10 Characteristics of Autocracy

Autocracy

We explain what autocracy is and what the ascendancy to power is like. Also, what are its general characteristics and some examples.

autocracy
The autocracy is sustained thanks to a separation of public powers.

What is the Autocracy?

Autocracy is a government system that centralizes the supreme power of the State in a single person , whose decisions could neither be questioned, nor contravened, nor be subject to controls of any kind. Whoever presides over one of this nature is known as an autocrat .

The main forms of autocracy in the history of humanity were the, as lived in Europe before, and the modern dictatorship, of which there are abundant examples of different ideological signs.

Autocracies are contrary to that, which is sustained thanks to a separation of public powers that take stock and balance their influences on civic life.

The term autocracy is often used as a synonym for dictatorship or for , although they are not necessarily synonymous.

Characteristics of the autocracy :

  1. Etymology

The word autocracy is made up of two Greek words: auto- ("own, by itself") and kratos ("power") .

Hence, autocracy can be understood as "power by itself" or "power by its own hand" , thus alluding to the fact that all the power of the city is concentrated in a councilor who uses it to keep governing.

  1. Concentration of power

autocracy
There is no autocracy without an autocrat.

The essential attribute of an autocracy is the concentration of powers in the same figure, that is, a single person who governs all the affairs of the nation . In this it is distinguished, for example, from other forms of the or the, in which power is exercised by a group or a social sector, such as a political party, a military junta or an ethnic minority. There is no autocracy without an autocrat.

  1. Rise to power

An autocracy can be established through various mechanisms, including popular election. It is enough for the ruler to initiate a series of changes that gradually lead in that direction, making use of legal tricks and the republican powers themselves .

In other cases, autocracies can be established by force , through armed struggles or military invasions, and sustained by violence and fear.

  1. Repression

The repression and persecution of dissent is often an important feature in autocracies, which deny political participation and sometimes even fundamental ones to those who think differently or to those who oppose the autocratic regime.

  1. Corruption

autocracy
The autocrat's allies enjoy near-absolute impunity and immunity.

Another distinctive feature of autocracies is corruption, since by not having any type of opposing powers, the autocrat's allies enjoy almost absolute impunity and immunity , thus being able to enrich themselves illegally, commit crimes and accumulate, without being judged by it.

  1. Violence

Autocratic times, especially in the contemporary world, can be periods of terror and violence , in which the declared enemies of the regime are persecuted, murdered and tortured, or even those who only refuse to cooperate with power.

In these periods there also tends to be violent resistance on the part of the governed , which can lead to violent protests, guerrilla warfare or even a Revolution or civil war, as the governed decide to sacrifice everything to recover their.

  1. Personality cult

autocracy
From the State the cult of the leader is promoted through manipulative messages.

Since all power resides in the hands of the same person, she is worshiped and venerated as if she were a deity or a saint . This is promoted from the structures of the State and the cult of the personality of the leader is encouraged, through manipulative messages that offer him as a savior, a redeemer or, in the worst case, as a necessary evil.

  1. Formation of an oligarchy

All autocracies end up benefiting (openly or secretly) not only the autocrat, but his followers and a certain social sector that is loyal to him. This sector eventually possesses enough assets to become one , that is, a powerful social sector that retains for itself the economic, social and political advantages of the.

  1. Synonyms

The terms despotism, tyranny and , although the latter implies a lesser degree of empowerment of the ruler, are practically synonymous with autocracy , and it necessarily refers to whoever governs through (military) force.

  1. Examples of autocracy

Autocracy - Tsar of Russia
The tsar was a local emperor who belonged to the historical Russian nobility.

Some historical examples of autocracies are:

  • Tsarist Russia. Russia before the era ruled by the Tsar, a local emperor who belonged to the historical Russian nobility.
  • French absolutism. That of the 15th century was ruled by Louis XIV, an absolutist monarch who was not subject to any institutional regulation.
  • Franco's Spain. , the conservative Spanish military, put an end to it through an atrocious dictatorship that disappeared thousands of opponents and centralized political powers in him, through the figure of "Caudillo. Watch: .
  • The Cuba of the Revolution. Ruled with an iron hand by , it is an example of an autocracy that emerged as a result of a Socialist Revolution that had abundant popular support. However, along the way, all powers were centralized in Fidel Castro and he ruled until his death, almost a monarch.


Update date: February 18, 2021.

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