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"disaggregated sovereignty" refers to the need for broad strategic cooperation on critical issues requiring the ceding of sovereignty from several sovereign entities to new institutions without creating a centralized authority or "government."
Some people argue that this is the de facto situation of global governance and actually more desireable than the creation of a single world Government. Global governance refers to a system-wide structure that both allows and constrains the behavior of actors in interdependent relationships in the absence of an overarching political authority. ... NOTE: some users are seeking to replace this article by another with the title Federal World Government. ...
A common and imperfect analogy is often made to the European Union as an example of how states can cede sovereignty to create regional governance. Traditional concepts of sovereignty emphasize separation into territorially independent groups. Dissagregated Sovereignty focuses on the mutual obligation and positive capacity to participate collectively through multiple institutions to address global and regional problems.