This assessment forms part of a module sequence designed to equip students with the analytical capacity to evaluate real-world disruptions to international maritime trade, security governance, and legal frameworks. The focus on the Red Sea crisis reflects the module’s core commitment to applied, evidence-based inquiry: rather than treating maritime law and security as abstract constructs, students are expected to interrogate how those frameworks perform under operational stress.
Since November 2023, Houthi insurgent attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait have constituted one of the most significant disruptions to global maritime trade in decades. Rodríguez-Díaz et al. (2024) document a marked decline in vessel traffic through the Gulf of Aden and the Suez Canal, with carriers rerouting via the Cape of Good Hope at considerable cost. That rerouting has added approximately 10–14 days to Asia-Europe voyages, raised insurance premiums across the board, and reduced Suez Canal transits from around 2,068 vessels per month in November 2023 to approximately 877 by October 2024. The legal, commercial, and geopolitical dimensions of this crisis cut across maritime safety, freedom of navigation, international humanitarian law, supply chain resilience, and port operations — exactly the terrain this module covers.
Students are expected to draw on module readings, primary treaty texts including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS, 1982), the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) instruments, and current peer-reviewed scholarship to construct a coherent, critically reasoned argument.
Write a 2,500–3,000-word critical essay that addresses the following question:
“To what extent does the international maritime legal framework adequately protect the freedom of navigation and global supply chain resilience in light of the Red Sea crisis (2023–2025)? With reference to UNCLOS, IMO instruments, and relevant geopolitical developments in the Suez Canal, Bab el-Mandeb Strait, and the wider Arabian Sea region, critically evaluate the challenges posed by the Houthi insurgency and assess the effectiveness of multilateral maritime security responses.”
Your essay must go beyond description. A strong submission will identify tensions, contradictions, or gaps in the legal or operational frameworks examined, and will use specific evidence — vessel incidents, traffic data, treaty provisions, case law or arbitration decisions where available — to support its analytical claims.
This assessment is designed to evaluate your achievement of the following module learning outcomes:
Your essay does not require a strict section-by-section structure, but the following elements must be addressed. You may integrate them as your argument develops.
Establish the scope and significance of the Red Sea crisis. Introduce your central argument (thesis). Briefly signpost the structure of the essay. Avoid reproducing background detail that should appear in the main body.
Address the following within your analytical discussion:
Synthesise your findings into a clear response to the essay question. Identify the most significant gaps or failures in the international framework. You may propose reasoned reforms or improvements — but ensure any recommendations are grounded in the evidence presented rather than speculation.
| Criterion | Weight | Distinction (70%+) | Merit (60–69%) | Pass (50–59%) | Fail (<50%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Analysis and Argument Depth, originality, and coherence of the central argument |
30% | Sustained, original critical analysis; argument is well-defined, nuanced, and consistently supported by evidence throughout. | Clear argument with competent critical analysis; occasional lapses into description rather than evaluation. | Argument present but underdeveloped; predominantly descriptive with limited critical engagement. | No clear argument; largely descriptive or incoherent. |
| Knowledge and Understanding Legal frameworks, geopolitical context, operational dimensions |
25% | Accurate, detailed command of UNCLOS provisions, IMO instruments, operational facts, and geopolitical dynamics; evidence of reading beyond module materials. | Sound understanding of key legal and operational issues; minor gaps or occasional inaccuracies. | Basic understanding of the main issues; some factual errors or omission of key frameworks. | Significant gaps in knowledge; factual inaccuracies or misapplication of legal provisions. |
| Use of Evidence and Sources Quality, range, and integration of sources |
20% | Excellent range of credible, current sources; evidence integrated analytically rather than quoted passively; data attributed accurately to named sources. | Good range of relevant sources; mostly well-integrated; minor citation or attribution issues. | Adequate number of sources but limited range; some over-reliance on a single source or descriptive quotation. | Insufficient sources; over-reliance on web sources or unattributed data; minimum requirements not met. |
| Structure, Clarity, and Coherence Organisation, paragraph logic, academic register |
15% | Logically structured throughout; paragraphs develop a clear function; academic register maintained consistently; transitions are controlled and purposeful. | Generally well-organised with minor structural weaknesses; academic register mostly maintained. | Adequate structure but some sections poorly ordered or underdeveloped; register occasionally informal. | Poor structure; difficult to follow; significant lapses in academic register. |
| Referencing Accuracy Consistent, correct Harvard/APA 7th formatting |
10% | Referencing is correct, complete, and consistent throughout; legal instruments cited accurately. | Minor referencing errors that do not impede understanding; generally consistent. | Noticeable referencing errors; inconsistent formatting; some missing in-text citations. | Frequent referencing errors or significant omissions; inability to distinguish in-text citation from reference list format. |
Many students make the mistake of treating the essay question as a request for a summary of the crisis. It is not. The question asks you to evaluate the adequacy of legal frameworks. That requires you to take a defensible position — for instance, that UNCLOS was never designed for non-state actor threats of this kind and that its Article 100 obligations (on suppression of piracy) do not neatly apply to politically motivated maritime attacks by an insurgent movement. Alternatively, you might argue the opposite: that the framework is adequate but that political paralysis in the UN Security Council, not legal deficiency, is the operative failure. Either position can earn a distinction, provided it is sustained by evidence.
Freight rate data, vessel traffic volumes, and revenue figures change rapidly. Use the most current data available and cite the specific source and date of retrieval. IMF Portwatch (portwatch.imf.org), BIMCO’s market reports, and Lloyd’s List Intelligence are all appropriate primary sources for shipping data.
A common weakness in student essays is assuming UNCLOS applies uniformly to non-state actors. UNCLOS primarily governs state-to-state obligations. Engagement with scholarly commentary on this gap — for example, the Cambridge Core article by Bueger et al. (2024) on maritime security governance assemblages — will strengthen your analysis considerably.
The Red Sea crisis that erupted in November 2023 did not create the vulnerabilities it exposed — it revealed them. When Houthi forces began targeting commercial vessels in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the international community reached quickly for the legal instruments at hand: UNCLOS, UN Security Council Resolution 2722, the SUA Convention. Each offered partial tools, but none had been architected for an insurgent movement deploying anti-ship ballistic missiles and kamikaze drones against third-party commercial shipping in a recognised international strait. Rodríguez-Díaz et al. (2024, p. 1900) document how maritime activity in the Gulf of Aden declined sharply in direct correlation with the Houthi attacks, and note the geographic and geopolitical challenges this created for one of the world’s most critical trade corridors. The legal framework’s first and most obvious limitation is jurisdictional: UNCLOS creates obligations between states, yet the Houthis are a non-state actor operating from territory they control but whose internationally recognised government remains distinct from them. Applying the Article 100 duty to cooperate in the suppression of piracy is further complicated by the political motivation of the attacks, which — under the 1982 definition in Article 101 — arguably excludes them from piracy classification because piracy requires acts committed for private ends. The result is a framework mismatch that multilateral operations like Operation Prosperity Guardian and Operation Aspides have tried to fill through force authorisation derived from UNSC Resolution 2722, yet that resolution itself was constrained by geopolitical divisions among Security Council permanent members that limited its operative language.
It is worth noting that the economic consequences of this legal and operational gap have been substantial and measurable. Egypt’s Suez Canal Authority reported revenues falling sharply through 2024 — the canal, which historically contributes roughly $9.4 billion annually to the Egyptian economy, saw monthly transits drop from 2,068 in November 2023 to approximately 877 by October 2024 according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence data cited across multiple academic and policy sources. Meanwhile, the International Crisis Group (2025) has observed that the rerouting of container ships via the Cape of Good Hope added between 10 and 14 days to Asia-Europe voyages, translating into approximately $1 million in additional fuel costs per voyage and contributing to a freight rate spike that affected automotive, electronics, and agricultural supply chains across multiple continents. These figures are not background context for the legal analysis — they are its stakes. Any argument about the adequacy of UNCLOS must be tested against the question of whether the framework’s enforcement architecture, even if legally coherent, produces outcomes capable of keeping critical trade lanes open in the face of sustained hybrid maritime threats.
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