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  1. Hace 5 días · Dictatorship, form of government in which one person or a small group possesses absolute power without effective constitutional limitations. Dictators usually resort to force or fraud to gain despotic political power, which they maintain through the use of intimidation, terror, and the suppression of civil liberties.

  2. Hace 5 días · Brazilian journalist Ludmila Pizarro grew up surrounded by idealists who were targeted and tortured during Brazil’s brutal dictatorship. But it wasn’t until she started researching a story to mark 60 years from the beginning of the dictatorship that she learned the details of her father’s own ordeal. For Agência Pública, she reconstructs the story of her family’s past.

  3. Hace 23 horas · In Latin America, where the memory of military dictatorship still looms large in countries like Brazil, the "Protect Democracy-2022 Brazilian Elections" coalition safeguards democratic principles against threats and ensures respect for election results, as demonstrated in their decisive response to the January 8, 2023, attack on the capital in Brasilia.

  4. Hace 1 día · A right-wing dictatorship, sometimes also referred to as a rightist dictatorship or right-wing authoritarianism, is an authoritarian or sometimes totalitarian regime following right-wing policies.

  5. Hace 4 días · A dictatorship is a form of government characterized by the concentration of power in the hands of a single individual or a small group. It often involves the suppression of political opposition, limited civil liberties, and a lack of checks and balances.

  6. Hace 2 días · HAVANA TIMES – Seven former ambassadors of Sweden to Nicaragua signed a letter published in the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper, urging their country’s authorities to get more actively involved in opposing the dictatorship of Daniel Ortega and his wife and vice president, Rosario Murillo. They suggest cutting off their financing from the World ...

  7. Hace 1 día · The difference was that during the dictatorship, mostly unqualified workers left the country; in the 21st century, the emigrants were mostly university graduates and qualified professionals. The losses are in many cases irreversible for the country that had trained them, and it has led to a demographic earthquake that conditions the economy and society of the present.