Factors of the formation of totalitarian governments in Afghanistan

Authors

  • Mohammad Karim Jebran
  • Abdul Hameed Sahak

Keywords:

political thought, hereditary government, culture, social environment, poverty

Abstract

Among the issues that have existed in our political thought, there has been the prescription of hereditary government, the theory that leaves the hands of influential rulers free to exercise governance and even allows them to commit authoritarian acts. Many scholars and writers have written in this field and examined the relationship or confrontation between tyranny and religion, culture, and social environment. In this regard, any of them studied and analyzed the relationship between tyranny and elements such as culture, geography, education, family, religion, ethnicity, social environment, poverty, and foreign interventions, according to their literature and way of thinking; for which I will present their findings to the dear readers.

References

Arendt, H. (2023). Totalitariansm. Tehran: Nashr Sales.

Bashiriyeh, H. (2023). Intelect in Politics. Tehran: Negah Maaser.

Dawoodi, A. (2009). Introduction to theorical politics. Mashhad: Sokhan Gostar Publications.

Hobbes, T. (2016). Leviathan. Tehran: Nai Publications.

Ibn Khaldoon, A. (2011). Introduction by Ibn Khaldoon. Tehran: Scientific and Cultural

Publication.

Kawakebi, A. (1984). The nature of tyranny. Tehran: Tarikh Iran Publications.

Montesquieu, C.-L. (2012). The spirit of the laws. Tehran: Amir Kabir Publications.

Rahimi, D. (2016). Geopolitcs of Afghanistan in 20th century. Kabul: Intesharat Sayeed.

Rahimi, M. (2018). Criticism on the structure of system. Kabul: Intesharat Azem.

Tanin, Z. (2004). Afhanistan in the 20th century. Tehran: M. Ebrahim Sharieyati Afghanistani.

Published

2023-11-02

How to Cite

Jebran, M. K. ., & Sahak, A. H. . (2023). Factors of the formation of totalitarian governments in Afghanistan. Journal of Constitutional Law and Jurisprudence, 6(2), 121–134. Retrieved from https://lawjournals.celnet.in/index.php/Jolj/article/view/1415

Issue

Section

Federalism and Constitutional Issues

Categories