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Many threats to security arising from terrorism, 'rogue' states and civil wars are complex and transnational in nature and effect. Such threats can no longer be meaningfully addressed at the national level but require an international response. Since the end of the Cold War the use of force under international auspices has increased substantially.
Interregionalism, the institutionalized relations between world regions, is a new phenomenon in international relations and has the potential to become a new layer in an increasingly differentiated global order.
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