During the Japanese Colonial Occupation (1910-1945) the main adversaries to the Japanese government were the Communist rebels, supported and protected by the Soviet Union. When the Soviet Union occupied the north of the Korean Peninsula following World War II, they allowed these Communist Rebels to create a national government there. The Communists then proceded to become ruling dictators over the remaining North Korean population. Nothing has changed in this respect for many decades.
Autocratic, the government control's the people and their citizens have no say in what goes on. It would not be oligarchic because it's a small group ruling.
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist
North Korea attacked South Korea.
North Korea does not really have distinct branches of government, with the system being something closer to a complex military-political oligarchy led by the Premier. The internal politics of the North Korean regime are unclear and it may be the case that members of the government hold each other to a certain degree of accountability, but how this works is unknown.
North Korea.... -_-
North Korea is located north of South Korea in East Asia.
cause they both are ran by the military The previous answer can be embellished a bit. Sparta was governed by an Oligarchy. In today's North Korea, which claims to be a communist country, it has been ruled by a family run oligarchy just as Sparta was an oligarchy. Sparta, however, may not have been "family " driven as North Korea is.
An example of Oligarchy was in south Africa at the time of Apartheid.
Cuba Venezuela North Korea Tunisia Cuba Venezuela North Korea Tunisia
it can be found in cuba, north korea, and tusanmi and idk google
it can be found in Cuba, North Korea, and tusanmi and idk Google
CubaVenezuelaNorth KoreaTunisiait can be found in cuba, north korea, and tusanmi and idk google
Most Comunist coutries such as China, Thankyou for your time. Peace out. Mothertruckers
As an oligarchy is a ruling aristocracy or self-selecting elite, curiously, most modern 'communist' countries, such as China, Vietnam and Cuba, qualify. North Korea seems to have decided monarchy is better.
North Korea is a communist country, ruled by a dictator. Their leader used to be Kim Il Sung but when he died in 1994, the leadership of North Korea passed to his son Kim Jung Il. Kim Jung Il now seems to be grooming another member of the Kim family to succeed him in the event of his (expected) imminent demise.
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist
North Korea does not really have distinct branches of government, with the system being something closer to a complex military-political oligarchy led by the Premier. The internal politics of the North Korean regime are unclear and it may be the case that members of the government hold each other to a certain degree of accountability, but how this works is unknown.
North Korea