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  1. May 20, 2024 · Authoritarian regimes are systems of government that have no established mechanism for the transfer of executive power and do not afford their citizens civil liberties or political rights. Power is concentrated in the hands of a single leader or a small elite, whose decisions are taken without regard for the will of the people.

    • Natasha Lindstaedt
  2. Mar 25, 2021 · Types of authoritarian governments include absolute monarchy, military dictatorship, and ideologically-based regimes. An authoritarian government is a government that is not chosen by the people and has absolute power to govern as it pleases, without consulting the people that they rule.

  3. According to Barbara Geddes, there are seven typologies of authoritarian regimes: dominant party regimes, military regime, personalist regimes, monarchies, oligarchic regimes, indirect military regimes, or hybrids of the first three.

  4. Totalitarianism, authoritarianism, and fascism are all forms of government characterized by a strong central rule that attempts to control and direct all aspects of individual life through coercion and repression. All nations have an official type of government as designated in the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency’s World Factbook.

  5. May 22, 2024 · Both totalitarianism and authoritarianism are forms of government that demand the submission of a nation’s citizens to a strong central authority. In contrast with democracy, totalitarianism and...

    • Sarah Pruitt
  6. Aug 6, 2015 · According to Linz, authoritarian regimes are characterized by four defining traits: (1) limited, nonresponsible, political pluralism; (2) the absence of an elaborate and guiding ideology, having instead “distinctive mentalities”; (3) the absence of both intensive and extensive political mobilization; and (4) the exercise of power within ...

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  8. Jun 12, 2024 · A style of government in which the rulers demand unquestioning obedience from the ruled. Traditionally, ‘authoritarians’ have argued for a high degree of determination by governments of belief and behaviour and a correspondingly smaller significance for individual choice.