For Judiciary exams, Legal Current Affairs and General Current Affairs are very important. Today, most exams ask many questions from current legal developments, latest judgments, new laws, amendments, government schemes, and national & international events. Many aspirants feel confused about how to study current affairs, especially because the online world has too much information.
- But don’t worry — here is a simple and complete guide for Judiciary students.
- Why Are Current Affairs Important for Judiciary Exams?
- Judiciary officers must stay updated with new laws and court decisions.
- Many Prelims and Mains questions are based on current legal events.
- Interviews test your awareness of real issues happening in society.
- Current affairs improve your writing and analytical thinking.
So remember: Current Affairs = High Scoring + Judge-like thinking.
What to Study in Legal Current Affairs
Focus on:
- Important Supreme Court & High Court judgments
- New laws and amendments
- Constitutional developments
- Legal issues, controversies, and debates
- Major cases related to fundamental rights
- Criminal law reforms
- Government legal policies and commissions
- If you study these sincerely, you cover most of the exam requirements.
What to Study in General Current Affairs
Cover these areas:
- Indian Polity & Government Schemes
- Economy & Budget
- National & International Events
- Science & Technology
- Environment & Climate issues
- Awards & Important appointments
- Remember, you don’t need everything — only useful and exam-related topics.
Simple Strategy to Study Current Affairs in the Online Era
1. Use Reliable Sources Only
Do not read random news from social media.
Choose trusted sources like:
- PIB
- The Hindu / Indian Express editorials
- LiveLaw / Bar & Bench
- PRS India
- Monthly current affairs magazines
- Quality is more important than quantity.
2. Make Short Notes
Write small 5–6 line notes for every important news.
Short notes help in fast revision before Prelims, Mains, and Interview.
3. Follow Daily + Weekly + Monthly Revision
- Daily – 30 minutes current affairs reading
- Weekly – revise notes and highlight important topics
- Monthly – read monthly magazine for summarisation
- Revision converts knowledge into memory.
4. Link Current Affairs with Law
Example:
- Read judgment on Article 21 → Connect with right to life and human dignity
- Read new Criminal Law reforms → link with IPC, CrPC and Evidence Act
- Legal connection makes understanding strong.
5. Use Online Tools Wisely
Use YouTube, Daily Digital PDFs, Apps, and Online News Platforms but avoid distractions like reels and social media noise.
Set a fixed time daily.
6. Practice Current Affairs MCQs and Mains Questions
Daily or weekly MCQ tests improve accuracy and exam confidence.
7. Stay Consistent
Consistency is more important than long hours.
Even 30 minutes daily is better than 3 hours once in a week.