International Problems: A Global Overview
Such challenges as international problems go beyond the frontiers of one country and touch on several countries and their global issues. Such problems commonly require the countries' authorities to work together and collectively for their solutions. Here are some of the most serious international problems:
Environmental Issues
Environmental Crisis: Climatic changes, heat waves other extreme weather patterns and melting ice caps and girdles pose a threat to the natural ecosystem and humans.
Loss of Biodiversity: The decline and/ or extinction of biological species and their ecosystems is an environmental crisis with immense repercussions.
Pollution: Air, water, and soil pollutants are some critical issues that should be considered, for they are lethal to the people and their surroundings.
Economic Issues
Global Poverty: The suffering of so many people in the world by living in abject poverty is a problem that remains unexplainable nor solvable.
Inequality: The rich and poor gap, one inverted and protruded in the classical conception, is simply another continuing ill or an issue for the entire world.
Economic and Financial Problems: Financial crises, trade quarrels or wars, and economic sustainability may damage nations and regions ceaselessly.
Political Issues
Intrastate/interstate difficulties and wars: Warfare, terrorism, and civil strife can yield refugee flows, human rights concerns, and non-productive resources.
Nuclear and WMD Proliferation: The increasing menace of nuclear weapons and their homicide technology proliferation threaten world peace.
Violation of Basic or Fundamental Human Rights