Context:
The Central Government announced the Padma Awards 2026, honouring 131 individuals across diverse fields for their exceptional contributions to the nation.
Key Highlights:
- Award Distribution
- 5 Padma Vibhushan
- 13 Padma Bhushan
- 113 Padma Shri
- Notable Awardees
- Padma Vibhushan (Posthumous): V.S. Achuthanandan, Dharmendra
- Padma Bhushan: Mammootty, Alka Yagnik, Uday Kotak, Vijay Amritraj
- Padma Shri: M. Jagadesh Kumar, R.V.S. Mani, Shashi Shekhar Vempati, Budha Krishna Mani
- Sports Awardees
- Rohit Sharma, Harmanpreet Kaur, Savita Punia, Baldev Singh, Praveen Kumar
- Regional Representation
- Tamil Nadu – 13 awardees
- West Bengal – 11 awardees
- Kerala – 8 awardees
- Special Category
- 45 “Unsung Heroes” recognised for grassroots contributions.
- Fields Covered
- Social Work, Public Affairs, Science & Engineering, Trade & Industry, Medicine, Literature, Education, Sports, Civil Services
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Padma Awards are among India’s highest civilian honours, instituted in 1954.
- Announced annually on the eve of Republic Day.
- Categories:
- Padma Vibhushan – India’s second-highest civilian award, for exceptional and distinguished service.
- Padma Bhushan – India’s third-highest civilian award, for distinguished service of high order.
- Padma Shri – India’s fourth-highest civilian award, for distinguished service in any field.
- Bharat Ratna remains the highest civilian award.
- Recommendations are made by the Padma Awards Committee, constituted by the Prime Minister annually.
- Open to all persons regardless of race, occupation, position, or sex (except government servants, except doctors and scientists).
- Awards are not titles and cannot be used as suffixes or prefixes.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Role in Nation-Building:
- Encourages excellence in public life and strengthens social capital.
- Recognition of “unsung heroes” promotes inclusive national integration.
- Democratization of Civilian Honours:
- Public nomination process enhances transparency and participatory governance.
- Reflects shift from elite-centric awards to grassroots recognition.
- Cultural Diplomacy & Soft Power:
- Honouring artists, sportspersons, and industrialists enhances India’s global image.
- Federal Dimension:
- Regional representation strengthens cooperative federalism and cultural diversity.
- Criticisms & Concerns:
- Allegations of politicisation in some cases.
- Need for objective and transparent selection criteria.
- Way Forward:
- Institutionalise clear evaluation benchmarks.
- Ensure balanced regional, gender, and sectoral representation.
- Strengthen outreach to identify more grassroots changemakers.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2 – Polity (Constitutional Values, Awards & Honours)
• GS 1 – Indian Society (Role Models, Social Contribution)
• Prelims – Civilian Awards of India
