It is held every year to select officers for the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS), Indian Police Service (IPS), and other Group A and B civil services. The UPSC civil services exam is considered one of the most competitive exams in the world.Even last year, the top three rank holders were women with Shruti Sharma, a student of history, securing the first position.UPSC had announced vacancies for 1,011 posts in civil services. The third and final phase of the interview was held on May 18. The commission conducted interviews in three phases for 2,589 candidates.Of the 933, 345 are from general category, 99 from Economic Weaker Sections, 263 from OBC, 154 from Scheduled Caste and 72 from Scheduled Tribe category. According to the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) that conducts the examinations, a total of 933 candidates have been recommended for appointment, of which 183 are chosen as IAS officers.In fact, women have taken up 12 of the top 20 slots. Among the top 25 candidates recommended for appointment to various elite services such as IAS, IPS and IFS, 14 are women and 11, men.Ishita Kishore topped the exam followed by Garima Lohia, Uma Harathi, Smriti Mishra, Mayur Hazarika, Gahna Navya James, Waseemm Ahmed Bhatt, Aniruddh Yadav, Kanika Goyal and Rahul Shrivastava.This is the second year in a row that the top three slots have gone to women. All the top four ranks have been bagged by women. The 200-plus day siege of the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut may be over but what comes next isn’t exactly to Moscow’s benefit.Ishita Kishore, a Delhi University graduate, has topped the civil services examinations, the results of which were announced on Tuesday. priorities and trade-offs between supporting Ukraine against Russia and defending Taiwan against China.īakhmut falls, but is it really a Russian victory? by Leonid Bershidsky Is it a choice of defending Ukraine, Taiwan - or both? by Brad Glosserman Kishida has denied that he is considering a snap election but then again, so does every Japanese prime minister when asked about the timing for such a vote. Why a snap election might be looming for Japan by Michael MacArthur Bosack Worried about backdoor layoffs? Try career cushioning by Beth KowittĮmployees have a new vocabulary to talk about workplace gripes, and they’re using it to reevaluate assumptions about work and its role in their lives. 5th Circuit appeared worryingly comfortable challenging the expertise of FDA scientists. Yet another bad week for abortion rights in America by Lisa Jarvis and Sarah Green Carmichael The new "works" partnership will transform Aston Martin into Honda's sole focus on the starting grid. Honda to power Aston Martin's F1 title ambitions from 2026 by Alan Baldwin While Prime Minister Fumio Kishida may or may not call a snap election now that the G7 summit is over, that uncertainty isn't stopping political parties from planning their next. Japan's political parties prepare as talk of snap election heats up by Eric Johnston The North is upgrading its space center to accommodate the increased demands of leader Kim Jong Un, raising alarm in Seoul. Korea space race heats up with North and South planning launches by Sangmi Cha and Bruce Einhorn Seven & I and activist fund ValueAct set for a showdown at shareholders meeting by Kazuaki Nagataĭespite making a steady recovery from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, Seven & I Holdings is facing pressure from a foreign shareholder that claims the firm is wasting its.
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