4. Rights, Environment, Advocacy
Across
- 1. one threat to the environment that involves the warming of the planet at an above average rate (2 words)
- 8. court that is in the UN that could hear cases against states (as a whole) (abbreviation)
- 9. idea that something is depleted or not protected because it is not owned by a single entity (4 words)
- 13. societal human rights (2 words)
- 16. belief that human rights are not universal (2 words)
- 17. security concerns are rising in this area due to warmer temperatures, with countries like Russia establishing a stronger military presence
- 18. something that benefits everyone and is not owned by a single actor (2 words)
- 19. 2023 was the ____ year ever recorded
- 20. a combination of non-state and state actors across state borders who come together to work on some issue (abbreviation, plural)
Down
- 2. a court and trial created by the UNSC after an event, such as the Rwandan Genocide. It is one way to prosecute individuals for genocide (4 words)
- 3. one way to prosecute individuals for genocide. Involves states using their own legal definitions for genocide, along with their own punishments (2 words)
- 4. one threat to the environment that was (at least in 2019) one of the top 3 leading causes of deaths in the world
- 5. one threat to the environment that is particularly concerning to countries like China. Leads to hotter temperatures, less food, and population shifts
- 6. one threat to the environment that is particularly concerning to countries like Brazil. Can lead to flooding, mudslides, and hotter temperatures
- 7. measure of violations of basic human rights in a country by agents of the country (3 words)
- 9. group human rights (2 words)
- 10. individual human rights (2 words)
- 11. court that can prosecute individuals for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity (abbreviation)
- 12. idea that transnational advocacy networks may be more successful at changing the behavior of a repressive state compared to just domestic groups (2 words)
- 14. international norm that states should protect citizens, and that other states should intervene when citizens are not protected (abbreviation)
- 15. idea that transnational advocacy networks go through stages, where they first try to make new norms, then spread those norms, and then get states to internalize those norms (3 words)