0 used to describe a situation in which the border between countries is not important, usually in relation to the movement of goods, people, etc.:
We are creating an increasingly borderless global economy.
Free-flowing, borderless markets have made borrowing and capital-raising easier.
Politicians have been quick to capitalize on the opportunities of a borderless world.
Today most of our more serious environmental problems are borderless and require an international response.
Agents play an instrumental role in the realization of a borderless digital 24-hour information economy, but users need to trust them first.
I recognise that many such issues can be tackled only on a global basis because electronic commerce introduces the borderless world.
The internet is borderless but consumers, businesses and regulators are not.
The next society in which we shall work will be technology based and borderless.
Can there be borderless justice?
It was argued that globalisation propagates deterritorialisation and a borderless world which is often associated with economic integration.
The author believes we all live in one borderless culture.