Political Science CSS Past Papers

Political Science is one of the most-picked CSS optional subjects in Group I, carrying 200 marks across two papers. It pairs naturally with IR, Public Administration, and Governance & Public Policies. Below you can download Political Science CSS Past Papers from 2000 to 2025, with paper pattern, syllabus highlights, recommended books, and a clear strategy for CSS 2026.

Download Political Science CSS Past Papers (Year-wise PDFs)

Political Science Past Paper 2023
Political Science Past Paper 2022
Political Science Past Paper 2021
Political Science Past Paper 2020
Political Science Past Paper 2019
Political Science Past Paper 2018
Political Science Past Paper 2017
Political Science Past Paper 2016
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Paper Pattern (FPSC 2026)

  • Paper I — Western political thought, Muslim political thought, key concepts & ideologies.
  • Paper II — Comparative politics, Pakistan’s political system, contemporary political developments.

Each paper is 100 marks, 3 hours. Format: 20 MCQs + 4 subjective questions out of 8 (each 20 marks). Pass mark per paper: 40%.

FPSC Syllabus Highlights

Paper I — Political Theory

  • Western thinkers: Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Mill, Marx
  • Muslim thinkers: Al-Farabi, Al-Mawardi, Ibn Khaldun, Shah Waliullah, Iqbal
  • Concepts: state, sovereignty, law, liberty, equality, justice, rights
  • Ideologies: liberalism, conservatism, socialism, fascism, feminism, environmentalism
  • Forms of government & political institutions

Paper II — Comparative & Pakistani Politics

  • Comparative political systems: UK, USA, France, China, Iran, Turkey
  • Political development in Pakistan since 1947
  • 1956, 1962, 1973 constitutions & 18th Amendment
  • Federalism, civil-military relations, judicial activism
  • Political parties & electoral systems in Pakistan
  • Contemporary issues: governance, populism, identity politics

Most Repeated Topics (2016-2025)

  • Comparison of Plato & Aristotle on justice
  • Ibn Khaldun’s theory of state & civilisation cycle
  • Rousseau’s general will and modern democracy
  • Iqbal’s reconstruction of Muslim political thought
  • 18th Amendment and federalism in Pakistan
  • Civil-military relations and democratic transitions
  • Comparative analysis: presidential vs parliamentary systems
  • Rise of populism in Western democracies

High-Scoring Strategy

  1. Read one textbook end-to-end — Andrew Heywood’s Political Theory: An Introduction is the gold standard.
  2. Build a thinkers’ notebook — One page per thinker with key works, central thesis, 2-3 quotes.
  3. Compare and contrast — Many questions ask for comparison (Plato vs Aristotle, Locke vs Hobbes). Practice these explicitly.
  4. Tie theory to Pakistan — Paper II rewards application; link Hobbes to authoritarian regimes, Rousseau to popular sovereignty debates.
  5. Practice 8-10 papers under exam timing in the final 6 weeks.
  6. Cite scholars in every answer — Heywood, Sabine, Strauss, Iqbal, Ayesha Jalal.

Recommended Books

  • Political Theory: An Introduction — Andrew Heywood
  • A History of Political Theory — George Sabine
  • Political Ideologies — Andrew Heywood
  • Comparative Government and Politics — Rod Hague
  • The Constitutional and Political History of Pakistan — Hamid Khan
  • The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam — Allama Iqbal
  • Pakistan: A Hard Country — Anatol Lieven

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Political Science easier than International Relations?

Political Science is more theory-heavy and conceptually demanding; IR is more dynamic and current-affairs driven. Many aspirants pick both as a pair because the syllabi reinforce each other.

How many Muslim political thinkers should I prepare?

At minimum: Al-Farabi, Al-Mawardi, Ibn Taymiyyah, Ibn Khaldun, Shah Waliullah, Sir Syed, and Iqbal. Know each thinker’s life, key works, and central political contributions.

Can I score 130+ in Political Science?

Yes — with structured answers, scholar citations, and tight time management. The subject rewards clear conceptual writing more than memorisation.

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