English

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Etymology

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From uni- +‎ party +‎ -ism.

Noun

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unipartyism

  1. A political system that has only one political party.
    Synonyms: monopartyism, one-party system
    Coordinate terms: multipartyism, pluripartyism
    • 1967, Claude Ake, A Theory of Political Integration, page 82:
      Unipartyism, it has been argued, is at once stabilizing and integrative; it reflects the legacy of government by consensus characteristic of most traditional political systems and prevents the dissipation of energy in desultory political strife.
    • 2006, Ibrahim John Werrema, Tanzanians to the Promised Land: After Forty Years, page 34:
      This transition from unipartyism back to multipartyism was quite a delicate process, and Tanzania is highly commended for the way this change took place.
    • 2013, Victor Oguejiofor Okafor, A Roadmap for Understanding African Politics, page 52:
      First, unipartyism is still vulnerable to parochial intra-party competition.
    • 2021, James S. Coleman, Carl G. Rosberg, Political Parties and National Integration in Tropical Africa, page 668:
      Like most political ideologies, it serves primarily to rationalize and legitimate a particular political state of affairs, which in this instance is postcolonial unipartyism.
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