The questions show a very clear UPSC pattern: they are not testing only "what is right or wrong"; they are testing whether the candidate can handle complex administrative situations where every option has a cost.
The PYQs show some very common UPSC sub-question formats:
This means students should prepare a standard case study framework:
Ethics case studies are not only evaluated on whether the final decision is morally correct. They are also evaluated on the maturity of reasoning, application of values, administrative feasibility, stakeholder sensitivity and clarity of presentation. Students can significantly improve their answers by strengthening the following areas.
For example, in the case where Vijay, a Deputy Commissioner, is handling a cloudburst disaster while also receiving news of his mother's death, many students may simply write:
"Vijay should show dedication to duty, integrity, empathy and public service."
"Since more than 200 people have died, around 5000 are injured, roads and communication networks are disrupted, Vijay's presence is crucial for coordinating rescue, relief, medical camps and evacuation. However, his mother's death is also a serious personal obligation. Therefore, he should ensure proper delegation, set up a control room, brief senior officers, remain digitally available if he has to leave briefly, and ensure that disaster relief does not suffer."
Note: In the actual examination, the answer need not be written in such long sentences. The purpose of the example is only to show how values should be linked with the facts of the case. In the exam, the same point can be written in a shorter and sharper manner.
Students can write stakeholders like this:
"Stakeholders are officers, public, government, family, media and society."
This is incomplete because it does not explain how each stakeholder is affected. For example, in the forest land housing case, stakeholders are not just "government and poor people". The case includes homeless people, economically weaker sections, tribal and nomadic communities, wildlife, local ecology, future generations and the district administration.
Homeless and economically weaker sections need dignified housing. Tribal and nomadic communities may lose livelihood and cultural connection with forests. Wildlife may lose habitat. Future generations may suffer due to ecological degradation. District administration has to balance welfare, legality and sustainability. The government has a duty to fulfil social justice without causing irreversible ecological harm.
Values should not be written as isolated words. They can be connected to action.
"Values involved are integrity, empathy, objectivity and transparency."
"Integrity requires the officer not to share confidential project information. Objectivity requires fair tendering without favouring relatives. Transparency requires all decisions to be recorded and processed through formal channels."
This converts theory into applied ethics.
Students sometimes choose dramatic options such as:
"I will immediately resign." / "I will expose everyone in the media." / "I will arrest all involved persons immediately." / "I will completely stop the project." / "I will blindly refuse the order."
Such answers may sound morally strong but often lack administrative maturity. For example, in the case where Rajesh is asked to split procurement expenditure to avoid sanction from higher authority, immediately resigning is not the best option.
He should refuse splitting of expenditure. He should place the financial rule position on record. He should seek approval from the competent authority. He should maintain professional communication with his superior. He should protect himself through documentation. He should escalate only if pressure continues.
UPSC prefers balanced courage, not impulsive idealism.
Some students write answers based only on sympathy or moral emotion and ignore rules. For example, in the bank case, the bank manager releases โน10 lakh from a dormant account to help a colleague's father undergo surgery. The intention is compassionate, but the method is legally and ethically wrong because the money belongs to someone else and the bank has fiduciary responsibility.
"The bank manager did the right thing because he saved a life."
"The bank manager's compassion is understandable, but using money from a dormant account violates banking ethics, financial rules and depositor trust. The correct approach would have been arranging staff contribution, emergency loan, CSR support, health scheme assistance or charitable funding."
Many case studies include vulnerable stakeholders. Students lose marks when they focus only on the officer or institution. For example, in the border crossing case, around 200โ250 people, mainly women and children, are trying to cross the border. Some are injured and need immediate medical care, but there are also armed soldiers among them.
"Do not allow anyone to cross the border."
"Injured civilians, women and children should be given immediate humanitarian and medical assistance. At the same time, armed soldiers must be separated, disarmed as per protocol, guarded securely and reported to higher authorities. Security screening should be done without violating human dignity."
Students often write emotionally attractive answers that are impossible to implement. For example, in the water crisis case, farmers complain that they are restricted from using groundwater while industries continue drawing large quantities of water.
"All industrial water use should be stopped immediately and farmers should be allowed to irrigate."
"Immediate priority should be drinking water security. The Collector should conduct a water audit, impose equal restrictions on farmers and industries, regulate borewell extraction, promote micro-irrigation, require industries to use recycled water, prevent illegal extraction, communicate transparently with farmers and provide temporary support for crop loss."
Many students focus only on immediate action. For example, in the MGNREGA mismanagement case, immediate action is needed against fake payments, fictitious workers and siphoning of funds. But the answer should not stop there.
UPSC case studies often ask multiple things: ethical issues, options, dilemmas, evaluation, best course of action and reforms. The answer becomes stronger when each part is addressed separately through clear subheadings.
Ethical issues involved โ Stakeholders and their interests โ Options available โ Evaluation of options โ Most appropriate course of action โ Long-term measures
Public trust is one of the most important values in Ethics case studies, but students often forget to mention it. For example, in the drug trial case, Dr. Srinivasan is pressured to manipulate data, selectively report positive outcomes, avoid informed consent and use patented compounds of another company.
"This is wrong because it violates honesty."
"Manipulating clinical trial data violates scientific integrity, informed consent, patient safety and public trust in medical research. If such a drug enters the market, it can endanger lives and damage trust in pharmaceutical institutions."
Similarly, in procurement, welfare schemes, disaster management, banking and environmental cases, public trust is central.
The conclusion should not be vague. It should reflect the balance of values.
"The best course of action should uphold rule of law, protect vulnerable stakeholders, maintain institutional integrity and ensure that compassion is exercised through lawful and sustainable means."
UPSC is testing whether the candidate can:
UPSC rewards answers that are balanced, mature, practical and value-based.
While practicing Ethics case studies at home, students should write points for all the dimensions mentioned in the framework (Given Below). For every case study, they should practise identifying the core ethical conflict, stakeholders, ethical issues, ethical dilemmas, options available, evaluation of options, best course of action, action plan and possible institutional reforms.
This practice helps students build a complete understanding of the case. In the actual examination, UPSC may not ask every dimension. Some questions may ask only for ethical issues, some may ask for options, some may ask for dilemmas, while others may ask for a course of action or reforms. However, if students have practised all dimensions at home, they can quickly select and write only the part demanded in the exam.
For almost every case study, students can follow this framework:
UPSC Ethics case studies are becoming more situational, contemporary and layered. They are not asking candidates to merely define ethics. They are testing whether an aspirant can act as a calm, courageous, compassionate and constitutionally guided decision-maker in real-life governance situations.
The biggest takeaway is this:
Ethics case studies are not about choosing the most ideal option; they are about choosing the most ethical option that is also lawful, humane, practical and institutionally sustainable.
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Read all 40+ case studies exactly as asked in the exam โ 2013 to 2025 โ and apply this framework to write better answers.