Navigation hub for the durable, structural current-affairs compendium for CAPF: the part of current affairs that is exam-relevant but does not depend on this week's headlines
This module is the durable spine of current affairs for CAPF. It collects the structural facts that the news cycle keeps reusing (which organisations exist and where they are headquartered, who publishes which index, how schemes and awards are organised, which exercises pair with which partner, where the strategic locations are) and leaves the dated values (this year's rank, this month's winner, the latest rate) explicitly flagged as "verify the latest". The CAPF Paper I current-events clause is largely solvable from this durable layer, because most "current affairs" questions are static-GK questions dressed in a topical hook.
This module pairs with the static current-events notes under Index and with the dated daily briefs under Index. Where a topic is fully covered in those modules, this index links across rather than duplicating. For the official clause mapping see syllabus index; for the approved source policy see sources index.
| Layer | Example | How to treat it |
|---|---|---|
| Durable (structural) | SCO is headquartered in Beijing; UNDP publishes the HDI; Param Vir Chakra is the highest wartime gallantry award | Memorise once; reuse for years |
| Dated (headline) | This year's HDI rank, the latest repo rate, the most recent summit host | Verify close to the exam; never assert a stale value |
The rule for this whole module: write the durable fact in full, and mark every dated value with "verify the latest". This protects accuracy and matches how CAPF actually tests current events.
Paper I current-events questions are objective MCQs with negative marking and reward recognition, not analysis. The recurring formats are single-fact recall (where is the SCO headquartered), matching (index to publisher, exercise to partner, organisation to headquarters), statement-type ("which of the following about BRICS is correct"), and the static-current blend (an entity is in the news, but the question tests its durable fact). The CAPF paper leans harder than a generic GK paper on the security and defence angle, so durable defence and security and the internal-security material in human rights and internal security carry extra weight.