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Dictatorship

A dictatorship is a form of government which is characterized by a leader, or a group of leaders, which holds governmental powers with few to no limitations on them. The leader of a dictatorship is called a dictator. Politics in a dictatorship are controlled by the dictator and facilitated through an inner circle of elites that include advisers, generals, and other high-ranking officials. The dictator maintains control by influencing and appeasing the inner circle while repressing any opposition, which may include rival political parties, armed resistance, or disloyal members of the inner circle. Dictatorships can be formed by a military coup that overthrows the previous government through force or by a self-coup in which elected leaders make their rule permanent. Dictatorships are authoritarian or totalitarian and can be classified as military dictatorships, one-party dictatorships, personalist dictatorships, or absolute monarchies.

The term dictatorship originates from its use in the Roman Republic. The earliest military dictatorships developed in the post-classical era, particularly in Shogun-era Japan. Modern dictatorships first developed in the 19th century, which included Bonapartism in Europe and caudillos in Latin America. The 20th century saw the rise of fascist and communist dictatorships in Europe; fascism was eradicated in the aftermath of World War II in 1945, while communism spread to other continents, maintaining prominence until the end of the Cold War in 1991. The 20th century also saw the rise of personalist dictatorships in Africa and military dictatorships in Latin America, both of which became prominent in the 1960s and 1970s. Several dictatorships have persisted into the 21st century, particularly in Africa and Asia.

Dictatorships frequently hold elections in order to establish their legitimacy or provide incentives to members of the ruling party, but these elections are not competitive for the opposition. Stability in a dictatorship is maintained through coercion and political repression, which involves the restriction of access to information, the tracking of the political opposition, and acts of violence. Dictatorships that fail to repress the opposition are susceptible to collapse through a coup or a revolution.

Structure

The leader of a dictatorship is called a dictator. The power structures of dictatorships vary, and different definitions of dictatorship consider different elements of this structure. Political scientists such as Juan José Linz and Samuel P. Huntington identify key attributes that define the power structure of a dictatorship, including a single leader or a small group of leaders, the exercise of power with few limitations, limited political pluralism, and limited mass mobilization.[1]

The dictator exercises broad power over the government and society, but other individuals are necessary to carry out the dictator's rule. These individuals form an inner circle, making up a class of elites that hold a degree of power within the dictatorship and receive benefits in exchange for their support. They may be military officers, party members, or friends and family of the dictator. Elites are also the primary political threats of a dictator, as they can leverage their power to influence or overthrow the dictatorship.[2] The inner circle's support is necessary for a dictator's orders to be carried out, causing elites to serve as a check on the dictator's power. To enact policy, a dictator must either appease the regime's elites or attempt to replace them.[3] Elites must also compete to wield more power than one another, but the amount of power held by elites also depends on their unity. Factions or divisions among the elites will mitigate their ability to bargain with the dictator, resulting in the dictator having more unrestrained power.[4] A unified inner circle has the capacity to overthrow a dictator, and the dictator must make greater concessions to the inner circle to stay in power.[5] This is particularly true when the inner circle is made up of military officers that have the resources to carry out a military coup.[6]

The opposition to a dictatorship represents all of the factions that are not part of the dictatorship and anyone that does not support the regime. Organized opposition is a threat to the stability of a dictatorship, as it seeks to undermine public support for the dictator and calls for regime change. A dictator may address the opposition by repressing it through force, modifying laws to restrict its power, or appeasing it with limited benefits.[7] The opposition can be an external group, or it can also include current and former members of the dictator's inner circle.[8]

Totalitarianism is a variation of dictatorship characterized by the presence of a single political party and more specifically, by a powerful leader who imposes personal and political prominence. Power is enforced through a steadfast collaboration between the government and a highly developed ideology. A totalitarian government has "total control of mass communications and social and economic organizations".[9] Political philosopher Hannah Arendt describes totalitarianism as a new and extreme form of dictatorship composed of "atomized, isolated individuals" in which ideology plays a leading role in defining how the entire society should be organized.[10] Political scientist Juan José Linz identifies a spectrum of political systems with democracies and totalitarian regimes separated by authoritarian regimes with varied classifications of hybrid systems.[11][12] He describes totalitarian regimes as exercising control over politics and political mobilization rather than merely suppressing it.[11]

Formation

 
Benito Mussolini in the March on Rome that installed him as dictator in Italy

A dictatorship is formed when a specific group seizes power, with the composition of this group affecting how power is seized and how the eventual dictatorship will rule. The group may be military or political, it may be organized or disorganized, and it may disproportionately represent a certain demographic.[13] After power is seized, the group must determine what positions its members will hold in the new government and how this government will operate, sometimes resulting in disagreements that split the group. Members of the group will typically make up the elites in a dictator's inner circle at the beginning of a new dictatorship, though the dictator may remove them as a means to gain additional power.[14]

Unless they have undertaken a self-coup, those seizing power typically have little governmental experience and do not have a detailed policy plan in advance.[15] If the dictator has not seized power through a political party, then a party may be formed as a mechanism to reward supporters and to concentrate power in the hands of political allies instead of militant allies. Parties formed after the seizure of power often have little influence and only exist to serve the dictator.[16]

Most dictatorships are formed through military means or through a political party. Nearly half of dictatorships start as a military coup, though others have been started by foreign intervention, elected officials ending competitive elections, insurgent takeovers, popular uprisings by citizens, or legal maneuvering by autocratic elites to take power within their government.[17] Between 1946 and 2010, 42% of dictatorships began by overthrowing a different dictatorship, and 26% began after achieving independence from a foreign government. Many others developed following a period of warlordism.[18]

Types of dictatorship

A classification of dictatorships, which began with political scientist Barbara Geddes in 1999, focuses on where power lies. Under this system, there are three types of dictatorships. Military dictatorships are controlled by military officers, one-party dictatorships are controlled by the leadership of a political party, and personalist dictatorships are controlled by a single individual. In some circumstances, monarchies are also considered dictatorships if the monarchs hold a significant amount of political power. Hybrid dictatorships are regimes that have a combination of these classifications.[19]

Military

 
Soldiers occupy Seoul, South Korea as part of the May 16 coup that placed General Park Chung-hee in power

Military dictatorships are regimes in which military officers hold power, determine who will lead the country, and exercise influence over policy.[20][21] They are most common in developing nations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. They are often unstable, and the average duration of a military dictatorship is only five years, but they are often followed by additional military coups and military dictatorships. While common in the 20th century, the prominence of military dictatorships declined in the 1970s and 1980s.[22]

Military dictatorships are typically formed by a military coup in which senior officers use the military to overthrow the government. In democracies, the threat of a military coup is associated with the period immediately after a democracy's creation but prior to large-scale military reforms. In oligarchies, the threat of a military coup comes from the strength of the military weighed against the concessions made to the military. Other factors associated with military coups include extensive natural resources, limited use of the military internationally, and use of the military as an oppressive force domestically.[23] Military coups do not necessarily result in military dictatorships, as power may then be passed to an individual or the military may allow democratic elections to take place.[24]

Military dictatorships often have traits in common due to the shared background of military dictators. These dictators may view themselves as impartial in their oversight of a country due to their nonpartisan status, and they may view themselves as "guardians of the state". The predominance of violent force in military training manifests in an acceptance of violence as a political tool and the ability to organize violence on a large scale. Military dictators may also be less trusting or diplomatic and underestimate the use of bargaining and compromise in politics.[25]

One-party

 
An assembly at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses in Moscow, Soviet Union

One-party dictatorships are governments in which a single political party dominates politics. Single-party dictatorships are one-party states in which only the party in power is legalized and all opposition parties are banned. Dominant-party dictatorships or electoral authoritarian dictatorships are one-party dictatorships in which opposition parties are nominally legal but cannot meaningfully influence government. Single-party dictatorships were most common during the Cold War, with dominant-party dictatorships becoming more common after the fall of the Soviet Union.[26] Ruling parties in one-party dictatorships are distinct from political parties that were created to serve a dictator in that the ruling party in a one-party dictatorship permeates every level of society.[27]

One-party dictatorships are more stable than other forms of authoritarian rule, as they are less susceptible to insurgency and see higher economic growth. Ruling parties allow a dictatorship to more broadly influence the populace and facilitate political agreement between party elites. Between 1950 and 2016, one-party dictatorships made up 57% of authoritarian regimes in the world,[26] and one-party dictatorships have continued to expand more quickly than other forms of dictatorship in the latter half of the 20th century.[28] Due to the structure of their leadership, one-party dictatorships are significantly less likely to face civil conflict, insurgency, or terrorism than other forms of dictatorship.[29][30] The use of ruling parties also provides more legitimacy to its leadership and elites than other forms of dictatorship[31] and facilitates a peaceful transfer of power at the end of a dictator's rule.[32]

One-party dictatorships became prominent in Asia and Eastern Europe during the Cold War as communist governments were installed in several countries.[27] One-party rule also developed in several countries in Africa during decolonization in the 1960s and 1970s, some of which produced authoritarian regimes.[33] A ruling party in a one-party dictatorship may rule under any ideology or it may have no guiding ideology. Marxist one-party states are sometimes distinguished from other one-party states, but they function similarly.[34] When a one-party dictatorship develops gradually through legal means, in can result in conflict between the party organization and the state apparatus and civil service, as the party rules in parallel and increasingly appoints its own members to positions of power. Parties that take power through violence are often able to implement larger changes in a shorter period of time.[31]

Personalist

 
Citizens of North Korea bow to statues of former dictators Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il in 2012.

Personalist dictatorships are regimes in which all power lies in the hands of a single individual. They differ from other forms of dictatorships in that the dictator has greater access to key political positions and the government's treasury, and they are more commonly subject to the discretion of the dictator. Personalist dictators may be members of the military or leaders of a political party, but neither the military nor the party exercises power independently from the dictator. In personalist dictatorships, the elite corps are usually made up of close friends or family members of the dictator, who typically handpicks these individuals to serve their posts.[35][36] These dictatorships often emerge either from loosely organized seizures of power, giving the leader opportunity to consolidate power, or from democratically elected leaders in countries with weak institutions, giving the leader opportunity to change the constitution. Personalist dictatorships are more common in Sub-Saharan Africa due to less established institutions in the region.[37]

Personalist dictators typically favor loyalty over competence in their governments and have a general distrust of intelligentsia. Elites in personalist dictatorships often do not have a professional political career and are unqualified for positions they are given. A personalist dictator will manage these appointees by segmenting the government so that they cannot collaborate. The result is that such regimes have no internal checks and balances, and are thus unrestrained when exerting repression on their people, making radical shifts in foreign policy, or starting wars with other countries.[38] Due to the lack of accountability and the smaller group of elites, personalist dictatorships are more prone to corruption than other forms of dictatorship,[39] and they are more repressive than other forms of dictatorship.[40] Personalist dictatorships often collapse with the death of the dictator. They are more likely to end in violence and less likely to democratize than other forms of dictatorship.[41]

The shift in the power relation between the dictator and their inner circle has severe consequences for the behavior of such regimes as a whole. Personalist regimes diverge from other regimes when it comes to their longevity, methods of breakdown, levels of corruption, and proneness to conflicts. On average, they last twice as long as military dictatorships, but not as long as one-party dictatorships.[42] Personalist dictatorships also experience growth differently, as they often lack the institutions or qualified leadership to sustain an economy.[43]

Absolute monarchy

 
King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia with two of his sons.

An absolute monarchy is a monarchy in which the monarch rules without legal limitations. This makes it distinct from constitutional monarchy and ceremonial monarchy.[44] In an absolute monarchy, power is limited to the royal family, and legitimacy is established by historical factors. Monarchies may be dynastic, in which the royal family serves as a ruling institution similar to a political party in a one-party state, or they may be non-dynastic, in which the monarch rules independently of the royal family as a personalist dictator.[45] Monarchies allow for strict rules of succession that produce a peaceful transfer of power on the monarch's death, but this can also result in succession disputes if multiple members of the royal family claim a right to succeed.[46] In the modern era, absolute monarchies are most common in the Middle East.[47]

History

Early dictatorships

 
Military dictator Antonio López de Santa Anna wearing a Mexican military uniform[48]

Dictatorship is historically associated with the Ancient Greek concept of tyranny, and several ancient Greek rulers have been described as "tyrants" that are comparable to modern dictators.[49][50] The concept of "dictator" was first developed during the Roman Republic. A Roman dictator was a special magistrate that was temporarily appointed by the consul during times of crisis and granted total executive authority. The role of dictator was created for instances when a single leader was needed to command and restore stability.[51] At least 85 such dictators were chosen over the course of the Roman Republic, the last of which was chosen to wage the Second Punic War. The dictatorship was revived 120 years later by Sulla after his crushing of a populist movement, and 33 years after that by Julius Caesar.[51] Caesar subverted the tradition of temporary dictatorships when he was made dictator perpetuo, or a dictator for life, which led to the creation of the Roman Empire.[52] The rule of a dictator was not necessarily considered tyrannical in Ancient Rome, though it has been described in some accounts as a "temporary tyranny" or an "elective tyranny".[49]

Asia saw several military dictatorships during the post-classical era. Korea experienced military dictatorships under the rule of Yeon Gaesomun in the 7th century[53] and under the rule of the Goryeo military regime in the 12th and 13th centuries.[54] Shoguns were de facto military dictators in Japan beginning in 1185 and continuing for over six hundred years.[55] During the Lê dynasty of Vietnam between the 16th and 18th centuries, the country was under de facto military rule by two rival military families: the Trịnh lords in the north and the Nguyễn lords in the south.[56] In Europe, the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell, formed in 1649 after the Second English Civil War, has been described as a military dictatorship by its contemporary opponents and by some modern academics.[57][58][59] Maximilien Robespierre has been similarly described as a dictator while he controlled the National Convention in France and carried out the Reign of Terror in 1793 and 1794.[59][60][61]

Dictatorship developed as a major form of government in the 19th century, though the concept was not universally seen pejoratively at the time, with both a tyrannical concept and a quasi-constitutional concept of dictatorship understood to exist.[62] In Europe it was often thought of in terms of Bonapartism and Caesarism, with the former describing the military rule of Napoleon and the latter describing the imperial rule of Napoleon III in the vein of Julius Caesar.[63] The Spanish American wars of independence took place in the early-19th century, creating many new Latin American governments. Many of these governments fell under the control of caudillos, or personalist dictators. Most caudillos came from a military background, and their rule was typically associated with pageantry and glamor. Caudillos were often nominally constrained by a constitution, but the caudillo had the power to draft a new constitution as he wished. Many are noted for their cruelty, while others are honored as national heroes.[64]

Interwar dictatorships and World War II

Europe

 
The Nuremberg rallies celebrated fascism and the rule of Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany.[65]

In the time between World War I and World War II, several dictatorships were established in Europe through coups which were carried out by far-left and far-right movements.[66] The aftermath of World War I resulted in a major shift in European politics, establishing new governments, facilitating internal change in older governments, and redrawing the boundaries between countries, allowing opportunities for these movements to seize power.[67] The societal upheaval caused by World War I and the unstable peace it produced further contributed to instability that benefited extremist movements and rallied support for their causes. Far-left and far-right dictatorships used similar methods to maintain power, including cult of personality, concentration camps, forced labour, mass murder, and genocide.[68]

The first communist state was created by Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks with the establishment of Soviet Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917. The government was described as a dictatorship of the proletariat in which power was exercised by soviets.[69] The Bolsheviks consolidated power by 1922, forming the Soviet Union.[70] Lenin was followed by Joseph Stalin in 1924, who consolidated total power and implemented totalitarian rule by 1929.[71][72] The Russian Revolution inspired a wave of left-wing revolutionary movements in Europe between 1917 and 1923, but none saw the same level of success.[73]

At the same time, nationalist movements grew throughout Europe. These movements were a response to what they perceived as decadence and societal decay due to the changing social norms and race relations brought about by liberalism.[74] Fascism developed in Europe as a rejection of liberalism, socialism, and modernism, and the first fascist political parties formed in the 1920s.[75] Italian dictator Benito Mussolini seized power in 1922, and began implementing reforms in 1925 to create the first fascist dictatorship.[76] These reforms incorporated totalitarianism, fealty to the state, expansionism, corporatism, and anti-communism.[77]

Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party created a second fascist dictatorship in Germany in 1933,[78] obtaining absolute power through a combination of electoral victory, violence, and emergency powers.[79] Other nationalist movements in Europe established dictatorships based on the fascist model.[68] During World War II, Italy and Germany occupied several countries in Europe, imposing fascist puppet states upon many of the countries that they invaded.[80] After being defeated in World War II, the far-right dictatorships of Europe collapsed, with the exceptions of Spain and Portugal. The Soviet Union occupied nationalist dictatorships in the east and replaced them with communist dictatorships, while others established liberal democratic governments in the Western Bloc.[68]

Latin America

Dictatorships in Latin America persisted into the 20th century, and further military coups established new regimes, often in the name of nationalism.[81] After a brief period of democratization, Latin America underwent a rapid transition toward dictatorship in the 1930s.[82] Populist movements were strengthened following the economic turmoil of the Great Depression, producing populist dictatorships in several Latin American countries.[83] European fascism was imported to Latin America as well, and the Vargas Era of Brazil was heavily influenced by the corporatism practiced in fascist Italy.[82]

Cold War dictatorships

Africa

 
A communist rally in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, during the country's period of Marxist dictatorship, the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia

The decolonisation of Africa prompted the creation of new governments, many of which became dictatorships in the 1960s and 1970s. Early African dictatorships were primarily personalist socialist dictatorships, in which a single socialist would take power instead of a ruling party. As the Cold War went on, the Soviet Union increased its influence in Africa, and Marxist–Leninist dictatorships developed in several African countries.[84] Military coups were also a common occurrence after decolonisation, with 14 African countries experiencing at least three successful military coups between 1959 and 2001.[85] These new African governments were marked by severe instability, which provided opportunities for regime change and made fair elections a rare occurrence on the continent. This instability in turn required rulers to become increasingly authoritarian to stay in power, further propagating dictatorship in Africa.[86]

Asia

The Chinese Civil War ended in 1949, splitting the Republic of China under Chiang Kai-shek and the People's Republic of China under Mao Zedong. Mao established the People's Republic of China as a one-party communist state under his governing ideology of Maoism. While the People's Republic of China was initially aligned with the Soviet Union, relations between the two countries deteriorated as the Soviet Union underwent de-Stalinization in the late-1950s. Mao consolidated his control of the People's Republic of China with the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, which involved the destruction of all elements of capitalism and traditionalism in China.[87] Deng Xiaoping took power as the de facto leader of China after Mao's death and implemented reforms to restore stability following the Cultural Revolution and reestablish free market economics.[88] Chiang Kai-shek continued to rule as dictator of the National government's rump state in Taiwan until his death in 1975.[89]

Marxist and nationalist movements became popular in Southeast Asia as a response to colonial control and the subsequent Japanese occupation of Southeast Asia, with both ideologies facilitating the creation of dictatorships after World War II. Communist dictatorships in the region aligned with China following the latter's establishment as a communist state.[90] A similar phenomenon took place in Korea, where Kim Il-sung created a Soviet-backed communist dictatorship in North Korea[91] and Syngman Rhee created a US-backed nationalist dictatorship in South Korea.[92]

The Middle East was decolonized during the Cold War, and many nationalist movements gained strength post-independence. These nationalist movements supported non-alignment, keeping most Middle Eastern dictatorships out of the American and Soviet spheres of influence. These movements supported pan-Arab Nasserism during most of the Cold War, but they were largely replaced by Islamic nationalism by the 1980s.[93] Several Middle Eastern countries were the subject of military coups in the 1950s and 1960s, including Iraq, Syria, North Yemen, and South Yemen.[94] A 1953 coup overseen by the American and British governments restored Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as the absolute monarch of Iran, who in turn was overthrown during the Iranian Revolution of 1979 that established Ruhollah Khomeini as the Supreme Leader of Iran under an Islamist government.[93]

Europe

During World War II, many countries of Central and Eastern Europe had been occupied by the Soviet Union. When the war ended, these countries were incorporated into the Soviet sphere of influence, and the Soviet Union exercised control over their governments.[95] Josip Broz Tito declared a communist government in Yugoslavia during World War II, which was initially aligned with the Soviet Union. The relations between the countries were strained by Soviet attempts to influence Yugoslavia, leading to the Tito–Stalin split in 1948.[96] Albania was established as a communist dictatorship under Enver Hoxha in 1944. It was initially aligned with Yugoslavia, but its alignment shifted throughout the Cold War between Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union, and China.[97] The stability of the Soviet Union weakened in the 1980s. The Soviet economy became unsustainable, and communist governments lost the support of intellectuals. In 1989, the Soviet Union was dissolved, and communism was abandoned by the countries of Central and Eastern Europe through a series of revolutions.[98]

Latin America

Military dictatorships remained prominent in Latin America during the Cold War, though the number of coups declined starting in the 1980s. Between 1967 and 1991, 12 Latin American countries underwent at least one military coup, with Haiti and Honduras experiencing three and Bolivia experiencing eight.[99] A one-party communist dictatorship was formed in Cuba when a US-backed dictatorship was overthrown in the Cuban Revolution, creating the only Soviet-backed dictatorship in the western hemisphere.[100] To maintain power, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet organized Operation Condor with other South American dictators to facilitate cooperation between their respective intelligence agencies and secret police organizations.[101]

21st century dictatorships

The nature of dictatorship changed in much of the world at the onset of the 21st century. Between the 1990s and the 2000s, most dictators moved away from being "larger-than-life figures" that controlled the populace through terror and isolated themselves from the global community. This was replaced by a trend of developing a positive public image to maintain support among the populace and moderating rhetoric to integrate with the global community.[102] The development of the internet and digital communication in the 21st century have prompted dictatorships to shift from traditional means of control to digital ones, including the use of artificial intelligence to analyze mass communications, internet censorship to restrict the flow of information, and troll farms to manipulate public opinion.[103]

Dictatorship in Europe largely ended after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, and the liberalization of most communist states.[98] Belarus under the rule of Alexander Lukashenko has been described as "the last European dictatorship",[104][105] though the rule of Vladimir Putin in Russia has also been described as a dictatorship.[106][107][108] Latin America saw a period of liberalization similar to that of Europe at the end of the Cold War, with Cuba being the only Latin American country that did not experience any degree of liberalization between 1992 and 2010.[109] The countries of Central Asia did not liberalize after the fall of the Soviet Union, instead forming as dictatorships led by former elites of the Communist Party and then later by successive dictators. These countries maintain parliaments and human rights organizations, but these remain under the control of the countries' respective dictators.[110]

The Middle East and Northern Africa did not undergo liberalization during the third wave of democratisation, and most countries in this region remain dictatorships in the 21st century. Dictatorships in the Middle East and Northern Africa are either illiberal republics in which a president holds power through unfair elections, or they are absolute monarchies in which power is inherited. Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, and Palestine are the only democratic nations in the region, with Israel being the only nation in this region that affords broad political liberties to its citizens.[111] Dictatorships in the Middle East are primarily guided by Islamic nationalism.[93]

Measurement

 
Democracy Index by the Economist Intelligence Unit, 2020.[112] Green countries are democracies, with yellow being hybrid regimes, and red being authoritarian countries.

One of the tasks in political science is to measure and classify regimes as either democracies or dictatorship (authoritarian) countries. Freedom House, the Polity data series, and the Democracy-Dictatorship Index are three of the most used data series by political scientists.[113] Generally, two research approaches exist: the minimalist approach, which focuses on whether a country has continued elections that are competitive, and the substantive approach, which expands the concept of democracy to include human rights, freedom of the press, and the rule of law. The Democracy-Dictatorship Index is seen as an example of the minimalist approach, whereas the Polity data series is more substantive.[114][115][116][117]

Economics

Most dictatorships exist in countries with high levels of poverty. Poverty has a destabilizing effect on government, causing democracy to fail and regimes to fall more often.[118] The form of government does not correlate with the amount of economic growth, and dictatorships on average grow at the same rate as democracies, though dictatorships have been found to have larger fluctuations. Dictators are more likely to implement long-term investments into the country's economy if they feel secure in their power. Exceptions to the pattern of poverty in dictatorships include oil-rich Middle Eastern dictatorships and the East Asian Tigers during their periods of dictatorship.[119]

The type of economy in a dictatorship can affect how it functions. Economies based on natural resources allow dictators more power, as they can easily extract rents without strengthening or cooperating with other institutions. More complex economies require additional cooperation between the dictator and other groups. The economic focus of a dictatorship often depends on the strength of the opposition, as a weaker opposition allows a dictator to extract additional wealth from the economy through corruption.[120]

Legitimacy and stability

Several factors determine the stability of a dictatorship, and they must maintain some degree of popular support to prevent resistance groups from growing. This may be ensured through incentives, such as distribution of financial resources or promises of security, or it may be through repression, in which failing to support the regime is punished. Stability can be weakened when opposition groups grow and unify or when elites are not loyal to the regime.[121] One-party dictatorships are generally more stable and last longer than military or personalist dictatorships.[26]

A dictatorship may fall because of a military coup, foreign intervention, negotiation, or popular revolution.[122] A military coup is often carried out when a regime is threatening the country's stability or during periods of societal unrest.[123] Foreign intervention takes place when another country seeks to topple a regime by invading the country or supporting the opposition.[124] A dictator may negotiate the end of a regime if it has lost legitimacy or if a violent removal seems likely.[125] Revolution takes place when the opposition group grows large enough that elites in the regime cannot suppress it or choose not to.[126] Negotiated removals are more likely to end in democracy, while removals by force are more likely to result in a new dictatorial regime. A dictator that has concentrated significant power is more likely to be exiled, imprisoned, or killed after ouster, and accordingly they are more likely to refuse negotiation and cling to power.[127]

Dictatorships are typically more aggressive than democracy when in conflict with other nations, as dictators do not have to fear electoral costs of war. Military dictatorships are more prone to conflict due to the inherent military strength associated with such a regime, and personalist dictatorships are more prone to conflict due to the weaker institutions to check the dictator's power.[128] In the 21st century, dictatorships have moved toward greater integration with the global community and increasingly attempt to present themselves as democratic.[102] Dictatorships are often recipients of foreign aid on the condition that they make advances toward democratization.[129] A study found that dictatorships that engage in oil drilling are more likely to remain in power, with 70.63% of the dictators who engage in oil drilling still being in power after 5 years of dictatorship, while only 59.92% of the non-oil producing dictators survive the first 5 years.[130]

Elections

 
An electoral slip in the 1936 German parliamentary election. Adolf Hitler and his inner circle are the only option.

Most dictatorships hold elections to maintain legitimacy and stability, but these elections are typically uncompetitive and the opposition is not permitted to win. Elections allow a dictatorship to exercise some control over the opposition by setting the terms under which the opposition challenges the regime.[131] Elections are also used to control elites within the dictatorship by requiring them to compete with one another and incentivizing them to build support with the populace, allowing the most popular and most competent elites to be promoted in the regime. Elections also support the legitimacy of a dictatorship by presenting the image of a democracy, establishing plausible deniability of its status as a dictatorship for both the populace and foreign governments.[132] Should a dictatorship fail, elections also permit dictators and elites to accept defeat without fearing violent recourse.[133] Dictatorships may influence the results of an election through electoral fraud, intimidation or bribing of candidates and voters, use of state resources such as media control, manipulation of electoral laws, restricting who may run as a candidate, or disenfranchising demographics that may oppose the dictatorship.[134]

In the 20th century, most dictatorships held elections in which voters could only choose to support the dictatorship, with only one-quarter of partisan dictatorships permitting opposition candidates to participate.[135] Since the end of the Cold War, more dictatorships have established "semi-competitive" elections in which opposition is allowed to participate in elections but is not allowed to win, with approximately two-thirds of dictatorships permitting opposition candidates in 2018.[136] Opposition parties in dictatorships may be restricted by preventing them from campaigning, banning more popular opposition parties, preventing opposition members from forming a party, or requiring that candidates be a member of the ruling party.[136] Dictatorships may hold semi-competitive elections to qualify for foreign, to demonstrate a dictator's control over the government, or to incentivize the party to expand its information-gathering capacity, particularly at the local level. Semi-competitive elections also have the effect of incentivizing members of the ruling party to provide better treatment of citizens so they will be chosen as party nominees due to their popularity.[137]

Violence

In a dictatorship, violence is used to coerce or repress all opposition to the dictator's rule, and the strength of a dictatorship depends on its use of violence. This violence is frequently exercised through institutions such as military or police forces.[138] The use of violence by a dictator is frequently most severe during the first few years of a dictatorship, because the regime has not yet solidified its rule and more detailed information for targeted coercion is not yet available. As the dictatorship becomes more established, it moves away from violence by resorting to the use of other coercive measures, such as restricting people's access to information and tracking the political opposition. Dictators are incentivized to avoid the use of violence once a reputation of violence is established, as it damages the dictatorship's other institutions and poses a threat to the dictator's rule should government forces become disloyal.[139]

Institutions that coerce the opposition through the use of violence may serve different roles or they may be used to counterbalance one another in order to prevent one institution from becoming too powerful. Secret police are used to gather information about specific political opponents and carry out targeted acts of violence against them, paramilitary forces defend the regime from coups, and formal militaries defend the dictatorship during foreign invasions and major civil conflicts.[139]

Terrorism is less common in dictatorships. Allowing the opposition to have representation in the regime, such as through a legislature, further reduces the likelihood of terrorist attacks in a dictatorship.[140] Military and one-party dictatorships are more likely to experience terrorism than personalist dictatorships, as these regimes are under more pressure to undergo institutional change in response to terrorism.[141]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ezrow & Frantz 2011, p. 2.
  2. ^ Ezrow & Frantz 2011, pp. 82–83.
  3. ^ Ezrow & Frantz 2011, pp. 113–117.
  4. ^ Geddes, Wright & Frantz 2018, pp. 65–66.
  5. ^ Geddes, Wright & Frantz 2018, pp. 76–79.
  6. ^ Geddes, Wright & Frantz 2018, pp. 97–99.
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Bibliography

  • Ezrow, Natasha M.; Frantz, Erica (2011). Dictators and Dictatorships: Understanding Authoritarian Regimes and Their Leaders. Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781441196828.
  • Galván, Javier A. (21 December 2012). Latin American Dictators of the 20th Century: The Lives and Regimes of 15 Rulers. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-6691-7.
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  • Staar, Richard F. (1982). Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe (4th ed.). Hoover Institution Press. ISBN 9780817976934.

Further reading

  • Behrends, Jan C. (14 March 2017). "Dictatorship: Modern Tyranny Between Leviathan and Behemoth (Version 2.0) (english version)". Docupedia-Zeitgeschichte. doi:10.14765/zzf.dok.2.790.v2.
  • Dikötter, Frank (3 December 2019). How to Be a Dictator: The Cult of Personality in the Twentieth Century. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-63557-380-0.
    • scholarly analysis of Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin and Mao, as well as Kim Il-sung of North Korea; François Duvalier, or Papa Doc, of Haiti; Nicolae Ceaușescu of Romania; and Mengistu Haile Mariam of Ethiopia. online review; also excerpt
  • Dobson, William J. (2013). The Dictator's Learning Curve: Inside the Global Battle for Democracy. Anchor. ISBN 978-0-307-47755-2.
  • Fraenkel, Ernst; Meierhenrich, Jens (13 April 2017). The Dual State: A Contribution to the Theory of Dictatorship. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198716204.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-102533-4.
  • Friedrich, Carl J.; Brzezinski, Zbigniew K. (1965). Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy (2nd ed.). Praeger.
  • Bueno de Mesquita, Bruce; Smith, Alastair (2011). The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics. Random House. p. 272. ISBN 978-1-61039-044-6. OCLC 701015473.

dictatorship, dictatorship, form, government, which, characterized, leader, group, leaders, which, holds, governmental, powers, with, limitations, them, leader, dictatorship, called, dictator, politics, dictatorship, controlled, dictator, facilitated, through,. A dictatorship is a form of government which is characterized by a leader or a group of leaders which holds governmental powers with few to no limitations on them The leader of a dictatorship is called a dictator Politics in a dictatorship are controlled by the dictator and facilitated through an inner circle of elites that include advisers generals and other high ranking officials The dictator maintains control by influencing and appeasing the inner circle while repressing any opposition which may include rival political parties armed resistance or disloyal members of the inner circle Dictatorships can be formed by a military coup that overthrows the previous government through force or by a self coup in which elected leaders make their rule permanent Dictatorships are authoritarian or totalitarian and can be classified as military dictatorships one party dictatorships personalist dictatorships or absolute monarchies The term dictatorship originates from its use in the Roman Republic The earliest military dictatorships developed in the post classical era particularly in Shogun era Japan Modern dictatorships first developed in the 19th century which included Bonapartism in Europe and caudillos in Latin America The 20th century saw the rise of fascist and communist dictatorships in Europe fascism was eradicated in the aftermath of World War II in 1945 while communism spread to other continents maintaining prominence until the end of the Cold War in 1991 The 20th century also saw the rise of personalist dictatorships in Africa and military dictatorships in Latin America both of which became prominent in the 1960s and 1970s Several dictatorships have persisted into the 21st century particularly in Africa and Asia Dictatorships frequently hold elections in order to establish their legitimacy or provide incentives to members of the ruling party but these elections are not competitive for the opposition Stability in a dictatorship is maintained through coercion and political repression which involves the restriction of access to information the tracking of the political opposition and acts of violence Dictatorships that fail to repress the opposition are susceptible to collapse through a coup or a revolution Contents 1 Structure 2 Formation 3 Types of dictatorship 3 1 Military 3 2 One party 3 3 Personalist 3 4 Absolute monarchy 4 History 4 1 Early dictatorships 4 2 Interwar dictatorships and World War II 4 2 1 Europe 4 2 2 Latin America 4 3 Cold War dictatorships 4 3 1 Africa 4 3 2 Asia 4 3 3 Europe 4 3 4 Latin America 4 4 21st century dictatorships 5 Measurement 6 Economics 7 Legitimacy and stability 7 1 Elections 7 2 Violence 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further readingStructure EditThe leader of a dictatorship is called a dictator The power structures of dictatorships vary and different definitions of dictatorship consider different elements of this structure Political scientists such as Juan Jose Linz and Samuel P Huntington identify key attributes that define the power structure of a dictatorship including a single leader or a small group of leaders the exercise of power with few limitations limited political pluralism and limited mass mobilization 1 The dictator exercises broad power over the government and society but other individuals are necessary to carry out the dictator s rule These individuals form an inner circle making up a class of elites that hold a degree of power within the dictatorship and receive benefits in exchange for their support They may be military officers party members or friends and family of the dictator Elites are also the primary political threats of a dictator as they can leverage their power to influence or overthrow the dictatorship 2 The inner circle s support is necessary for a dictator s orders to be carried out causing elites to serve as a check on the dictator s power To enact policy a dictator must either appease the regime s elites or attempt to replace them 3 Elites must also compete to wield more power than one another but the amount of power held by elites also depends on their unity Factions or divisions among the elites will mitigate their ability to bargain with the dictator resulting in the dictator having more unrestrained power 4 A unified inner circle has the capacity to overthrow a dictator and the dictator must make greater concessions to the inner circle to stay in power 5 This is particularly true when the inner circle is made up of military officers that have the resources to carry out a military coup 6 The opposition to a dictatorship represents all of the factions that are not part of the dictatorship and anyone that does not support the regime Organized opposition is a threat to the stability of a dictatorship as it seeks to undermine public support for the dictator and calls for regime change A dictator may address the opposition by repressing it through force modifying laws to restrict its power or appeasing it with limited benefits 7 The opposition can be an external group or it can also include current and former members of the dictator s inner circle 8 Totalitarianism is a variation of dictatorship characterized by the presence of a single political party and more specifically by a powerful leader who imposes personal and political prominence Power is enforced through a steadfast collaboration between the government and a highly developed ideology A totalitarian government has total control of mass communications and social and economic organizations 9 Political philosopher Hannah Arendt describes totalitarianism as a new and extreme form of dictatorship composed of atomized isolated individuals in which ideology plays a leading role in defining how the entire society should be organized 10 Political scientist Juan Jose Linz identifies a spectrum of political systems with democracies and totalitarian regimes separated by authoritarian regimes with varied classifications of hybrid systems 11 12 He describes totalitarian regimes as exercising control over politics and political mobilization rather than merely suppressing it 11 Formation Edit Benito Mussolini in the March on Rome that installed him as dictator in Italy A dictatorship is formed when a specific group seizes power with the composition of this group affecting how power is seized and how the eventual dictatorship will rule The group may be military or political it may be organized or disorganized and it may disproportionately represent a certain demographic 13 After power is seized the group must determine what positions its members will hold in the new government and how this government will operate sometimes resulting in disagreements that split the group Members of the group will typically make up the elites in a dictator s inner circle at the beginning of a new dictatorship though the dictator may remove them as a means to gain additional power 14 Unless they have undertaken a self coup those seizing power typically have little governmental experience and do not have a detailed policy plan in advance 15 If the dictator has not seized power through a political party then a party may be formed as a mechanism to reward supporters and to concentrate power in the hands of political allies instead of militant allies Parties formed after the seizure of power often have little influence and only exist to serve the dictator 16 Most dictatorships are formed through military means or through a political party Nearly half of dictatorships start as a military coup though others have been started by foreign intervention elected officials ending competitive elections insurgent takeovers popular uprisings by citizens or legal maneuvering by autocratic elites to take power within their government 17 Between 1946 and 2010 42 of dictatorships began by overthrowing a different dictatorship and 26 began after achieving independence from a foreign government Many others developed following a period of warlordism 18 Types of dictatorship EditA classification of dictatorships which began with political scientist Barbara Geddes in 1999 focuses on where power lies Under this system there are three types of dictatorships Military dictatorships are controlled by military officers one party dictatorships are controlled by the leadership of a political party and personalist dictatorships are controlled by a single individual In some circumstances monarchies are also considered dictatorships if the monarchs hold a significant amount of political power Hybrid dictatorships are regimes that have a combination of these classifications 19 Military Edit Main article Military dictatorship Soldiers occupy Seoul South Korea as part of the May 16 coup that placed General Park Chung hee in power Military dictatorships are regimes in which military officers hold power determine who will lead the country and exercise influence over policy 20 21 They are most common in developing nations in Africa Asia and Latin America They are often unstable and the average duration of a military dictatorship is only five years but they are often followed by additional military coups and military dictatorships While common in the 20th century the prominence of military dictatorships declined in the 1970s and 1980s 22 Military dictatorships are typically formed by a military coup in which senior officers use the military to overthrow the government In democracies the threat of a military coup is associated with the period immediately after a democracy s creation but prior to large scale military reforms In oligarchies the threat of a military coup comes from the strength of the military weighed against the concessions made to the military Other factors associated with military coups include extensive natural resources limited use of the military internationally and use of the military as an oppressive force domestically 23 Military coups do not necessarily result in military dictatorships as power may then be passed to an individual or the military may allow democratic elections to take place 24 Military dictatorships often have traits in common due to the shared background of military dictators These dictators may view themselves as impartial in their oversight of a country due to their nonpartisan status and they may view themselves as guardians of the state The predominance of violent force in military training manifests in an acceptance of violence as a political tool and the ability to organize violence on a large scale Military dictators may also be less trusting or diplomatic and underestimate the use of bargaining and compromise in politics 25 One party Edit Main article One party state An assembly at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses in Moscow Soviet Union One party dictatorships are governments in which a single political party dominates politics Single party dictatorships are one party states in which only the party in power is legalized and all opposition parties are banned Dominant party dictatorships or electoral authoritarian dictatorships are one party dictatorships in which opposition parties are nominally legal but cannot meaningfully influence government Single party dictatorships were most common during the Cold War with dominant party dictatorships becoming more common after the fall of the Soviet Union 26 Ruling parties in one party dictatorships are distinct from political parties that were created to serve a dictator in that the ruling party in a one party dictatorship permeates every level of society 27 One party dictatorships are more stable than other forms of authoritarian rule as they are less susceptible to insurgency and see higher economic growth Ruling parties allow a dictatorship to more broadly influence the populace and facilitate political agreement between party elites Between 1950 and 2016 one party dictatorships made up 57 of authoritarian regimes in the world 26 and one party dictatorships have continued to expand more quickly than other forms of dictatorship in the latter half of the 20th century 28 Due to the structure of their leadership one party dictatorships are significantly less likely to face civil conflict insurgency or terrorism than other forms of dictatorship 29 30 The use of ruling parties also provides more legitimacy to its leadership and elites than other forms of dictatorship 31 and facilitates a peaceful transfer of power at the end of a dictator s rule 32 One party dictatorships became prominent in Asia and Eastern Europe during the Cold War as communist governments were installed in several countries 27 One party rule also developed in several countries in Africa during decolonization in the 1960s and 1970s some of which produced authoritarian regimes 33 A ruling party in a one party dictatorship may rule under any ideology or it may have no guiding ideology Marxist one party states are sometimes distinguished from other one party states but they function similarly 34 When a one party dictatorship develops gradually through legal means in can result in conflict between the party organization and the state apparatus and civil service as the party rules in parallel and increasingly appoints its own members to positions of power Parties that take power through violence are often able to implement larger changes in a shorter period of time 31 Personalist Edit Further information Autocracy and Cult of personalitySee also Personalismo Citizens of North Korea bow to statues of former dictators Kim Il sung and Kim Jong il in 2012 Personalist dictatorships are regimes in which all power lies in the hands of a single individual They differ from other forms of dictatorships in that the dictator has greater access to key political positions and the government s treasury and they are more commonly subject to the discretion of the dictator Personalist dictators may be members of the military or leaders of a political party but neither the military nor the party exercises power independently from the dictator In personalist dictatorships the elite corps are usually made up of close friends or family members of the dictator who typically handpicks these individuals to serve their posts 35 36 These dictatorships often emerge either from loosely organized seizures of power giving the leader opportunity to consolidate power or from democratically elected leaders in countries with weak institutions giving the leader opportunity to change the constitution Personalist dictatorships are more common in Sub Saharan Africa due to less established institutions in the region 37 Personalist dictators typically favor loyalty over competence in their governments and have a general distrust of intelligentsia Elites in personalist dictatorships often do not have a professional political career and are unqualified for positions they are given A personalist dictator will manage these appointees by segmenting the government so that they cannot collaborate The result is that such regimes have no internal checks and balances and are thus unrestrained when exerting repression on their people making radical shifts in foreign policy or starting wars with other countries 38 Due to the lack of accountability and the smaller group of elites personalist dictatorships are more prone to corruption than other forms of dictatorship 39 and they are more repressive than other forms of dictatorship 40 Personalist dictatorships often collapse with the death of the dictator They are more likely to end in violence and less likely to democratize than other forms of dictatorship 41 The shift in the power relation between the dictator and their inner circle has severe consequences for the behavior of such regimes as a whole Personalist regimes diverge from other regimes when it comes to their longevity methods of breakdown levels of corruption and proneness to conflicts On average they last twice as long as military dictatorships but not as long as one party dictatorships 42 Personalist dictatorships also experience growth differently as they often lack the institutions or qualified leadership to sustain an economy 43 Absolute monarchy Edit Main article Absolute monarchy King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia with two of his sons An absolute monarchy is a monarchy in which the monarch rules without legal limitations This makes it distinct from constitutional monarchy and ceremonial monarchy 44 In an absolute monarchy power is limited to the royal family and legitimacy is established by historical factors Monarchies may be dynastic in which the royal family serves as a ruling institution similar to a political party in a one party state or they may be non dynastic in which the monarch rules independently of the royal family as a personalist dictator 45 Monarchies allow for strict rules of succession that produce a peaceful transfer of power on the monarch s death but this can also result in succession disputes if multiple members of the royal family claim a right to succeed 46 In the modern era absolute monarchies are most common in the Middle East 47 History EditEarly dictatorships Edit Military dictator Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna wearing a Mexican military uniform 48 Dictatorship is historically associated with the Ancient Greek concept of tyranny and several ancient Greek rulers have been described as tyrants that are comparable to modern dictators 49 50 The concept of dictator was first developed during the Roman Republic A Roman dictator was a special magistrate that was temporarily appointed by the consul during times of crisis and granted total executive authority The role of dictator was created for instances when a single leader was needed to command and restore stability 51 At least 85 such dictators were chosen over the course of the Roman Republic the last of which was chosen to wage the Second Punic War The dictatorship was revived 120 years later by Sulla after his crushing of a populist movement and 33 years after that by Julius Caesar 51 Caesar subverted the tradition of temporary dictatorships when he was made dictator perpetuo or a dictator for life which led to the creation of the Roman Empire 52 The rule of a dictator was not necessarily considered tyrannical in Ancient Rome though it has been described in some accounts as a temporary tyranny or an elective tyranny 49 Asia saw several military dictatorships during the post classical era Korea experienced military dictatorships under the rule of Yeon Gaesomun in the 7th century 53 and under the rule of the Goryeo military regime in the 12th and 13th centuries 54 Shoguns were de facto military dictators in Japan beginning in 1185 and continuing for over six hundred years 55 During the Le dynasty of Vietnam between the 16th and 18th centuries the country was under de facto military rule by two rival military families the Trịnh lords in the north and the Nguyễn lords in the south 56 In Europe the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell formed in 1649 after the Second English Civil War has been described as a military dictatorship by its contemporary opponents and by some modern academics 57 58 59 Maximilien Robespierre has been similarly described as a dictator while he controlled the National Convention in France and carried out the Reign of Terror in 1793 and 1794 59 60 61 Dictatorship developed as a major form of government in the 19th century though the concept was not universally seen pejoratively at the time with both a tyrannical concept and a quasi constitutional concept of dictatorship understood to exist 62 In Europe it was often thought of in terms of Bonapartism and Caesarism with the former describing the military rule of Napoleon and the latter describing the imperial rule of Napoleon III in the vein of Julius Caesar 63 The Spanish American wars of independence took place in the early 19th century creating many new Latin American governments Many of these governments fell under the control of caudillos or personalist dictators Most caudillos came from a military background and their rule was typically associated with pageantry and glamor Caudillos were often nominally constrained by a constitution but the caudillo had the power to draft a new constitution as he wished Many are noted for their cruelty while others are honored as national heroes 64 Interwar dictatorships and World War II Edit Europe Edit See also European interwar dictatorships The Nuremberg rallies celebrated fascism and the rule of Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany 65 In the time between World War I and World War II several dictatorships were established in Europe through coups which were carried out by far left and far right movements 66 The aftermath of World War I resulted in a major shift in European politics establishing new governments facilitating internal change in older governments and redrawing the boundaries between countries allowing opportunities for these movements to seize power 67 The societal upheaval caused by World War I and the unstable peace it produced further contributed to instability that benefited extremist movements and rallied support for their causes Far left and far right dictatorships used similar methods to maintain power including cult of personality concentration camps forced labour mass murder and genocide 68 The first communist state was created by Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks with the establishment of Soviet Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917 The government was described as a dictatorship of the proletariat in which power was exercised by soviets 69 The Bolsheviks consolidated power by 1922 forming the Soviet Union 70 Lenin was followed by Joseph Stalin in 1924 who consolidated total power and implemented totalitarian rule by 1929 71 72 The Russian Revolution inspired a wave of left wing revolutionary movements in Europe between 1917 and 1923 but none saw the same level of success 73 At the same time nationalist movements grew throughout Europe These movements were a response to what they perceived as decadence and societal decay due to the changing social norms and race relations brought about by liberalism 74 Fascism developed in Europe as a rejection of liberalism socialism and modernism and the first fascist political parties formed in the 1920s 75 Italian dictator Benito Mussolini seized power in 1922 and began implementing reforms in 1925 to create the first fascist dictatorship 76 These reforms incorporated totalitarianism fealty to the state expansionism corporatism and anti communism 77 Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party created a second fascist dictatorship in Germany in 1933 78 obtaining absolute power through a combination of electoral victory violence and emergency powers 79 Other nationalist movements in Europe established dictatorships based on the fascist model 68 During World War II Italy and Germany occupied several countries in Europe imposing fascist puppet states upon many of the countries that they invaded 80 After being defeated in World War II the far right dictatorships of Europe collapsed with the exceptions of Spain and Portugal The Soviet Union occupied nationalist dictatorships in the east and replaced them with communist dictatorships while others established liberal democratic governments in the Western Bloc 68 Latin America Edit Dictatorships in Latin America persisted into the 20th century and further military coups established new regimes often in the name of nationalism 81 After a brief period of democratization Latin America underwent a rapid transition toward dictatorship in the 1930s 82 Populist movements were strengthened following the economic turmoil of the Great Depression producing populist dictatorships in several Latin American countries 83 European fascism was imported to Latin America as well and the Vargas Era of Brazil was heavily influenced by the corporatism practiced in fascist Italy 82 Cold War dictatorships Edit Africa Edit A communist rally in Addis Ababa Ethiopia during the country s period of Marxist dictatorship the People s Democratic Republic of Ethiopia The decolonisation of Africa prompted the creation of new governments many of which became dictatorships in the 1960s and 1970s Early African dictatorships were primarily personalist socialist dictatorships in which a single socialist would take power instead of a ruling party As the Cold War went on the Soviet Union increased its influence in Africa and Marxist Leninist dictatorships developed in several African countries 84 Military coups were also a common occurrence after decolonisation with 14 African countries experiencing at least three successful military coups between 1959 and 2001 85 These new African governments were marked by severe instability which provided opportunities for regime change and made fair elections a rare occurrence on the continent This instability in turn required rulers to become increasingly authoritarian to stay in power further propagating dictatorship in Africa 86 Asia Edit The Chinese Civil War ended in 1949 splitting the Republic of China under Chiang Kai shek and the People s Republic of China under Mao Zedong Mao established the People s Republic of China as a one party communist state under his governing ideology of Maoism While the People s Republic of China was initially aligned with the Soviet Union relations between the two countries deteriorated as the Soviet Union underwent de Stalinization in the late 1950s Mao consolidated his control of the People s Republic of China with the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s which involved the destruction of all elements of capitalism and traditionalism in China 87 Deng Xiaoping took power as the de facto leader of China after Mao s death and implemented reforms to restore stability following the Cultural Revolution and reestablish free market economics 88 Chiang Kai shek continued to rule as dictator of the National government s rump state in Taiwan until his death in 1975 89 Marxist and nationalist movements became popular in Southeast Asia as a response to colonial control and the subsequent Japanese occupation of Southeast Asia with both ideologies facilitating the creation of dictatorships after World War II Communist dictatorships in the region aligned with China following the latter s establishment as a communist state 90 A similar phenomenon took place in Korea where Kim Il sung created a Soviet backed communist dictatorship in North Korea 91 and Syngman Rhee created a US backed nationalist dictatorship in South Korea 92 The Middle East was decolonized during the Cold War and many nationalist movements gained strength post independence These nationalist movements supported non alignment keeping most Middle Eastern dictatorships out of the American and Soviet spheres of influence These movements supported pan Arab Nasserism during most of the Cold War but they were largely replaced by Islamic nationalism by the 1980s 93 Several Middle Eastern countries were the subject of military coups in the 1950s and 1960s including Iraq Syria North Yemen and South Yemen 94 A 1953 coup overseen by the American and British governments restored Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as the absolute monarch of Iran who in turn was overthrown during the Iranian Revolution of 1979 that established Ruhollah Khomeini as the Supreme Leader of Iran under an Islamist government 93 Europe Edit During World War II many countries of Central and Eastern Europe had been occupied by the Soviet Union When the war ended these countries were incorporated into the Soviet sphere of influence and the Soviet Union exercised control over their governments 95 Josip Broz Tito declared a communist government in Yugoslavia during World War II which was initially aligned with the Soviet Union The relations between the countries were strained by Soviet attempts to influence Yugoslavia leading to the Tito Stalin split in 1948 96 Albania was established as a communist dictatorship under Enver Hoxha in 1944 It was initially aligned with Yugoslavia but its alignment shifted throughout the Cold War between Yugoslavia the Soviet Union and China 97 The stability of the Soviet Union weakened in the 1980s The Soviet economy became unsustainable and communist governments lost the support of intellectuals In 1989 the Soviet Union was dissolved and communism was abandoned by the countries of Central and Eastern Europe through a series of revolutions 98 Latin America Edit Military dictatorships remained prominent in Latin America during the Cold War though the number of coups declined starting in the 1980s Between 1967 and 1991 12 Latin American countries underwent at least one military coup with Haiti and Honduras experiencing three and Bolivia experiencing eight 99 A one party communist dictatorship was formed in Cuba when a US backed dictatorship was overthrown in the Cuban Revolution creating the only Soviet backed dictatorship in the western hemisphere 100 To maintain power Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet organized Operation Condor with other South American dictators to facilitate cooperation between their respective intelligence agencies and secret police organizations 101 21st century dictatorships Edit Further information List of countries by system of government The nature of dictatorship changed in much of the world at the onset of the 21st century Between the 1990s and the 2000s most dictators moved away from being larger than life figures that controlled the populace through terror and isolated themselves from the global community This was replaced by a trend of developing a positive public image to maintain support among the populace and moderating rhetoric to integrate with the global community 102 The development of the internet and digital communication in the 21st century have prompted dictatorships to shift from traditional means of control to digital ones including the use of artificial intelligence to analyze mass communications internet censorship to restrict the flow of information and troll farms to manipulate public opinion 103 Dictatorship in Europe largely ended after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the liberalization of most communist states 98 Belarus under the rule of Alexander Lukashenko has been described as the last European dictatorship 104 105 though the rule of Vladimir Putin in Russia has also been described as a dictatorship 106 107 108 Latin America saw a period of liberalization similar to that of Europe at the end of the Cold War with Cuba being the only Latin American country that did not experience any degree of liberalization between 1992 and 2010 109 The countries of Central Asia did not liberalize after the fall of the Soviet Union instead forming as dictatorships led by former elites of the Communist Party and then later by successive dictators These countries maintain parliaments and human rights organizations but these remain under the control of the countries respective dictators 110 The Middle East and Northern Africa did not undergo liberalization during the third wave of democratisation and most countries in this region remain dictatorships in the 21st century Dictatorships in the Middle East and Northern Africa are either illiberal republics in which a president holds power through unfair elections or they are absolute monarchies in which power is inherited Iraq Israel Lebanon and Palestine are the only democratic nations in the region with Israel being the only nation in this region that affords broad political liberties to its citizens 111 Dictatorships in the Middle East are primarily guided by Islamic nationalism 93 Measurement Edit Democracy Index by the Economist Intelligence Unit 2020 112 Green countries are democracies with yellow being hybrid regimes and red being authoritarian countries One of the tasks in political science is to measure and classify regimes as either democracies or dictatorship authoritarian countries Freedom House the Polity data series and the Democracy Dictatorship Index are three of the most used data series by political scientists 113 Generally two research approaches exist the minimalist approach which focuses on whether a country has continued elections that are competitive and the substantive approach which expands the concept of democracy to include human rights freedom of the press and the rule of law The Democracy Dictatorship Index is seen as an example of the minimalist approach whereas the Polity data series is more substantive 114 115 116 117 Economics EditMost dictatorships exist in countries with high levels of poverty Poverty has a destabilizing effect on government causing democracy to fail and regimes to fall more often 118 The form of government does not correlate with the amount of economic growth and dictatorships on average grow at the same rate as democracies though dictatorships have been found to have larger fluctuations Dictators are more likely to implement long term investments into the country s economy if they feel secure in their power Exceptions to the pattern of poverty in dictatorships include oil rich Middle Eastern dictatorships and the East Asian Tigers during their periods of dictatorship 119 The type of economy in a dictatorship can affect how it functions Economies based on natural resources allow dictators more power as they can easily extract rents without strengthening or cooperating with other institutions More complex economies require additional cooperation between the dictator and other groups The economic focus of a dictatorship often depends on the strength of the opposition as a weaker opposition allows a dictator to extract additional wealth from the economy through corruption 120 Legitimacy and stability EditSee also Negative selection politics Several factors determine the stability of a dictatorship and they must maintain some degree of popular support to prevent resistance groups from growing This may be ensured through incentives such as distribution of financial resources or promises of security or it may be through repression in which failing to support the regime is punished Stability can be weakened when opposition groups grow and unify or when elites are not loyal to the regime 121 One party dictatorships are generally more stable and last longer than military or personalist dictatorships 26 A dictatorship may fall because of a military coup foreign intervention negotiation or popular revolution 122 A military coup is often carried out when a regime is threatening the country s stability or during periods of societal unrest 123 Foreign intervention takes place when another country seeks to topple a regime by invading the country or supporting the opposition 124 A dictator may negotiate the end of a regime if it has lost legitimacy or if a violent removal seems likely 125 Revolution takes place when the opposition group grows large enough that elites in the regime cannot suppress it or choose not to 126 Negotiated removals are more likely to end in democracy while removals by force are more likely to result in a new dictatorial regime A dictator that has concentrated significant power is more likely to be exiled imprisoned or killed after ouster and accordingly they are more likely to refuse negotiation and cling to power 127 Dictatorships are typically more aggressive than democracy when in conflict with other nations as dictators do not have to fear electoral costs of war Military dictatorships are more prone to conflict due to the inherent military strength associated with such a regime and personalist dictatorships are more prone to conflict due to the weaker institutions to check the dictator s power 128 In the 21st century dictatorships have moved toward greater integration with the global community and increasingly attempt to present themselves as democratic 102 Dictatorships are often recipients of foreign aid on the condition that they make advances toward democratization 129 A study found that dictatorships that engage in oil drilling are more likely to remain in power with 70 63 of the dictators who engage in oil drilling still being in power after 5 years of dictatorship while only 59 92 of the non oil producing dictators survive the first 5 years 130 Elections Edit An electoral slip in the 1936 German parliamentary election Adolf Hitler and his inner circle are the only option Most dictatorships hold elections to maintain legitimacy and stability but these elections are typically uncompetitive and the opposition is not permitted to win Elections allow a dictatorship to exercise some control over the opposition by setting the terms under which the opposition challenges the regime 131 Elections are also used to control elites within the dictatorship by requiring them to compete with one another and incentivizing them to build support with the populace allowing the most popular and most competent elites to be promoted in the regime Elections also support the legitimacy of a dictatorship by presenting the image of a democracy establishing plausible deniability of its status as a dictatorship for both the populace and foreign governments 132 Should a dictatorship fail elections also permit dictators and elites to accept defeat without fearing violent recourse 133 Dictatorships may influence the results of an election through electoral fraud intimidation or bribing of candidates and voters use of state resources such as media control manipulation of electoral laws restricting who may run as a candidate or disenfranchising demographics that may oppose the dictatorship 134 In the 20th century most dictatorships held elections in which voters could only choose to support the dictatorship with only one quarter of partisan dictatorships permitting opposition candidates to participate 135 Since the end of the Cold War more dictatorships have established semi competitive elections in which opposition is allowed to participate in elections but is not allowed to win with approximately two thirds of dictatorships permitting opposition candidates in 2018 136 Opposition parties in dictatorships may be restricted by preventing them from campaigning banning more popular opposition parties preventing opposition members from forming a party or requiring that candidates be a member of the ruling party 136 Dictatorships may hold semi competitive elections to qualify for foreign to demonstrate a dictator s control over the government or to incentivize the party to expand its information gathering capacity particularly at the local level Semi competitive elections also have the effect of incentivizing members of the ruling party to provide better treatment of citizens so they will be chosen as party nominees due to their popularity 137 Violence Edit In a dictatorship violence is used to coerce or repress all opposition to the dictator s rule and the strength of a dictatorship depends on its use of violence This violence is frequently exercised through institutions such as military or police forces 138 The use of violence by a dictator is frequently most severe during the first few years of a dictatorship because the regime has not yet solidified its rule and more detailed information for targeted coercion is not yet available As the dictatorship becomes more established it moves away from violence by resorting to the use of other coercive measures such as restricting people s access to information and tracking the political opposition Dictators are incentivized to avoid the use of violence once a reputation of violence is established as it damages the dictatorship s other institutions and poses a threat to the dictator s rule should government forces become disloyal 139 Institutions that coerce the opposition through the use of violence may serve different roles or they may be used to counterbalance one another in order to prevent one institution from becoming too powerful Secret police are used to gather information about specific political opponents and carry out targeted acts of violence against them paramilitary forces defend the regime from coups and formal militaries defend the dictatorship during foreign invasions and major civil conflicts 139 Terrorism is less common in dictatorships Allowing the opposition to have representation in the regime such as through a legislature further reduces the likelihood of terrorist attacks in a dictatorship 140 Military and one party dictatorships are more likely to experience terrorism than personalist dictatorships as these regimes are under more pressure to undergo institutional change in response to terrorism 141 See also EditBenevolent dictatorship Constitutional dictatorship Despotism Elective dictatorship Generalissimo Hoxhaism Juche Leninism List of cults of personality List of titles used by dictators List of totalitarian regimes Maximum Leader Mobutism Nazism People s democratic dictatorship Putinism Rashism Selectorate theory 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Frantz 2011 pp 20 22 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 20 Friedrich Carl 1950 Military Government and Dictatorship The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 267 1 7 doi 10 1177 000271625026700102 OCLC 5723774494 S2CID 146698274 Danopoulos Constantine P 2019 Military Dictatorships in Retreat Problems and Perspectives In Danopoulos Constantine P ed The Decline of Military Regimes The Civilian Influence Routledge pp 1 24 ISBN 9780367291174 Acemoglu Daron Ticchi Davide Vindigni Andrea 2010 A Theory of Military Dictatorships American Economic Journal Macroeconomics 2 1 1 42 doi 10 1257 mac 2 1 1 hdl 1721 1 61747 ISSN 1945 7707 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 34 38 Kim Nam Kyu 2021 Illiberalism of Military Regimes In Sajo Andras Uitz Renata Holmes Stephen eds Routledge Handbook of Illiberalism Routledge pp 571 581 ISBN 9780367260569 a b c Magaloni Beatriz Kricheli Ruth 2010 Political Order and One Party Rule Annual Review of Political Science 13 123 143 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 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24420972 Goodlad Graham 2007 Oliver Cromwell p 22 ISBN 9786612040436 It would forever attach the label however unjustified of military dictator to Cromwell s reputation a b Bychowski Gustav Bychowski Gustaw 1943 Dictators and Their Followers A Theory of Dictatorship Bulletin of the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America 1 3 455 457 ISSN 0376 2327 JSTOR 24725069 Marik Soma 20 April 2009 Robespierre Maximilien de 1758 1794 in Ness Immanuel ed The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest Oxford UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 1 5 doi 10 1002 9781405198073 wbierp1264 ISBN 978 1 4051 9807 3 retrieved 26 July 2022 Kim Minchul 3 October 2015 The many Robespierres from 1794 to the present History of European Ideas 41 7 992 996 doi 10 1080 01916599 2015 1029729 ISSN 0191 6599 S2CID 144194413 Prieto Moises 2021 Introduction Dictatorship in the Nineteenth Century Conceptualisations Experiences Transfers 1st ed Routledge doi 10 4324 9781003024927 ISBN 9780367457174 S2CID 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2006 Belarus The last dictator The Analyst Central and Eastern European Review English Edition 4 59 70 ISSN 1787 0364 Brel Fournier Yuliya Morrison Minion K C 2021 The Predicament of Europe s Last Dictator International Area Studies Review 24 3 169 192 doi 10 1177 22338659211018326 ISSN 2233 8659 S2CID 236409309 Robertson Graeme Greene Samuel 2017 The Kremlin Emboldened How Putin Wins Support Journal of Democracy 28 4 86 100 doi 10 1353 jod 2017 0069 ISSN 1086 3214 S2CID 158185856 Kotkin Stephen 2015 The Resistible Rise of Vladimir Putin Russia s Nightmare Dressed Like a Daydream Foreign Affairs 94 2 140 153 ISSN 0015 7120 JSTOR 24483492 Pettypiece Shannon 12 April 2022 Biden suggests Putin is a dictator who has committed genocide half a world away CNBC Retrieved 31 July 2022 Mainwaring Scott Perez Linan Anibal 2013 Democracies and Dictatorships in Latin America Emergence Survival and Fall Cambridge University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 521 19001 5 Rumer Boris Z 2005 Central Asia at the End of the Transition M E Sharpe pp 3 4 ISBN 978 0 7656 1576 3 Angrist Michele Penner 2010 Politics amp Society in the Contemporary Middle East Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 6 7 ISBN 978 1 58826 717 7 EIU Democracy Index 2020 World Democracy Report Economist Intelligence Unit Archived from the original on 3 March 2021 Retrieved 7 March 2021 William Roberts Clark Matt Golder Sona N Golder 23 March 2012 5 Democracy and Dictatorship Conceptualization and Measurement Principles of Comparative Politics CQ Press ISBN 978 1 60871 679 1 Democracy and Dictatorship Conceptualization and Measurement cqpress com 17 August 2017 Moller Jorgen Skaaning Svend Erik 2012 Requisites of Democracy Conceptualization Measurement and Explanation Routledge pp 78 ISBN 978 1 136 66584 4 Clark William Roberts Golder Matt Golder Sona Nadenichek 2009 Principles of comparative politics CQ Press ISBN 978 0 87289 289 7 Divergent Incentives for Dictators Domestic Institutions and International Promises Not to Torture Appendix Unlike substantive measures of democracy e g Polity IV and Freedom House the binary conceptualization of democracy most recently described by Cheibub Gandhi and Vree land 2010 focuses on one institution elections to distinguish between dictatorships and democracies Using a minimalist measure of democracy rather than a substantive one better allows for the isolation of causal mechanisms Cheibub Gandhi and Vreeland 2010 73 linking regime type to human rights outcomes Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 129 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 130 131 Gandhi Jennifer Przeworski Adam 2006 Cooperation Cooptation and Rebellion Under Dictatorships Economics and Politics 18 1 1 26 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0343 2006 00160 x ISSN 0954 1985 S2CID 31652364 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 55 58 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 61 62 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 63 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 64 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 65 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 66 Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 pp 206 207 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 144 145 Wright Joseph 2009 How Foreign Aid Can Foster Democratization in Authoritarian Regimes American Journal of Political Science 53 3 552 571 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5907 2009 00386 x Crespo Cuaresma Jesus Oberhofer Harald Raschky Paul A September 2011 Oil and the duration of dictatorships Public Choice 148 3 4 505 530 doi 10 1007 s11127 010 9671 0 S2CID 154677328 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 67 68 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 69 70 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 p 69 Ezrow amp Frantz 2011 pp 71 74 Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 p 137 a b Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 p 138 Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 pp 138 140 Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 p 154 a b Geddes Wright amp Frantz 2018 p 155 Aksoy Deniz Carter David B Wright Joseph 1 July 2012 Terrorism In Dictatorships The Journal of Politics 74 3 810 826 doi 10 1017 S0022381612000400 ISSN 0022 3816 S2CID 153412217 Conrad Courtenay R Conrad Justin Young Joseph K 2014 Tyrants and Terrorism Why Some Autocrats are Terrorized While Others are Not International Studies Quarterly 58 3 539 549 doi 10 1111 isqu 12120 Bibliography EditEzrow Natasha M Frantz Erica 2011 Dictators and Dictatorships Understanding Authoritarian Regimes and Their Leaders Bloomsbury ISBN 9781441196828 Galvan Javier A 21 December 2012 Latin American Dictators of the 20th Century The Lives and Regimes of 15 Rulers McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 6691 7 Geddes Barbara Wright Joseph Frantz Erica 2018 How Dictatorships Work Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107115828 Lee Stephen J 2016 European Dictatorships 1918 1945 4th ed Routledge ISBN 9781315646176 Staar Richard F 1982 Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe 4th ed Hoover Institution Press ISBN 9780817976934 Further reading EditBehrends Jan C 14 March 2017 Dictatorship Modern Tyranny Between Leviathan and Behemoth Version 2 0 english version Docupedia Zeitgeschichte doi 10 14765 zzf dok 2 790 v2 Dikotter Frank 3 December 2019 How to Be a Dictator The Cult of Personality in the Twentieth Century Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 63557 380 0 scholarly analysis of Mussolini Hitler Stalin and Mao as well as Kim Il sung of North Korea Francois Duvalier or Papa Doc of Haiti Nicolae Ceaușescu of Romania and Mengistu Haile Mariam of Ethiopia online review also excerpt Dobson William J 2013 The Dictator s Learning Curve Inside the Global Battle for Democracy Anchor ISBN 978 0 307 47755 2 Fraenkel Ernst Meierhenrich Jens 13 April 2017 The Dual State A Contribution to the Theory of Dictatorship Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198716204 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 102533 4 Friedrich Carl J Brzezinski Zbigniew K 1965 Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy 2nd ed Praeger Bueno de Mesquita Bruce Smith Alastair 2011 The Dictator s Handbook Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics Random House p 272 ISBN 978 1 61039 044 6 OCLC 701015473 Wikiquote has quotations related to Dictatorship Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dictatorship amp oldid 1135294850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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