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dictatorship |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
dictatorshipForm of government in which one person or an oligarchy possesses absolute power without effective constitutional checks. With constitutional democracy, it is one of the two chief forms of government in use today. Modern dictators usually use force or fraud to gain power and then keep it through intimidation, terror, suppression of civil liberties, and control of the mass media. In 20th-century Latin America, nationalist leaders often achieved power through the military and attempted either to maintain the privileged elite or to institute far-reaching social reform, depending on their class sympathies. In Europe's communist and fascist dictatorships, a charismatic leader of a mass party used an official ideology to maintain his regime, and terror and propaganda to suppress opposition. In postcolonial Africa and Asia, dictators have often retained power by establishing one-party rule after a military takeover. |
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| It was the one-man rule practiced by the supreme ruler of the colonists that our Revolutionary War was all about. America's Founding Fathers, who knew their Roman history well, saw in the despotic excesses of one-man rule an historic flaw they were determined to exclude from their constitutional design for a new nation. In the first half of the 20th century, Egypt saw liberal parliamentary democracy, but that tradition has become stunted by decades of one-party and one-man rule. |
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