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Advice for teachers -
Australian and Global Politics

Unit 4 Area of Study 2: Global crises

Outcome 2

Analyse TWO contemporary global crises and evaluate the effectiveness of global actors’ responses to these.

Examples of learning activities

Climate change

  • Discuss the causes of climate change using edited clips from the film Inconvenient Truth.
  • Produce a flow chart or an annotated timeline of the key events and developments in the emergence of the climate change crisis.
  • Collect and produce maps to show the potential effects of climate change on sea levels, temperature changes, environmental degradation, including desertification and water shortages.
  • Define key terms in the context of the crisis of climate change: crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, globalisation and unilateralism.
  • Research the responses from relevant global actors, including the work of United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), 2015 Paris negotiations COP21. Evaluate the effectiveness of these responses.
  • Example icon for advice for teachers
    Discuss challenges in achieving effective resolutions outlined in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Conduct a conference role-play.
  • Discuss key aspects of the crisis of climate change, including resource exploitation, national interests, and methods of adapting to and reducing climate change.
  • Research and share in a class blog articles and journal analysis of climate change and include up-to-date reports.
  • Write an essay on the topic: ‘The climate change crisis is shaped by its causes’. Discuss.

Armed conflict

  • Discuss the meaning of the terms: crisis, crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, unilateralism and find examples of each.
  • Create a map identifying the name of states involved in armed conflict, their allies, and annotate the attitudes towards the armed conflict.
  • Conduct research into the causes and reasons for an armed conflict. Create a mind map of the causes.
  • Example icon for advice for teachers
    Role-play a member of the Security Council of the United Nations and write a speech about a conflict and deliver it at a conference session of the Security Council; the role-play should aim to illuminate the concepts of crisis, crisis diplomacy and international cooperation.
  • Compile a list and explanation of the challenges in achieving an effective resolution to an armed conflict. Note the responses from relevant global actors, the occupation and rebuilding of Iraq, the sectarian and civil conflict including ISIS and the effect of the staged withdrawal of the US and coalition ground troops.
  • Role-play a political analyst advising the US President of the background and assessment of different strategies and aspects of the armed conflict including intervention, war as an instrument of state policy, prosecuting war and war crimes in international law.

Terrorism

  • Define key terms in the context of the crisis of terrorism, crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, globalisation and unilateralism.
  • Example icon for advice for teachers
    In groups use a hexagon activity to identify and explain the causes of terrorism.

  • Research the origins of Islamic State and its connections with other terrorist groups like Al Qaeda, Jabhat al-Nusra, Hamas and Hezbollah.
  • Research responses to terrorism, war on terror, counter terrorism, US support in the Middle-East, use of drones, key aspects of the crisis of terrorism including non-state terrorism, terrorism as an instrument of state policy and the role of asymmetric warfare.
  • Outline the responses from relevant global actors, for example non-negotiation as terrorist policy.
  • Explain the challenges in achieving an effective resolution to terrorism. For example, the Islamic State’s success because of asymmetric warfare, integration with civilians, counter terrorism.
  • Create a class blog that collates research articles and journal analysis on terrorism.

Economic instability

  • Consider the example of the Great Depression and use a fishbone diagram to explain the causes of economic instability.
  • Research the polar economic theories of economic rationalism and austerity on one side and Keynesian economic strategies of government stimulus on the other.
  • Apply the terms: crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, globalisation and unilateralism to economic instability.
  • Compile a media file of a least ten articles from the last two years and annotate them to show how they interpret economic instability.
  • Discuss the challenges in achieving effective resolutions by the European Union and International Monetary Fund in Greece.
  • Example icon for advice for teachers
    Role-play a G20 Conference taking on a range of actors and discuss challenges in achieving effective economic resolutions.
  • Discuss the key aspects of the crisis of economic instability, including globalisation, capitalism’s boom-bust cycle, the role of key global actors as regulators and stabilisers.
Example icon for advice for teachers 

Detailed example 1

Climate change: Role-play UNFCC conference

Students role-play an emergency session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) that will illuminate the concepts of crisis diplomacy and international cooperation. The members discuss challenges in achieving effective climate change resolutions made in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Roles are allocated to students, including permanent members, elected members and observers. These include:

  • key states and groups: USA, Germany, France, Russia, Great Britain, Japan, South Korea, People’s Republic of China, Brazil, South Africa, India, Argentina, Australia, Pacific Islands
  • possible observers – World Wide Fund for Nature, Greenpeace.

Conference participants demonstrate responses to the conflict by writing and delivering a speech in their role.

Participants suggest and present arguments for proposed solutions to climate change ranging from greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets, carbon trading schemes, renewable energy targets and aid to nations to meet these targets.

After the conference presentations, students in their roles discuss the challenges to effective resolution of the crisis.

After the conference, each student writes a newspaper article reporting on their viewpoint of what happened. Later, students compare their articles. 

Example icon for advice for teachers 

Detailed example 2

Armed conflict – Syria: Role-play a security council emergency session

Demonstrate responses to the conflict by writing and delivering a speech in a role play of an emergency conference session of the Security Council of the United Nations Organisation that will also illuminate the concepts of ‘crisis diplomacy’ and ‘international cooperation’.

Allocate roles, including permanent members, elected members and observers. These include:

  • permanent members: USA, Russia, Great Britain, France, People’s Republic of China
  • elected members: South Africa, India, Colombia, Germany, Portugal, Rwanda (Africa), Republic of Korea, Argentina, Australia, Luxembourg
  • possible observers: Palestinian Authority, Red Cross, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.

Suggest and present arguments for proposed solutions to the armed conflict in Syria; actions might range from armed intervention, air strikes, ground forces, sanctions, or support for NGOs and governments.

Prepare and deliver speeches.

After the conference presentations, discuss the challenges to an effective resolution of the crisis. 

Example icon for advice for teachers 

Detailed example 3

Terrorism

This group work involves a hexagon activity. This can be generated from HookED SOLO hexagon Generator activity or Mind Map. Include the key terms: crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, globalisation, unilateralism.

In this SOLO activity, the website allows terms, organisations, examples, causes, responses, and proposed solutions to be typed into a hexagon generator, which can then be printed, cut up and used to demonstrate knowledge and understanding in a visual way. Students work in groups, collaborate and collate information and demonstrate connections and causal relationships.

In this activity students define the term ‘terrorism’; set out a history of terrorism, including groups that arose from the Irish Revolt, Che Guevara’s revolutionary movement, and Palestinian Liberation Organisation.

Students identify examples of terrorism over the last ten years. They map incidences of terrorism and highlight their frequency across the world, including in Yemen, Israel, Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, France, UK, US, Australia and Syria. They also look at the causes of terrorism and effects of terrorism.

Students identify and explain responses to terrorism, and the effectiveness of these responses. Responses include legislation, education and public awareness programs, increases in national security precautions, international law enforcement, cooperation, sanctions, covert operations, drone attacks, air strikes, non-negotiation policies and invasion.


Example icon for advice for teachers 

Detailed example 4

Economic Instability: G20 Conference

Students role-play a G20 Meeting. The members of the G20 are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union.

Students also role-play interested observers and protesters. They present a petition and list of demands as protesters from the anti-globalisation movement.

As participants, students demonstrate responses to the ongoing Greece Sovereign Debt Crisis or Global Financial Crisis in 2007 by writing and delivering a speech in their role at an emergency conference session of the G20. In their speech, students explain the concepts of crisis diplomacy and international cooperation.

Key terms used should include: crisis diplomacy, international cooperation, globalisation, unilateralism.

After the Conference, each student writes a newspaper article reporting on their viewpoint of what happened. Later, students compare their articles.