The Government North Korea has today is a Dictatorship. Kim Jong-Il rules the country with mighty power.
Type of Government: DYNASTIC COMMUNIST STATECurrent Leader (as of 2016): KIM JONG-UN
They're all communist countries.
North Korea has no Citizen Participation. If you looked this question up, your a moron. - Gilbert.
peninsula
an independent government
Communist.
The Government North Korea has today is a Dictatorship. Kim Jong-Il rules the country with mighty power.
Type of Government: DYNASTIC COMMUNIST STATECurrent Leader (as of 2016): KIM JONG-UN
They're all communist countries.
North Korea's economy is a joke. It has the type of government that wont last long .
dictatorship
communist, as does Cuba, Laos, China, and North Korea
North Korea is a one-party, socialist, and dictatorial state. The official political ideology of North Korea is called Juche, a combination of Marxist-Leninist principles and self-reliance/self-dependence.
Officially, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (commonly known as "North Korea" and "Korea DPR") operates under a Juche socialist republic-type government, not a communism. However, in the eyes of the outside public, North Korea is a communist country and, in some extreme views, a Dictatorship.A Juche-style government relies heavily on the motto of "self-dependence". Because of this, North Korea is an extremely isolated nation, torn from the outside world. And, as a result, North Korea's economy reflects on this.
North Korea has a Juche government. And this type of government tends to have absolute control over it's citizens. Though the fact that they are not allowed to leave the country does not mean it has not seen it's share of attempts to cross south of the border.Being a Juche government, They are told what they can and can not do, say or even wear! So it's a given that they are told they can not leave their country. After Kim Jong-il took over North Korea, he stated that he was never listened to or treated right in that country, so he said that he would treat the People of North Korea the way they treated him. And telling the country that they are unable to leave,gives him somewhat justice I suppose.
Realistically speaking, it's a relatively banal form of absolute (or totalitarian) dictatorship.