A month of pibtracker reorganised by theme, with editorial connective tissue between releases, the trap-watch notes consolidated, and a closing essay on what to chase outside PIB. Designed for revision — print it, annotate it, mark the questions you want to come back to.
Each chapter packs 8–10 releases per A4 page in a tight 2-column box grid. A short editor's note opens the chapter; the boxes carry the substance. Below is one page of Chapter 3 — the layout you receive in print.
Four days that moved the world's AI policy debate to New Delhi. 117 countries, 39 signatories, the succession into Vienna 2027. Read the boxes below in order; each one connects to the next.
This is page 6 of the February 2026 compilation. The full chapter spans pp. 6–8 (3 pages, 24 release boxes across India-as-host, India-abroad, and multilateral-organisation themes). Trap-watch flags are consolidated in Chapter 7 (p. 15), where each flag points back to the originating release.
The month is regrouped by subject — Foreign affairs, Cabinet, Environment, etc. Easier to revise from. The chronological view stays on the daily feed.
Releases that belong together (e.g. AI Summit + Indian Languages Corpus + Bengaluru Safety Institute) are placed adjacent with a one-paragraph bridge.
Every conflation, wrong-attribution risk, and ambiguous wording we noticed in the month, consolidated in one chapter.
What PIB didn't cover but might surface on the exam — RBI circulars, SC verdicts, scientific papers, international press. With links.
The Cabinet decisions, budget consultations, and summits expected in the following month — so you know what's coming.
Designed at A4 with a tight 2-column box layout. ~8 release boxes per page so 16 pages fits 130 releases without crowding. Mono-spaced PRIDs and ministry tags for highlight-marking.
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