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CLAT Current Affairs: GK Topics, Sources, Monthly Routine and Practice

Current Affairs for CLAT is not a last-week fact dump. It is a year-long habit of following issues, understanding their background and answering passage-based questions calmly.

28-32
GK questions
5
topic families
Daily
reading habit
8
PYQs
Practise Current Affairs →
📑 On this page

CLAT Current Affairs, including General Knowledge, is one of the most misunderstood sections in the exam. Students often treat it as a pile of monthly PDFs, random quizzes and breaking-news headlines. That approach creates volume, but not confidence. CLAT does not merely ask whether you saw a fact yesterday. It asks whether you can read a passage about a contemporary issue, connect it to institutions, people, dates, places, treaties, awards, constitutional ideas, economic terms or historical background, and then choose accurately under time pressure.

This page gives you a working system for Current Affairs. It does not pretend to be a daily news feed, and it does not invent "latest" facts without verification. Instead, it shows how to read, track, revise and practise the section using LawyerHatch. The dedicated Current Affairs & GK hub has topic guides and drills. This page answers the broader search intent around CLAT current affairs, monthly PDFs, static GK, sources, notes and quiz practice.

📌 Current Affairs rule
For CLAT, a current issue becomes useful when you can answer three questions: what happened, why it matters, and what static background the passage can connect to.

What Current Affairs in CLAT actually tests

The section usually sits in the 28 to 32 question range and has a heavy reading component. It may use passages connected with national developments, international affairs, legal and constitutional issues, economy, science, environment, culture, sports and historically significant events. The exact question can ask for a fact, but the surrounding passage often gives context. That is why pure rote learning is fragile. A student who understands institutions and timelines can recover even when a fact is phrased differently.

Think of CLAT GK as layered knowledge. The first layer is current: a bill, judgment, summit, appointment, award, conflict, budget announcement, index, mission or sports event. The second layer is static: the institution behind it, the constitutional article, the treaty body, the historical background, the economic term, the geography, the book or the cultural source. The third layer is passage logic: what the author says in the given text. Strong preparation trains all three layers without letting any one layer dominate.

The five topic families to cover

These families are not watertight boxes. A single passage on climate finance can combine international affairs, economy, environment and public policy. A passage on a Supreme Court judgment can combine legal GK, polity and current affairs. The purpose of dividing topics is to make revision manageable. If you know your weak family, you can practise it directly instead of taking another random quiz and hoping for improvement.

Best sources for CLAT Current Affairs

The best source is the one you can actually follow consistently. A daily newspaper or reliable explainer source is useful, but only if you extract exam-relevant notes instead of reading everything with equal intensity. Monthly compendiums are useful for revision, but they are weak as the only source because they encourage passive highlighting. Quizzes are useful for recall, but they do not teach background unless solutions explain the context. LawyerHatch practice should be one layer in this system: it tests whether your reading converts into answer choices.

Source typeUse it forDo not use it for
Newspaper/editorial readingBuilding awareness, vocabulary and issue contextTrying to memorise every line or every political update.
Monthly compendiumRevision, chronology and missed-topic coverageReplacing daily reading completely.
Static GK notesInstitutions, geography, awards, books, history and constitutional backgroundLearning disconnected facts without issue context.
QuizzesRecall, speed and identifying gapsJudging preparation only by one day's score.
PYQs and mocksUnderstanding CLAT's framing and pressurePredicting exact future questions.
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How to make monthly Current Affairs notes

A monthly note should not be a copied compendium. It should be your own short issue tracker. For every important development, write the event, the institution, the background, the legal or policy connection, and two possible question angles. Keep it compact. The point is not to create a beautiful notebook; it is to make revision fast. If a note cannot help you answer a question, shorten it or remove it.

  1. 1
    Capture the issue
    Write the event in one plain sentence. Example: a bill was passed, an index was released, a treaty meeting was held, a court gave a ruling, or an award was announced.
  2. 2
    Attach static context
    Add the institution, article, organisation, country, place, book, sport, economic term or historical background that CLAT can connect to the event.
  3. 3
    Write the legal or policy angle
    Ask why the issue matters for law, governance, rights, public policy, economy, environment or international relations.
  4. 4
    Create two recall prompts
    Turn the issue into two questions. One can be factual; one should test background. This prevents passive note-taking.
  5. 5
    Revise at three distances
    Review after two days, after two weeks and at the end of the month. Current Affairs decays quickly unless revisited.

A sample issue-tracker format

ColumnWhat to writeExample of the thinking
IssueOne-line eventA constitutional body released a report; a treaty meeting was held; an award was announced.
Institution/person/placeThe body, ministry, court, country, organisation or locationUN body, RBI, Supreme Court, Parliament, NITI Aayog, UNESCO, COP, Asian Games.
Static linkBackground that can be askedConstitutional role, headquarters, founding year, article, treaty, geography, previous winner.
Why it mattersPolicy or legal importanceRights impact, economy impact, environmental effect, international relation, governance issue.
Quiz angleLikely question routeDefinition, location, member country, function, author, index rank, article, committee name.
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Static GK for CLAT: what matters and what does not

Static GK matters in CLAT, but not as an unlimited trivia universe. You should prioritise static facts that connect to current issues: constitutional bodies, courts, Parliament, important articles, international organisations, treaties, national parks, geographical locations in news, awards, books, authors, sports tournaments, economic institutions, government schemes, cultural sites and major historical anniversaries. Static GK becomes meaningful when attached to a current passage. A detached list of ten thousand facts may look serious, but it is poor strategy.

When you revise static GK, always ask: why would CLAT put this in a passage? A headquarters fact about an international organisation is useful if that organisation was in the news. A national park location is useful if the park appears in an environment passage. An article of the Constitution is useful if a rights or governance issue appears. This issue-first method prevents you from drowning in trivia.

Current Affairs questions: how to practise

Current Affairs practice should combine recall and passage reading. A short factual quiz is good for memory, but the actual exam often frames facts inside paragraphs. Practise both. Use topic drills to test families such as national affairs, international affairs, economy, science and culture. Use PYQs to understand how CLAT phrases current affairs. Use full mocks to test whether you can switch from Legal Reasoning or English into GK without losing focus.

A weekly routine that works

  1. 1
    Monday to Friday: daily reading
    Spend 25 to 35 minutes on serious news reading. Capture only issues that connect to institutions, law, policy, economy, environment, international relations, culture or sports.
  2. 2
    Three days a week: static bridge
    Take one issue and add its static background. If the issue is a summit, add organisation, members, headquarters and purpose. If it is a judgment, add the right or institution involved.
  3. 3
    Saturday: quiz and correction
    Attempt a Current Affairs or GK drill. Do not only check marks. Write why each wrong answer was missed.
  4. 4
    Sunday: monthly file cleanup
    Remove weak notes, merge duplicates and mark high-value issues. A clean revision file beats a giant unread folder.

PDFs, compendiums and the hoarding problem

There is nothing wrong with a CLAT monthly current affairs PDF. The problem begins when collecting PDFs replaces thinking. A student can download twelve compendiums and still not know the difference between a body, a scheme, a treaty and a constitutional office. Use one reliable monthly source, not five. Convert it into a smaller revision sheet. Then test yourself. If a PDF page is highlighted in three colours but never converted into a recall prompt, it is decoration, not preparation.

Also be honest about freshness. Current Affairs pages must be updated. If you are reading this page for a specific exam cycle, use it as the method page and check live official/news sources for date-specific facts. LawyerHatch should eventually add monthly issue pages, but until those are built, this page should not pretend to be a latest-news ticker. It is a preparation system for the Current Affairs section.

How to revise the last six months before CLAT

In the final phase, reduce discovery and increase recall. Divide your revision by month and by topic family. For each month, identify the top issues, attach static context and quiz yourself. For each topic family, review recurring institutions: Parliament, Supreme Court, Election Commission, RBI, UN bodies, climate agreements, sports bodies, cultural institutions, awards and indices. Do not spend the final week reading brand-new long documents unless they fill a specific gap. The last week should make the existing material retrievable.

PhaseMain taskOutput
Daily phaseRead and capture issuesOne-line issue notes with static links.
Weekly phaseQuiz and correctError labels and repeated weak themes.
Monthly phaseCompress and reviseA short file of high-value issues.
Final phaseRecall and mixed practiceFast retrieval under mock pressure.
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Current Affairs is not isolated from the rest of CLAT. Legal Reasoning passages often draw from public policy, rights, courts, institutions and social questions. A student who follows current legal developments understands those passages faster, even if the answer still comes from the principle. Similarly, English passages may use topics from environment, economy or culture. Logical Reasoning arguments may discuss policy claims. Good current affairs preparation improves the whole paper because it makes unfamiliar passages feel less alien.

How to prioritise when the news feels endless

The news cycle is infinite; your study time is not. Prioritise issues with institutional weight. A constitutional body, Supreme Court development, major bill, international summit, national policy, environment report, economic announcement, major award, sports event or cultural milestone deserves attention. A short-lived controversy with no legal, policy, institutional or static-GK link can usually be skipped after basic awareness. This judgement is important because Current Affairs preparation can become a time sink if every headline receives equal treatment.

Use a three-level label. Level one means must revise: national importance, official body, legal or policy impact, and likely static links. Level two means know briefly: useful context but low chance of detailed questioning. Level three means ignore after awareness: noise, speculation, gossip, repetitive political exchange or unverified social-media claims. The label keeps your monthly notes lean. A lean file that you revise four times is stronger than a giant file you never reopen.

How parents and schools can support GK preparation

Current Affairs is easier when the student is not studying in isolation. A parent or teacher does not need to know CLAT deeply to help. They can ask the student to explain one issue every evening in two minutes: what happened, who is involved, why it matters and what background is connected. If the student cannot explain it simply, the note is not ready for revision. This small conversation builds recall and clarity without adding another expensive resource.

A useful weekly check is the "five issue test". The student should be able to explain one national issue, one international issue, one economy issue, one science or environment issue and one culture, sports or static-GK issue. If one bucket is always empty, the reading habit is unbalanced. This is a simple way to catch gaps before a monthly backlog becomes scary.

Keep the explanation spoken, not just written. If a student can speak an issue clearly without looking at notes, they probably understand it well enough to revise. If they can only recognise it when the PDF is open, the knowledge is still weak. CLAT rewards retrievable knowledge, not highlighted pages.

Build GK through practice
Use the Current Affairs & GK hub for topic guides, drills and passage-style revision.
Open Current Affairs hub

Frequently asked questions

Which current affairs are important for CLAT?
Prioritise national affairs, polity, international affairs, economy, science and environment, arts and culture, sports, legal developments, awards, books, indices and historically significant events connected to current issues.
Is static GK important for CLAT?
Yes, but it should be studied through current issues. Static GK is most useful when it explains the institution, treaty, place, award, article or background behind a contemporary development.
Is a monthly current affairs PDF enough?
A monthly PDF is useful for revision, but not enough by itself. You still need daily issue awareness, static context, quizzes, PYQs and mock practice.
How many months of current affairs should I revise?
There is no single permanent rule for every cycle. A practical approach is to maintain monthly notes through the year, revise the recent months heavily, and use official/past-paper patterns to judge depth.
Where can I practise CLAT GK questions?
Use the Current Affairs & GK hub, topic drills, PYQs and full mocks. Label every error by fact gap, static gap, passage miss or careless choice.
Is LawyerHatch an official CLAT website?
No. LawyerHatch is an independent CLAT UG practice platform. Official notices, application forms, admit cards, answer keys, results and counselling instructions must be checked on the Consortium of NLUs website.
Can I start without signing up?
Yes. You can begin free practice immediately. An account is useful when you want to save progress, return to previous attempts and track score history.

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