🏠 Home Detailed notes Environment walk-through Globalisation walk-through All judgement grids

How to use this

Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.

Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.

Strong institutions = does this body or regime have real institutional machinery? Binding enforcement = can it enforce its rules against an unwilling state? States comply = do states actually follow it in practice? Measurable progress = has the underlying problem actually improved? Serves the weakest = does it protect or serve the least powerful? Great-power backing = do the most powerful states support it? Well dealt with = your overall verdict: has this been dealt with well?

Environment against poverty - which has the world dealt with better? +   -

Empty version. Print and fill in.
Body / regime+   - Strong institutions Binding enforcement States comply Measurable progress Serves the weakest Great-power backing Well dealt with
Paris
Agreement
(2015)
COPs + Loss
and Damage
Montreal
Protocol
(1987)
World Bank
IMF
Trade-led
growth
How to use the grid in an essay. The top three rows are the environmental regime; the bottom three are the poverty and development regime. Read each column down BOTH halves and the comparison writes itself: where the halves differ, you have an essay paragraph on why international organisations handle one problem better than the other.

Environment against poverty - which has the world dealt with better? +   -

Filled version. Use this to check your own grid - and tap any cell for the full detail behind the judgement.
Body / regime+   - Strong institutions Binding enforcement States comply Measurable progress Serves the weakest Great-power backing Well dealt with
Paris
Agreement
(2015)
+Universal membership, five-yearly reviews, transparent reporting under the UNFCCC. -Voluntary NDCs - no enforcement if a state misses its own target. -States set weak targets and still miss them - free-riding as predicted. -Emissions still rising; 2024 was the first calendar year above the 1.5C threshold. -The worst impacts fall on states that caused least of the problem. -US withdrawal and return showed the regime's dependence on one capital. -Universal commitment, inadequate action - the examiner report's own contrast.
COPs + Loss
and Damage
+An annual process that has run for three decades. -Summit declarations bind nobody. -Pledges outrun delivery year after year. -The gap between agreed ambition and emissions keeps widening. +Loss and Damage is the first mechanism built for the hardest-hit states. -Vetoes and watering-down land at every summit. -The process survives; the problem grows.
Montreal
Protocol
(1987)
+Universally ratified with working review machinery. +Binding phase-out schedules - and they held. +States complied; production ended. +The ozone hole is closing - the measurable win of the field. +Funding helped developing states transition. +Backed by every major power. +Proof cooperation works when interests align and alternatives exist.
World Bank +Development finance machinery no single donor matches. +Loan conditions carry real force. +Borrowers comply - access to finance depends on it. +Decades of funded infrastructure and poverty programmes. -Weighted voting keeps the borrowers furthest from the wheel. +Western-led by design - which is also the criticism. +Flawed governance, real delivery.
IMF +The standing crisis lender of the global economy. +Conditionality - the strongest enforcement in global governance. +States in crisis have little choice. -Austerity conditions harmed the poor in the structural adjustment era - softened since. -The poorest bear the adjustment costs. +Weighted voting; Western leadership by convention. +Harsh medicine that mostly works - the harm-or-good essay in one row.
Trade-led
growth
+The WTO, IMF and World Bank set the rules that made integration possible. +Trade rules are enforced because access is the prize. +States queue to join the system, not to leave it. +Extreme poverty has fallen dramatically since 1990 - the headline fact. -Inequality rose within and between states even as poverty fell. +The system runs on great-power participation. +The strongest delivery record on either half of the grid.
What the filled grid shows. Read the two halves against each other. On Measurable progress the poverty half wins clearly - extreme poverty has fallen dramatically since 1990 while emissions are still rising and 2024 was the first calendar year above 1.5C. On Binding enforcement the poverty half also wins - IMF conditionality has teeth the Paris Agreement deliberately lacks. The environment half wins only where Montreal sits: few substances, few producers, available alternatives. The judgement line: international organisations deal best with problems where interests align and the fix is affordable - poverty reduction rode economic self-interest, while climate asks states to pay now for benefits later, which is exactly what the tragedy of the commons predicts they will not do.
See also