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Short-Term Causes: Global Issue

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Short-Term Causes: Global Issue

Politics
01 May 2026

Short-Term Causes of a Global Issue

Overview

In VCE Politics Unit 3, students examine the short-term causes of one global issue — that is, the precipitating events, escalating tensions, and triggering factors that have emerged within the last 10 years. Understanding short-term causes is distinct from analysing deep historical roots; the focus is on recent, identifiable developments that have intensified or brought a global issue to the foreground.

Common global issues studied include:
- Climate change (including extreme weather events and emissions policy failure)
- Global economic instability (e.g. pandemic-driven recession, inflation crises)
- Development (widening inequality, access to vaccines, food insecurity)
- Weapons of mass destruction (nuclear proliferation, chemical weapons use)

KEY TAKEAWAY: Short-term causes are those that have emerged in the last decade and help explain why the issue has become so pressing now. Link each cause to specific events, decisions, or turning points.

Conceptual Framework: What Is a “Cause”?

A cause in politics is a factor that contributes to the emergence or escalation of a problem. Short-term causes may be:

Type Description Example
Political Government decisions, policy failures, leadership changes US withdrawal from Paris Agreement (2017), re-entry (2021)
Economic Trade shocks, financial crises, inequality COVID-19 supply chain disruption; energy price spikes (2022)
Environmental Natural disasters, ecosystem collapse 2019–20 Australian bushfires; 2022 Pakistan floods
Social Population displacement, public health crises COVID-19 pandemic (2020–2022); food insecurity in Sub-Saharan Africa
Technological New capabilities, cyber threats, AI Increased satellite monitoring exposing deforestation; cyberattacks on infrastructure
Ideological Rising nationalism, anti-globalism, populism MAGA politics; Brexit nationalism undermining multilateral cooperation

Case Study: Climate Change — Short-Term Causes (2014–2024)

1. Failure of COP Commitments

Despite the landmark Paris Agreement (2015), many signatory states have consistently fallen short of their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). Analysis by Climate Action Tracker found that commitments by major emitters (USA, China, India, Russia) were insufficient to limit warming to 1.5°C. This ongoing policy gap is a significant short-term cause of continued climate deterioration.

2. Fossil Fuel Expansion

Between 2015 and 2023, global fossil fuel subsidies rose to a record US\$7 trillion (IMF, 2023), including implicit subsidies. Governments including Australia, Saudi Arabia, and the United States approved new oil and gas projects despite scientific consensus on the need for phaseout.

3. Extreme Weather Events as Feedback Loop

The frequency and severity of extreme weather events has accelerated:
- 2020–21: Record-breaking fires in California and Australia
- 2021: Heat dome event in Canada killed over 600 people
- 2022: Pakistan floods affecting 33 million people
- 2023: Record global average temperatures exceeding 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels for the first time

These events simultaneously demonstrate and worsen climate change, creating a feedback loop.

4. Geopolitical Disruption

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 triggered a global energy crisis that led many European states to revert to coal-fired power and extend the life of gas infrastructure — directly undermining emissions reduction timelines. This geopolitical event had immediate environmental consequences.

5. US Political Volatility

The Trump administration’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement (2017) and rollback of the Clean Power Plan created regulatory uncertainty that slowed investment in renewables. While Biden re-entered the Agreement (2021) and passed the Inflation Reduction Act (2022) — the largest climate investment in US history — the political instability itself became a cause of delayed global action.

EXAM TIP: For each short-term cause you identify, connect it to a specific, datable event. VCAA rewards responses that demonstrate knowledge of recent, concrete examples rather than vague generalisations.

Linking Causes to Global Interconnectedness

Short-term causes do not occur in isolation — they are amplified by global interconnectedness:

  • A financial crisis in one economy spreads through global supply chains
  • A pandemic in one country becomes a global health emergency within weeks
  • Political decisions by major emitters affect all states’ ability to meet climate targets

This interconnectedness means that national decisions have global consequences, a key theme in VCAA Politics.

Evaluating Causes: Relative Significance

When asked to evaluate causes, consider:

  1. Immediacy: How recent is the cause? How directly did it trigger/escalate the issue?
  2. Scale: How many people or states are affected?
  3. Reversibility: Can the cause be addressed, or has it created irreversible effects?
  4. Actor agency: Was this a deliberate choice by a political actor, or an unintended consequence?

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often confuse long-term structural causes (e.g. industrialisation, colonial legacies) with short-term causes. Keep your analysis anchored to events within the last 10 years, while acknowledging how they interact with deeper historical factors.

Key Vocabulary

Term Definition
Precipitating cause The immediate trigger that brings an issue to crisis point
Structural cause Deep, long-term factors that create conditions for a problem
Escalation The worsening or intensification of an issue over time
Global commons Shared resources (atmosphere, oceans) that affect all states
Policy gap The difference between stated commitments and actual action

VCAA FOCUS: You are required to study ONE global issue in depth. Whatever issue you choose, ensure you can identify and explain at least three distinct short-term causes with supporting evidence from recent events.

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