Dictatorship
Dictatorship
Dictatorship
Dictatorships are often established through military force or through the formation of a
political party. Roughly half of all dictatorships originate from a military coup, while
others start due to foreign interference, elected officials ending competitive elections,
insurgent takeovers, popular uprisings by citizens, or legal maneuvering by autocratic
elites to seize power within their government. Between 1946 and 2010, 42% of
dictatorships began by overthrowing a different dictatorship, and 26% started after
achieving independence from a foreign government. Many others arose following a
period of warlordism.
Types of dictatorships
Military Dictatorship:
Military dictatorships are governments in which military officers hold power and
decide who will lead the country. They are common in developing countries in Africa,
Asia, and Latin America. These regimes are typically unstable with an average duration
of five years and often followed by subsequent military coups and dictatorships. The
prominence of military dictatorships decreased during the 1970s and 1980s. Military
coups occur in democracies after their creation but before military reforms. In
oligarchies, the military's strength weighed against the concessions made to it poses a
threat. Factors associated with coups include abundant natural resources, limited
military use internationally, and using the military domestically as an oppressive force.
Military coups do not always lead to dictatorships as power may be passed on to an
individual or democratic elections may take place.
One-party
A personalist dictatorship is a regime in which a single individual holds all the power.
Personalist dictators typically favor loyalty over competence and often handpick friends
or family members as elite corps. Due to the lack of accountability and smaller group of
elites, personalist dictatorships are more prone to corruption and repression than other
forms of dictatorship. These regimes have no internal checks and balances and often
collapse with the death of the dictator. Personalist dictatorships are more likely to end
in violence and less likely to democratize than other forms of dictatorship.
Further Reads:
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/dictatorship-countries
Further Watch: