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Is laxmikanth enough for UPSC?

Is laxmikanth enough for UPSC?

Ans. For General Studies Paper 2 as well as IAS Prelims, Laxmikant is essential but it is not enough. You have to go to other books enlisted above.

Is laxmikanth enough for mains?

Secondly, Laxmikant does not cover the entire Syllabus of Mains Polity and Governance hence those topics left should be done like NGOs, Role of Civil Services. For this, a separate book is not necessary.

How many days are enough for laxmikant?

45 days Strategy for M.Laxmikant (5th Edition) You have to simultaneously solve questions and revise the topics otherwise you will keep reading new topics and will forget the earlier ones. 45 days means almost 6 weeks and every Sunday (or any other day) should be reserved for tests and revision.

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What is the best way to read Laxmikanth?

“Personally, I found that the best way to read Laxmikanth is by starting with Class 11 and 12 NCERT ’s on polity. Most of the concepts get cleared with a general reading of these books and once done, an aspirant should take up Laxmikanth,” shares Priyank. “It is imperative that the book is read cover to cover for the first 2-3 times.

Is Laxmikant enough for polity?

If you are going to read Laxmikant for polity that is a good decision. it is not sufficient but it is more than enough for polity. you can cover 95\% syllabus of polity from this book. For remaining 5\% if you are going to study other books, you might get puzzled and you might forget laxmikant also. so

Is m Laxmikant for polity enough for the UPSC prelims?

Say yes to facts. M. Laxmikant for polity is a bible for all UPSC aspirants. The prelims exam has 8–10 questions from this section while the GS paper 2 of mains exam has 2–5 questions from polity and remaining questions are from current affairs and applied part of Polity like governance and policies.

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What to read in GS-1?

Assuming you are now familiar with the syllabus of GS-1, we will discuss a topic by topic what to read, from where to read and what not to read for these topics. Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice and International relations.