•  
  •  
 

Abstract

In recent years, numerous proposals for new international orders—economic, informational, cultural, humanitarian, and commercial—have emerged, each promising transformative change. Sovereignty remains central to these debates, as new orders redefine states' rights and obligations, making sovereignty inherently relative. Beyond inter-state relations, new actors and factors now challenge traditional conceptions of sovereignty in an increasingly interdependent world. The author explores how these "new orders" impose reciprocal limits on state power, reflecting a shift from purely state-centric interests toward broader global solidarity. This evolution complicates the classical legal and political understanding of sovereignty as absolute and territorial.

DOI

10.66499/2665-7112.1547

Share

COinS