international order

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Noun[edit]

international order (plural international orders)

  1. world order.
    • 1969, Ernest A. Gross, The American Journal of International Law, volume 62, American Society of International Law, page 541:
      The Court, as an essential institution of international order and justice, achieves greater stature for having so candid and faithful a Boswell.
    • 1985, Michael Allen Fox and Leo Groarke, editors, Nuclear War: Philosophical Perspectives: An Anthology, P. Lang, →ISBN, page 229:
      … weapons could in fact enhance the balance of power concept, because their awesome power could virtually guarantee the devastation of any state that chose to break the international order, regardless of its military strength.
    • 2021 June 11, Laura Kuenssberg, “G7: UK and US have an 'indestructible relationship', PM says”, in BBC News[1]:
      Mr Johnson told the BBC the UK and US shared a belief in human rights, the rules-based international order and the transatlantic alliance.

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