In VCE Politics Unit 3, Area of Study 2, students examine a contemporary humanitarian crisis chosen from three categories:
- Human rights crisis (e.g. Rohingya genocide, Uyghur detention in Xinjiang, Yemen humanitarian crisis)
- Armed conflict (e.g. Russia-Ukraine War, Sudan civil war, Israel-Gaza conflict)
- Mass movement of people (e.g. Venezuelan refugee crisis, Afghan displacement post-2021, Mediterranean migration crisis)
As with the global issue, students focus on short-term causes — events and decisions within the last 10 years that precipitated or significantly escalated the crisis.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Short-term causes are the identifiable recent triggers — political decisions, military actions, economic collapses, or humanitarian failures — that brought the crisis to its current state. They exist on top of deeper historical tensions but are distinct from them.
| Cause Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Political decision | A leader’s choice to use force, impose sanctions, or change policy |
| Economic collapse | Rapid economic deterioration forcing displacement or conflict |
| Political transition/failure | Regime change creating a power vacuum |
| Military escalation | Crossing of thresholds — use of prohibited weapons, aerial bombardment |
| External intervention | Foreign military or political involvement that escalates a conflict |
| Humanitarian system failure | Collapse of aid infrastructure or access denial |
The Russia-Ukraine War provides a rich case study in multi-layered short-term causation.
Russia’s security concerns about NATO expansion — particularly Ukraine’s application and Western military cooperation — escalated in the period 2019–2022:
- 2021: Biden-Zelensky summit affirmed US support for Ukraine’s NATO path
- Russia demanded legally binding guarantees that Ukraine would never join NATO — refused by the US/NATO in January 2022
Fighting in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region — ongoing since 2014 — intensified in early 2022:
- Russian military build-up near Ukrainian borders throughout 2021 (est. 190,000 troops by February 2022)
- Ceasefire violations along the line of contact increased significantly in the weeks before the invasion
On 21 February 2022, Putin recognised the Donetsk and Luhansk “People’s Republics” as independent states — a direct violation of the Minsk Agreements. On 24 February 2022, he announced a “special military operation” framing it as de-Nazification and prevention of genocide against Russian-speaking Ukrainians — narratives widely rejected as pretextual by Western analysts.
EXAM TIP: For your chosen crisis, ensure you can explain at least three specific short-term causes with supporting evidence: dates, actors, decisions, and consequences. Vague references to “tensions” or “conflict” will not score well.
Short-term causes must always be contextualised:
- They do not emerge from nowhere — they ignite deeper tensions
- But VCAA specifically asks about the last 10 years — so keep your analysis temporally precise
- Acknowledge long-term structural factors briefly, then focus on recent triggers
COMMON MISTAKE: Spending too much time on historical background (e.g. the Partition of India for the Kashmir conflict, or WW2 origins for European security tensions) at the expense of specific short-term analysis. VCAA requires evidence from within the last decade.
VCAA FOCUS: Make sure your chosen crisis clearly falls within one of the three designated categories: human rights, armed conflict, or mass movement of people. If it spans multiple categories (which many do), identify the primary classification and acknowledge how the categories overlap.