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The understanding of security has recently moved away from national security to include the consideration of a larger number of threats and additional objects of security. In parallel, changes occurred in governing, with growing importance of norms and rules coming from outside of the state and multi-actor participation in decision making and implementation. These trends are also increasingly found in the making and implantation of policies for the security sector, resulting in a number of different forms of security sector governance. Globalization and growing demands for participation and legitimization of a wider set of political actors increasingly seem to require more comprehensive approaches to security sector governance which include a range of relevant domestic actors and orientation towards regional and global norms. Security sector education should reflect these trends.
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