User:Antidiskriminator/Drafts of articles/Puppet regime vs. puppet state?
Appearance
When it was created in 2002, a topic of the Puppet state article was in fact the Puppet government. During first five years it remained unchallenged until User:Zchenyu changed it to puppet state. This article now has state for topic but template which refers to different forms of governments.Template:Forms of government
Puppet state vs. its government
[edit]- "distinction between state and government" - 13,100 GoogleBooks hits
- Krystyna Marek: Puppet states are to be distinguished from puppet governments. A puppet State is an entirely new organism created by the occupant, whereas in a puppet government only the governmental functions are a creation of the occupant, the original State having been in existence before the occupation. - "Identity and Continuity of States in Public International Law", 1968
- Raphael Lemkin: Axis Rule in Occupied Europe, "Puppet states are to be distinguished from puppet governments.", ... "In Yugoslavia Germany established the pupet state of Serbia.", 2008, page 8
- Amerasia; a review of America and the Far East, Том 4 "From the structural point of view the puppet government, like the puppet state, theoretically enjoys complete independence, but for all practical purposes is dominated by the controlling power." p.574 - 1940
Serbia
[edit]- Raphael Lemkin: Axis Rule in Occupied Europe, ... "In Yugoslavia Germany established the pupet state of Serbia.", 2008, page 8
- Wayne S. Vucinich, Jozo Tomasevitch - Contemporary Yugoslavia: twenty years of Socialist experiment, "There is no satisfactory study on the puppet state of Serbia during World War II." p. 368
- John R. Morris, Yugoslavia, "puppet state of Serbia", 1948, p. 43
- Bernd Jürgen Fischer, Balkan Strongmen: Dictators and Authoritarian Rulers of South Eastern Europe, "A puppet state of Serbia was created, ...", p. 221
Government
[edit]Government (which can sometimes be puppet government) is the particular group of people, the administrative bureaucracy, that controls the state apparatus at a given time.[1][2][3] That is, governments are the means through which state power is employed. States are served by a continuous succession of different governments.[3]
- ^ Bealey, Frank, ed. (1999). "government". The Blackwell dictionary of political science: a user's guide to its terms. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-631-20695-8.
- ^ Sartwell, 2008: p. 25
- ^ a b Flint & Taylor, 2007: p. 137