In the sense that it is ruled by one person or group of people who do not answer to the population and recognise no limits to their authority.
The Korean people can vote for their rulers but as no opposition is allowed to the ruling party they have no other choice.
YES. The North Korean state heavily monitors the actions of all of its citizens and violates their individual rights on a daily basis. These are the indicators of totalitarianism.
For all intents and purposes, North Korea is a totalitarian monarchy.
North Korea set up a totalitarian government that supressed it's people and adopted communism as a way of protecting it's interests. Because South Korea was more free, exiles fled the north looking for a better life.
Afghanistan, Cuba, North Korea, Laos and Vietnam.
A communist government.
NO. North Korea is a unitary state, not a federation. As a result, it has no federal government, but rather a single national government.
North Korea.
For all intents and purposes, North Korea is a totalitarian monarchy.
North Korea and The Soviet Union
Is called a totalitarian state.Example: Communist North Korea.
China, Cuba, Russia, Philippines, Iran, North Korea, right now have totalitarian governments.
Oh yes, there are a number of totalitarian governments in existence today. The most totalitarian government is that of North Korea, but there are lots of others. China is another very significant example. Burma/Myanmar has a very unpleasant totalitarian government. Iran has a totalitarian theocracy.
North Korea is a Communist totalitarian state with widespread hunger and poverty.
North Korea, Myanmar and Cuba are totalitarian states. China to a lesser extent can be lumped in there as well.
Realistically speaking, it's a relatively banal form of absolute (or totalitarian) dictatorship.
Totalitarian dictatorship
Yes it was, and still is.
Of those choices, North Korea is clearly a TOTALITARIAN DICTATORSHIP.