The term "Dictatorship" really does not tell you much about the internal organization of the power structure. Different dictatorships operate at different levels in terms of their decision-making process. The only way of decision-making that a dictatorship cannot embrace is popular suffrage (because that is a democracy).
There are some dictatorships like Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, where the ruler simply expresses the law by fiat. There are some dictatorships like Vietnam, where almost all decisions are made by the Communist Party leadership in closed-door negotiations and simply vocalized by the President after the fact. There are dictatorships like Russia, where the parliament is in alliance with the President because they come from the same party and effectively rubber stamp the actions of the President, but still have the theoretical power to oppose the President's will.
by voting and doin what youu want and they make it a rule : ) !
Laws and decisions are made in a Dictatorship by a centralized individual. This is also known as the dictator.
The dictator.
Cuba is a Communist Dictatorship - the government leaders MAKE the laws.
they usaully act like major dicks
YES
It has to do with this thing the founding fathers made up called division of powers. The legislative branch (congress) gets to make the laws, the executive branch (the president) gets to enforce the laws, and the judicial branch (supreme court) gets to interpret the laws. This way, no one person can have too much power and make America a dictatorship.
The US should not be called a dictatorship. It is a Federal Republic form of government. We elect persons to represent us in making laws.
China is a Communist dictatorship. The leadeer of the Communist Party MAKE the rules and laws. If they break them, WHO is going to prosecute them. . . themselves?
A parliamentary government A monarchy A dictatorship A theocracy All cover this criterion.
The citizens make the dictatorship work. With out them there would be nobody to control.
People can protest in a dictatorship in the same way that they would protest any other form of government. Typically, a dictatorship has stricter laws prohibiting various types of protest, and therefore protesters would have to violate the law.