Round Table Conference did Gandhi attend as the sole representative of the Congress?

  1. First
  2. Second
  3. Third
  4. None of them
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Second

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. Gandhi attended only the Second Round Table Conference (1931), as the sole Congress representative. Hence option (b).

Q2. The Communal Award of 1932, granting separate electorates to the Depressed Classes, was announced by:

  1. Lord Irwin
  2. Ramsay MacDonald
  3. Lord Linlithgow
  4. Sir John Simon
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Ramsay MacDonald

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Communal Award was announced by the British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald in August 1932. Hence option (b).

Q3. With reference to the Poona Pact (1932), consider the following statements:

  1. It was signed after Gandhi's fast against the Communal Award.
  2. It replaced separate electorates for the Depressed Classes with reserved seats in a joint electorate.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Both 1 and 2

Explanation.

Both are correct. The Poona Pact followed Gandhi's fast and replaced separate electorates with reserved seats in a joint electorate. Hence option (c).

Q4. Under the Poona Pact, the number of seats reserved for the Depressed Classes in the provincial legislatures was raised to about:

  1. 71
  2. 148
  3. 250
  4. 30
Show answer and explanation

Answer: 148

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Communal Award had given about 71 seats; the Poona Pact raised the reserved provincial seats to roughly 148. Hence option (b).

Q5. The Third Round Table Conference (1932) was notable because:

  1. Gandhi led the Congress delegation
  2. The Congress did not take part
  3. It granted complete independence
  4. It abolished the salt tax
Show answer and explanation

Answer: The Congress did not take part

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Congress did not attend the Third Round Table Conference, which was the least productive of the three. Hence option (b).

Q6. Consider the following pairs of a settlement and its electoral provision:

  1. The Communal Award : separate electorates for the Depressed Classes.
  2. The Poona Pact : reserved seats in a joint electorate.

Which of the pairs given above is/are correctly matched?

  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Both 1 and 2

Explanation.

Both pairs are correct: the Communal Award gave separate electorates, and the Poona Pact substituted reserved seats in a joint electorate. Hence option (c).

Sources and Further Reading

Editorial Disclaimer

This article is prepared for UPSC examination preparation. Verify key facts and interpretations against standard reference histories before relying on them.

Part 8 of 21 · The Gandhian Era

All 21 parts in this cluster
  1. 1 Part 1: Gandhi Before the Mass Movement: South Africa, Satyagraha and the Gandhian Creed
  2. 2 Part 2: The Early Experiments: Champaran, Ahmedabad and Kheda (1917-1918)
  3. 3 Part 3: Rowlatt, Jallianwala Bagh and the Khilafat Question (1919-1920)
  4. 4 Part 4: The Non-Cooperation Movement: Programme, Spread and Chauri Chaura (1920-1922)
  5. 5 Part 5: The Swaraj Party and the Council-Entry Years (1922-1928)
  6. 6 Part 6: The Simon Commission, the Nehru Report and the Communal Fault-line (1927-1929)
  7. 7 Part 7: Purna Swaraj and the Salt Satyagraha: Civil Disobedience Phase I (1929-1931)
  8. 8 Part 8: The Round Table Conferences, the Poona Pact and Civil Disobedience Phase II (1931-1934) (this article)
  9. 9 Part 9: Revolutionary Nationalism in the 1920s-30s: HSRA, Bhagat Singh and Chittagong (1924-1934)
  10. 10 Part 10: The Government of India Act 1935
  11. 11 Part 11: Provincial Autonomy: The 1937 Elections and the Congress Ministries (1937-1939)
  12. 12 Part 12: The Second World War, the Failed Missions and Individual Satyagraha (1939-1944)
  13. 13 Part 13: The Quit India Movement (1942)
  14. 14 Part 14: Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army (1939-1945)
  15. 15 Part 15: Communal Politics and the Demand for Pakistan (1906-1947)
  16. 16 Part 16: Partition and Independence: From Wavell to the Radcliffe Line (1945-1947)
  17. 17 Part 17: The Integration of the Princely States (1947-1948)
  18. 18 Part 18: Gandhi and Social Reform: Caste, Untouchability and the Poona Pact
  19. 19 Part 19: The Constructive Programme and Gandhian Economic Thought
  20. 20 Part 20: Many Voices: Peasants, Tribals, Workers and Women in the Freedom Struggle
  21. 21 Part 21: The Gandhian Era: Historiography, Analysis and the Verdict