Paper Title
The Changing World Order and the New Wave of Terrorism in the Middle East

Abstract
The structure of the international system until the nineties worked in the form of a "distributive order pattern". In the framework of this pattern, states were the major actors forming the existing order and the exclusive distributor of power. However, after the nineties, with the changes created in the class structure of the central states due to the demands of the capitalist system, another type of pattern of order was established in the structure of the international system that the article refers to it as the "pattern of proliferative order" or new global governance. In the context of this new pattern, the central reasons of the structure, i.e. the concept of power was proliferated in such a way that its monopoly of distribution and institutionalization came out of the yoke of states, and non-state actors were able to independently benefit not only the power but also the capacity to institutionalize it. Because of the requirements of capitalism as a system, this new pattern has spread in the entire world. In this regard, the question that arises is what impact has this new pattern created in the Middle East and the issue of terrorism? In response to this hypothesis, it has been outlined that the requirements arising from the pattern of proliferative order (new global governance) have shaped the grounds for the formation of the fifth wave of terrorism with seven distinct features in the Middle East. Keywords - Proliferative Order, New Actors, the Middle East, the Fifth Wave of Terrorism