What Is Authoritarianism?
The Oxford English Dictionary traces the first use of the term “authoritarian” back to the 1850s. By the mid-20th century, the noun form of “authoritarianism” was being used to describe states that, while not democratic, did not involve the same degree of repression and control as a truly totalitarian regime.
In an essay published in 1964, the political scientist Juán Linz offered a definition of authoritarian political systems that contrasted them both with democratic governments and totalitarian regimes. According to Linz, authoritarian systems retain control of political processes, including limiting or prohibiting the right to create opposing political parties that might compete for power with the ruling group.
Because of the limited political freedom they allow citizens, authoritarian governments or leaders are not typically subject to constitutional limitations, free and fair popular elections or other constraints. As a result, authoritarian leaders can exercise power arbitrarily without the accountability built into democratic political systems.
Key Differences
Like totalitarianism, authoritarianism requires citizens to submit to the authority of the state, whether to a single dictator or to a group. However, authoritarian regimes typically allow citizens a certain degree of individual or corporate freedom that is lacking under a totalitarian regime.
According to Linz, a totalitarian system also typically has a more elaborate guiding ideology than authoritarian systems, which he argued “are based more on distinctive mentalities which are difficult to define.” Beyond ideological coherence, totalitarian systems have the political mobilization to ensure absolute enforcement of the ruling doctrine—including through the most repressive of means.
While authoritarian governments usually allow some diversity in social organization, totalitarian regimes aim to suppress and eliminate all existing political and social institutions and traditional structures with new ones under their complete control. “In a simplistic way,” Isaac says, “totalitarianism is an extreme form of authoritarianism that involves an effort to practice total domination.”
Examples of Totalitarianism