Security deficit
Thirdly, we have to speak of a security deficit. A threat to the global social order in today's world is the violence within failed states : Rwanda, Congo, Yugoslavia, Ethiopia, Somalia, Sri-Lanka, and so on. It is difficult for the international community to interfere, partly because of the nature of civil war, partly because of the -divided- nature of the international community and partly because interference in civil wars is limited by the UN-Charter to those situations that endanger the international stability.
This security deficit causes the refugee-problem. People from failed states seek asylum in safer areas. The number of refugees is growing very fast and for the receiving countries it is often impossible to determine whether an asylum seeker is a political or an economic refugee. Although the richer countries seem to complain hardest about the refugee-problem, usually it is the (often poor) surrounding countries that have to receive the most people.
Security is furthermore threatened by the growth of international criminality and 'national survival criminality'. The first being conducted by professional criminal organizations making good use of ICT and mobility, the second being conducted by members of the global undercaste who are excluded from the fruits of globalization. Both threaten the social order, but they ask for very different measures.