Our site uses cookies. Some of the cookies we use are essential for parts of the site to operate and have already been set. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work. To find out more about cookies on this website, see our Cookie Policy
Accept
© eRevision.uk and ZigZag Education 2025
This test is run by .
Note that your final mark will not be saved in the system.

EQ3: What are human rights arguments for political/military intervention? MatchUp

Target Level
C
Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3

Click on a top box, then click on its match below. Or, drag a top box and drop it onto the correct match. Match all pairs before clicking ‘Check’.

Multilateral aid
Trade embargo
Genocide
Tied aid
Indirect military intervention
The right to be free from torture
Bilateral aid
Direct military intervention
Structural Adjustment Programme
Aid given by one country directly to another.
Aid given by a group of countries to one country, often through an IGO. 

Aid given by one country to another which specifies terms for that aid.


Where a country bans or restricts trade with another country as an intervention to a human rights breach.

Sending troops to, conducting air strikes on or setting up a naval presence in another sovereign nation. 


Providing financial support, logistical advice or weapons to support a country. 
Intervention for a breach of human rights is often agreed by many countries when it involves the attempt to remove a whole group of people, which is often given this name as an alternative to 'ethnic cleansing'.
Waterboarding as a form of interrogation is considered by many to be a breach of this human right.
The IMF programme which offered loans as long as reductions in public spending were made by the recipient, often in areas such as health and education. 

This is your 1st attempt! You get 3 marks for each one you get right. Good luck!

Pass Mark
75%