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An alternative method of decision-making in international organisations is intergovernmentalism. Few international organizations today operate on the basis of supranationalism; the main exceptions are the European Union and the South American Community of Nations, often called supranational unions, as they incorporate both intergovernmental and supranational elements. Some degree of supranationalism may exist in some International organizations. Supporters of a Federal World Government wish it to be extended. The United Nations holds a limited degree of supranational power insofar as governing important matters of global security through the binding decisions of the Security Council.
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