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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Totalitarian regimes. Totalitarian regimes. Information about Totalitarian regimes in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Examples of totalitarian regimes are Italy under Benito Mussolini 1922–45; Germany under Adolf Hitler 1933–45; the USSR under Joseph Stalin from the 1930s until...
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encyclopedia.farlex.com/Totalitarian+regimes
encyclopedia.farlex.com/Totalitarian+regimes
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A totalitarian regime is a government which controls every aspect of the life of the people. People living under a totalitarian regime generally also support it, sometimes almost cultishly, thanks to extensive propaganda missions which are ...
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-totalitarian-regime.h...
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Unlike the liberals who argued for minimum state intervention in society, Mussolini's state was a totalitarian one that controlled many aspects of Italian lives, although the control was not as far reaching as the German Nazi state under Hitler in the 1930s. Mussolini tapped into those mass sentiments and manipulated...
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www.indiana.edu/~hisdcl/h114_2002/fascism.htm
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The government of Nazi Germany was a fascist, totalitarian state. Totalitarian regimes, in contrast to a dictatorship, establish complete political, social, and cultural control over their subjects, and are usually headed by a charismatic leader.
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remember.org/guide/Facts.root.nazi.html
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The Age of Anxiety, the age of the lost generation, was also an age in which modern Fascism and Totalitarianism made their appearance on the historical stage. This full-text lecture discusses the origins and impact of totalitarian regimes in the 1920s and 30s. ... The totalitarian state was based on boundless dynamism.
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www.historyguide.org/europe/lecture10.html
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Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes publicizes lists of staff servicemen of SNB Directorate I and II ... The Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes presents a series of events this month to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Communist totalitarian regime in Czechoslovakia.
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; The European population had to deal with the consequences of war. No longer was war a case of two or three government-armies that met on the battlefield. Instead, citizens were victimised and, ... The urge to achieve national unity resulted in the generation of refugees. Fascism chased away socialists, anti-fascists and...
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www.let.leidenuniv.nl/history/migration/chapter71.html
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Franco's Fascist regime in Spain ... Mussolini's Fascist rule in Italy ... The Nazi regime in Germany...
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www.mtholyoke.edu/~amblack/
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What were the common factors that led to the establishment of totalitarian regimes in Italy and Germany in the inter-war period? (1990) Coursework by GCSE and A level students ... Words: | Submitted: Tue Sep 23 2003 ... See this essay or coursework document in full right now...
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www.studentcentral.co.uk/were_common_factors_that_led_t...
www.studentcentral.co.uk/were_common_factors_that_led_the_establishment_to_6769/
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