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Autocracy Vs.

Democracy

Democracy is a form of government in which the people either directly or


indirectly, take part in governing. However, the term is also used as a
measurement of how much influence a people has over their government, as
in how much democracy exists. A modern democracy implies certain rights for
citizens:

1. Right to elect government through free and fair elections


2. Freedom of Speech
3. The rule of Law
4. Human Rights
5. Freedom of Assembly
6. Freedom from discrimination

Is Democracy the Best System?

There is much debate on the ability of a democracy to properly represent both


the ‘will of the people’, and to do what is right, but to quote Winston Churchill;

“Democracy is the worst form of government except for all those others
that have been tried”.

This is because there is no system that can ideally order society. Traditionally,
the purpose of the democracy is to prevent tyranny (the accumulation of too
much authority in the hands of one or few. Thus, if the democracy cannot give
us a good government, it puts limits to the abuse of power.

What is Autocracy?

In simple tone, an autocracy is a system where the ruler rules the people with
too much accumulation of the power, or there is no kind of limits on abuse of
power. Autocracy signify lacking of people’s representation or participation in
the governance process.

Despotism: Autocracy might be imposed by a single person or a group.


When a singular authority –either a single person or tightly knit group-which
rules with absolute power is know as “despotism”. Despotism implies
tyrannical rule; it suggest a form of government which exercises exacting and
near absolute control over all its citizens.

Totalitarianism: Totalitarianism is any poetical system in which a citizen is


totally subjected to state authority  in all aspects of  day-to-day life. It goes
well beyond dictatorship of typical police state measures, and even beyond
those measures sustain total war with other state. It involves constant
brainwashing achieved by propaganda to erase any political  for dissent, by
anyone, including most especially the state’s agents.

Dictatorship: Dictatorship is a government headed by a dictator or more


generally any authoritarian or totalitarian government. It is often equivalent to
a police state, but the term dictator refers to the way the leaders gain and hold
power, but not the watch kept on the people.

Police State: A political condition where the government maintains strict


control over society, particularly through suspension of rights and often with
use of a force of secret police.

Authoritarianism: The term authoritarianism is used  to describe an


organization or a state which enforces strong and sometimes oppressive
measures against population. This is distinguished from totalitarianism both by
the degree and scope, authoritarian government being less intrusive and in
organization not necessarily  backed by the force.

Autocracy in general implies an ideology or concept of regime ‘which tends to


or rule by accumulation of power without being accountable to people’. People
are subjected to the authority of the state. This sate of condition implies that:

1. People have not freedom electing government.


2. People exercise no freedoms
3. Government interferes in all aspects of life of the people.
4. Police measures are used to contain the people.

Legislation is Used to Rule People

Law is effectively used to:

1. Remove the limits of power, and prevent abuse of power. Legislation in


such regime is used to empower the rulers to accumulate powers or
authority.
2. Restrict the people to dissent. People rights to freedom of speech and
assembly is restricted or marginalized.

Features of Legislation in Autocracy

Prescriptive: Legislation prescribes the duties  for people to support the ruler


without any question.

Regulatory: Legislation is regulatory, so that behaviors of all people are


strictly regulated, deviation being punishable.

Punitive: Legislation is punitive for violation of the prescription or regulation.

Centralization of power: Governance power is centralized. The devolution of


the power is effectively negated. Centralization of power weakens the
authority of the Parliament, the law making body.

 Legislation is abstract and ambiguous or maintains possibility double


standard.
 Legislation empowers executive for rule making through regulation or
ordinance or bye-laws.
 Legislation provides absolute power for interpretation of the statute.

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