International Law Effectiveness - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Politics Effectiveness of international laws

International Law Effectiveness

Politics
StudyPulse

International Law Effectiveness

Politics
01 May 2026

Effectiveness of International Laws in Addressing Global Issues

Overview

International law provides the formal framework within which global actors are expected to operate. However, unlike domestic law, international law lacks a centralised enforcement authority — compliance depends largely on state consent, political will, and reputational incentives. In VCE Politics, students must evaluate both the effectiveness of international legal instruments in addressing a chosen global issue, and the extent to which global actors comply with those laws.

KEY TAKEAWAY: International law is binding in theory but voluntary in practice. Its effectiveness depends on the mechanisms for enforcement, the level of state buy-in, and the presence of institutions capable of holding actors accountable.

What Is International Law?

International law encompasses:

Type Description Examples
Treaties Binding agreements between states that have ratified them Paris Agreement, NPT, Geneva Conventions
Customary international law Practices accepted as legally binding through consistent state practice Prohibition on torture, rules of war
International court decisions Rulings by the ICJ, ICC, WTO dispute panels ICJ ruling on nuclear weapons (1996); ICC prosecutions
UN Security Council resolutions Binding on all UN members when adopted under Chapter VII UNSC Resolution 1373 (counter-terrorism)
Soft law Non-binding guidelines, declarations, norms UN Sustainable Development Goals; Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Case Study: Climate Change and the Paris Agreement

What the Law Requires

The Paris Agreement (2015) requires signatories to:
- Submit Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) every five years
- Report transparently on progress
- Progressively increase ambition (the ratchet mechanism)

Critically, NDCs are self-determined — states decide their own targets. There is no penalty for missing them.

Effectiveness Assessment

Strengths:
- Near-universal participation (196 parties)
- Created a global norm that net-zero is necessary
- Transparency mechanism creates reputational accountability — public scrutiny of NDC progress
- Facilitated $COP28 Loss and Damage Fund** (2023) — acknowledging that some adaptation is beyond prevention

Weaknesses:
- No enforcement mechanism: states that miss targets face no legal sanction
- NDCs collectively insufficient: Climate Action Tracker (2023) assessed that current policies put the world on track for 2.5–2.9°C of warming, well above 1.5°C
- Major emitters (USA, China) repeatedly fall short: US emissions in 2023 were still 17% above 2005 levels despite pledging 50–52% reduction by 2030
- Power asymmetry: The UNFCCC consensus requirement means one large state can block progress (e.g. India and China blocking coal phaseout language at COP26)

State Compliance

State Commitment Compliance Assessment
EU 55% reduction by 2030 (vs 1990) On track via European Green Deal
USA 50–52% reduction by 2030 (vs 2005) Behind — Inflation Reduction Act helps but insufficient
China Peak emissions before 2030, neutrality by 2060 Ambiguous — still approving coal plants
Australia 43% reduction by 2030 (vs 2005) Legislated 2022; trajectory uncertain
India 45% emissions intensity reduction by 2030 On track for intensity but absolute emissions rising

Case Study: Weapons of Mass Destruction and the NPT

The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT, 1968) prohibits non-nuclear states from acquiring nuclear weapons and obligates nuclear states to disarm. Its effectiveness is deeply contested:

  • Compliance failures: India, Pakistan, and Israel never joined; North Korea withdrew in 2003 and conducted six nuclear tests; Iran’s compliance remains disputed
  • Selective enforcement: The five recognised nuclear states (USA, Russia, China, UK, France) have not fulfilled disarmament obligations under Article VI
  • The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW, 2021) — signed by 93 states, ratified by 70 — provides stronger prohibition language but is boycotted by all nuclear-armed states

EXAM TIP: The NPT example illustrates a critical tension: powerful states that benefit from the status quo can frustrate more ambitious legal frameworks. Use this to argue that the political will of major powers is the primary determinant of international legal effectiveness.

Factors Affecting Compliance

  1. National interest alignment: States comply when international law aligns with, or only modestly constrains, their national interests
  2. Enforcement capacity: Laws with monitoring bodies, sanctions, or dispute mechanisms achieve higher compliance
  3. Reciprocity: States are more likely to comply when they see others doing so — collective action dynamics
  4. Reputational costs: In a connected world, non-compliance can damage bilateral relationships and access to trade/aid
  5. Domestic politics: Leaders facing domestic pressure from fossil fuel industries, nationalist movements, or short-term economic concerns may deprioritise international commitments

Non-State Actor Enforcement Role

In the absence of a global enforcement body, non-state actors play a critical role in holding states accountable:

  • Litigation: The Urgenda case (Netherlands, 2019) and Friends of the Earth v Shell (2021) used domestic courts to enforce climate obligations
  • Reporting and monitoring: NGOs like Climate Action Tracker and Carbon Disclosure Project track state and corporate compliance
  • Naming and shaming: Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch document violations, creating reputational pressure

COMMON MISTAKE: Avoid saying international law is simply “ineffective” because it lacks enforcement. Instead, argue that its effectiveness is variable and conditional — it works better in some contexts than others, and non-state actors extend its reach beyond what formal institutions alone can achieve.

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA assessors want you to evaluate — not just describe — the effectiveness of international law. Use specific examples to support a nuanced argument about when and why law succeeds or fails to shape actor behaviour.

Table of Contents