Members of parliament have to stand for election at legally specified intervals (generally 4 or 5 years) and the general public has the opportunity to vote against any member of parliament whom they do not want to continue in office, and to elect someone else. Dictators do not have honest elections (sometimes they do have rigged elections, in which they get to count the votes themselves) and they can rule until they either die, or are overthrown by force. In theory dictators can also choose to retire, although this virtually never happens. Parliamentary government and Dictatorship are both capable of ruling badly or ruling well, but dictators do not respect human rights to the extent that a parliamentary government normally does.
A "Dictatorship" is power derived through a single source, normally a single person or very small group of people; a dictatorship is a subset government under the Aristocracy definition: unquestionable rule by some right or power. A "Democracy" is rule by mass will of the people, it is sometimes termed as Mobocracy (the will of the majority sets the rule of law).
In a democracy, the people have control of the government; in a Dictatorship, one person has control of the government.A democracy is when the people rule the government and a dictatorship is when one or a small group of people rule the gobernment such as a military leader
Dictatorship or minority rule
a dictatorship
This is usually evidence of authoritarian rule or a Dictatorship.
It was a Dictatorship, with Hitler at its head.
The dictator. That's what makes it a dictatorship.
Military Dictatorship
Yes.
* rule of law, * juditial review* ,quasi theological term, * natura law[divine law] * ,highest ann unlimited power* ,making law, constitutional limitation
a variable changes a rule doesn't.
Those who rule in Dictatorship cannot he held responsible to the will of the people. The government is not accountable for the policies, nor for how they are carried out.