This Key Knowledge point asks students to go beyond describing what actors did and evaluate how effectively they were able to respond. Effectiveness in crisis response is determined by a combination of capacity (resources, mandate, legitimacy), constraints (structural, political, legal), and outcomes (did the response achieve its stated objectives? Did it reduce harm?).
KEY TAKEAWAY: Effective crisis response requires capability (having the tools), mandate (authority to act), will (political commitment), and coordination (working with other actors). The failure of any one element can render a response ineffective regardless of how well-resourced or intentioned the actor is.
| Dimension | What to Assess | Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Mandate | Does the actor have legal authority and political legitimacy to act? | Was there a UNSC resolution? Did the state consent to intervention? |
| Capacity | Does the actor have sufficient resources, expertise, and reach? | Financial resources, military capability, institutional infrastructure |
| Will | Is there sustained political commitment to the response? | Is support contingent on domestic politics? |
| Coordination | Does the actor work effectively with other actors? | Is there coherent burden-sharing? Are responses complementary or duplicative? |
| Outcomes | Did the response achieve its goals? What remained unresolved? | Measurable improvements in protection, access, safety |
Strengths:
- Unprecedented scale: $150+ billion in combined aid through 2023
- Military effectiveness: Ukrainian forces — armed and trained by Western states — repelled the initial Russian assault, recaptured Kherson (November 2022) and Kharkiv region (September 2022)
- Economic pressure: Russian GDP fell, trade was redirected; energy revenues initially dropped before recovering through non-Western markets
- Diplomatic: Near-universal UNGA condemnation; Sweden and Finland joining NATO strengthened collective deterrence
Limitations:
- Internal coherence: Disagreements within NATO over providing certain weapons (long-range missiles, F-16s, cluster munitions) led to delays that may have prolonged the conflict
- Dependence on US: European states’ military capacity constraints revealed; European dependence on US leadership created vulnerability when US domestic politics threatened aid continuity (2023–2024 Congressional delays)
- Outcome: The war had not ended by 2024, with Ukrainian forces unable to achieve a decisive military victory and Western states facing growing “aid fatigue”
Effective:
- Black Sea Grain Initiative (2022–2023): UN-mediated deal allowing Ukrainian grain exports — prevented global food crisis, demonstrating UN’s unique convening capacity
- UNGA resolutions: Provided political legitimacy to the condemnation of Russia even without enforcement power
- UNHCR: Managed the largest European refugee crisis since WWII — 6.3 million registered refugees in Europe
Ineffective:
- UNSC completely paralysed by Russian veto — unable to authorise any enforcement action
- No accountability mechanism for Russian war crimes beyond ICC (which Russia rejects)
- Black Sea Initiative’s collapse when Russia withdrew in 2023 demonstrated the fragility of UN-mediated arrangements without enforcement
Effective in norm articulation:
- Arrest warrant for Putin (March 2023) — unprecedented, signalled that impunity for powerful actors has limits
- 43 states referred Ukraine situation to ICC within days of invasion — historic speed and scale
Ineffective in enforcement:
- Warrant cannot be enforced; Russia rejects jurisdiction
- No arrests have been made; perpetrators remain in power
- Symbolically important but operationally limited — the effectiveness is primarily in deterrence and norm-setting for the future
| Actor | Effectiveness Assessment |
|---|---|
| ASEAN | Largely ineffective — non-interference norm and China’s blocking prevented any meaningful collective action. Five-Point Consensus (2021) has not been implemented. |
| Bangladesh | Provided immediate refuge to 700,000+ Rohingya in 2017, preventing mass deaths — effective humanitarian response. But long-term camp situation is unsustainable and repatriation stalled. |
| ICJ | Provisional measures (January 2020) were a significant legal achievement; however, the measures cannot be enforced and Myanmar’s coup made compliance even less likely. |
| USA/EU | Sanctions on Myanmar military commanders; cut military ties — appropriate but insufficient to compel behaviour change. Did not extend to Myanmar’s economic interests (jade, gem industries). |
| China | Effectively protected Myanmar from UNSC action — in terms of China’s own interest (stability, BRI), highly effective. In terms of protecting Rohingya, counterproductive. |
| UNHCR/MSF/WFP | Provided essential humanitarian services to camp populations; effectively prevented mass starvation. But humanitarian response addressed symptoms, not causes — resolution of refugee status not achieved. |
The same actor can be effective in one dimension and ineffective in another:
EXAM TIP: Structure your effectiveness evaluation as: (actor) was effective in (specific domain) because (evidence), but limited in (other domain) because (structural/political reason). This shows nuance — avoid blanket judgements that an actor was “effective” or “ineffective” overall.
APPLICATION: Link your effectiveness assessment to the concept of political stability and change: did the response contribute to stabilising the situation or enabling change? This connects AoS 2 to the broader Unit 3 theme.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA wants you to construct an argument evaluating actor effectiveness — not just list what actors did. Use evidence from specific, dated actions to support your judgement, and acknowledge counterevidence that complicates your assessment.