HSC Legal Studies · Crime · Chapter 6 · Student worksheet

International Crime — Activity Materials

Print or work on screen · pairs with the Chapter 6 lesson
Name: Class: Date:

Activity 1 — Sort the crime

Syllabus link: 6.1 categories of international crime
Sort each example into crime against the international community (prosecuted internationally) or transnational crime (dealt with by cooperation) by writing IC or TN.
ExampleIC / TN
A militia leader uses child soldiers under 15 during a civil war.
A syndicate smuggles people across borders by boat for profit.
A systematic campaign to destroy an ethnic group.
An online fraud ring steals banking data from victims in several countries.
A widespread, systematic attack on a civilian population (outside a war).
A cartel traffics illegal drugs from overseas into Australia.

In one sentence: what is universal jurisdiction?

Activity 2 — The ICC: match the fact

Syllabus link: 6.2 the International Criminal Court & the Rome Statute
Match each fact to the correct term from the word-bank.
Rome StatuteThe HagueComplementarityLubangaUniversal jurisdictionState sovereignty
FactTerm
The 1998 treaty that created the ICC.
The city where the ICC sits.
The principle that the ICC acts only where a state won't or can't prosecute.
The first person ever convicted by the ICC (child soldiers, DRC).
The idea that any state may prosecute the gravest crimes wherever they occur.
The principle that limits enforcement because states cannot be compelled to cooperate.

Activity 3 — Domestic vs international measures

Syllabus link: 6.2–6.3 dealing with international crime
For each body or law, tick whether it is mainly a domestic (Australian) measure or an international one, and note in a few words what it does.
Body / lawDomestic / InternationalWhat it does
Australian Federal Police (AFP)
INTERPOL
Division 268, Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth)
UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC)
Extradition Act 1988 (Cth)
The International Criminal Court (ICC)

Activity 4 — Effective or not? The sovereignty problem

Syllabus link: 6.4 state sovereignty; evaluating effectiveness
The ICC has issued arrest warrants for sitting leaders (e.g. Putin in 2023, Netanyahu in 2024), but they have not been arrested. Use this to build a balanced evaluation.
Evidence the measures ARE effective
Evidence they are LIMITED

My judgement (to what extent are the measures effective?) — one or two sentences

Activity 5 — Plan the 2025-style extended response

Syllabus link: whole chapter + link to domestic Crime chapters
Plan a response to a real HSC-style question: "Analyse how Australia's criminal legal system operates to protect community interests, referring to legal measures to combat both transnational and domestic crimes." Fill the planner.
ParagraphPoint + example/legislation + theme
Intro (thesis)
Body 1 — domestic measures
Body 2 — transnational/international measures
Body 3 — evaluation (sovereignty)
Conclusion

Take it further — resources

Real, reputable sources for your own research
Rose Bay Secondary College · HSC Legal Studies · Crime — Chapter 6 activity materials · NESA Stage 6 (2009)