have no authority over individuals, exercise unlimited government, place limits on the freedom fo government
This depends on what you mean by "dictatorships" but Parade magazine publish a list of dictators, of the top twenty, nine could be considered Islamic.
Dictators can make faster decisions than democracies.
None, all are either dictatorships or democracies
Democracies usually tend to be more stable because if the people do not like their leaders they can peacefully remove them from office through their vote. However dictators usually must be removed by force and those attempts have often led to civil wars. Even though there can be civil wars in democracies it's less likely to occur when compared to dictatorships and absolute monarchies.
In dictatorships, voluntarily or involuntarily, everyone is forced (compelled) to vote for the dictator and usually, the dictator is always the top candidate among one or two other candidates. The opposite is the case in presidential democracies i.e people are free to choose from a wide option of candidates.
You can write anywhere. The question is about what you can write. Generally, democracies have less censorship than dictatorships, but this is not necessarily the case.
Different types of democracies include direct democracy, representative democracy, and presidential democracy. Different types of dictatorships include autocracy, oligarchy, and military dictatorship.
Dictators took aggresive action but met only verbal protests and pleas for peace from the democracies. Mussolini and Hitler viewed that desire for peace as weakness and responded with new acts of aggression. With hindsight, we can see the shortcomings of the democracies policies.
It was fought by democracies such as the UK, US and France against the aggressive dictatorships in Germany, Italy and Japan, although the Allies also included some notable dictatorships such as the USSR and China.
Almost all of Europe is made of democracies. All 28 European Union members are democracies, most notably Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Sweden. Another five to ten are illiberal democracies and only Belarus and Russia are proper dictatorships.
DAVID G. WILLIAMSON has written: 'AGE OF THE DICTATORS: A STUDY OF THE EUROPEAN DICTATORSHIPS, 1918-53'
Because of dictators ability to power their controlling area, they can hinder trade in some needed areas.