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Revolutions and Dictatorships

Books Abroad, 1939
H. K. B., Hans Kohn
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A Mouthful of Dictatorship

Russian Education & Society, 1994
The Eureka-Development Conference was supposed to open on August 20, in closed Cheliabinsk-70, and it did. The representatives of the left-wing teachers' movement, not yet knowing that the right-wing coup was going to fizzle, continued to learn to teach.
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Democracy and dictatorship revisited

, 2010
J. A. Cheibub, J. Gandhi, J. Vreeland
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On the Dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie

Monthly Review, 1982
Review of Working for Capitalism by Richard M. Pfeffer.This article can also be found at the Monthly Review website, where most recent articles are published in full.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
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Dictatorship and Compromise

2004
The Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes had proven, in effect, ungovernable owing to the failure of its politicians to accept the necessity for compromise and concession implicit in parliamentary government in an environment characterised by a series of strongly held cultural identities.
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Dictatorship by Plebiscite

1994
The Bonapartist dictatorship did not spring fully grown from the coup d’etat of Brumaire; it took four years to develop. At first, as we have seen, Bonaparte was compelled to negotiate, first with the brumairiens who had helped him into power, and then with the Pope to secure religious peace.
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Dictators and Dictatorships

2008
September 11, 1973, La Moneda, the Chilean presidential palace in Santiago, was bombed by military airplanes; smoke rose from the debris while democracy was annihilated. On December 22, 1989, the first-ever televised revolution was aired; shots were fired as the last soviet satellite, Romania, collapsed.
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The Casuistry of Dictatorship

World Politics, 1951
For the political scientist in America there can scarcely be a more fascinating or more elusive study than the Soviet Union. The first enticement is the menacing importance of Soviet power. Then there is the miracle which in a single generation has changed a defeated and disintegrating agrarian society into one of the two greatest industrial and ...
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The Stalinist Dictatorship

2018
From the late 1920s onwards, forced collectivisation, state-directed industrialisation, mass purging and the party's control of culture, refashioned Russia and gave birth to a new type of society. The 'second revolution' and its aftermath remodelled the Soviet State and the Bolshevik party, restructured all institutions and reconstituted all social ...
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