Key Idea: Whatever authoritarian regime shows up on your Paper 2, you analyse it with the same four concepts: cause and consequence, continuity and change, perspectives, and significance. Learn the toolkit once, then apply it to any regime the question throws at you.
How this topic is tested
Paper 2 always has the same three-part shape, and this topic supplies the concepts AND the exam skills for all three parts.
Section A [6] — Analyse ONE concept using ONE example: one tight paragraph, concept named early. Section B(a) [4] — Explain ONE example clearly: no concept-naming needed, just precise detail. Section B(b) [15] — 'To what extent...' essay using at least 2 examples from at least 2 different IB regions (Africa & Middle East, Americas, Asia & Oceania, Europe), argued by theme with explicit comparison and a final judgement.
The single biggest way students lose marks on Section B(b) is writing about only one region. Even a brilliant essay on just Nazi Germany is capped well below the top band — the comparison itself is what earns marks.
Must-know facts — one row per sub-topic
| Micro | Focus | Key names/dates you must know |
|---|---|---|
| 8.5.1 §1 | Cause and consequence; continuity and change | Nazi Germany 1933: Treaty of Versailles resentment + 1929 Depression + Hitler's use of Article 48 → dictatorship, not inevitable. Perón's Argentina 1946: decades of oligarchic exclusion + 1943 coup → elected populist authoritarianism. Mao's China from 1949: collectivization (rapid change) vs. old deference to central authority (continuity). |
| 8.5.1 §2 | Perspectives on the same regime | Four viewpoints: supporters, victims, contemporary outsiders, later historians. Great Leap Forward (1958-1962): official Party accounts claimed record harvests; survivors and later research reveal mass famine. Perón: descamisados (workers) praised him; censored middle class/press opposed him. |
| 8.5.1 §3 | Significance | Significance is a judgement, not a fact — state your criterion. Nazi Germany: significant for power/impact (reshaped international law, led to the UN in 1945). Perón's Argentina: significant for what it reveals (the populist-authoritarian blend). Great Leap Forward peasants: marginalized at the time, significant now for revealing information control. |
| 8.5.1 §4 | Summary of the four concepts | One-line recap of cause/consequence, continuity/change, perspectives, significance, each anchored to Nazi Germany, Mao's China, and Perón's Argentina. |
| 8.5.2 §1 | Section A concept mini-essay [6] | Command word Analyse = break into parts and link them, not just narrate. Use ONE example in depth. Worked model: Pinochet's Chile (1973-1990) — supporters cite economic stabilization and defeat of Marxism; victims cite DINA torture and 'disappeared' opponents. |
| 8.5.2 §2 | Section B(a) explain one example [4] | Shortest question — one named, dated, detailed example, no concept-naming required. Worked model: Nazi Germany's propaganda — Goebbels' Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment, radio/film/Nuremberg rallies, state control of schools and press from 1933. |
| 8.5.2 §3 | Section B(b) cross-regional essay [15] | MUST use 2+ examples from 2+ regions, argued by theme (not region-by-region blocks), with explicit comparison. Worked model theme: Nazi Germany's Enabling Act (1933) + Gestapo terror compared with Pinochet's Chile's coup (1973) + DINA secret police. |
| 8.5.2 §4 | Summary of Paper 2 questions | Recaps all three question types plus a region-by-region regime bank: Europe = Nazi Germany (1933-1945); Americas = Pinochet's Chile (1973-1990); Asia & Oceania = Meiji Japan (1868-1912). |
Worked exam question — Section B(b) [15]
To what extent was force the most important method used to maintain authoritarian rule?
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: Writing a Section B(b) essay about only ONE region. Even if your facts are perfect, an essay without a genuine second region and explicit comparison is capped below the top mark band — always plan two regions before you start writing.
What are the four IB History concepts tested in this topic? Cause and consequence, continuity and change, perspectives, and significance — the same four lenses apply to any authoritarian regime you study.
Why is 1933 significant for Nazi Germany? Hitler was appointed Chancellor in January 1933 after the Great Depression's mass unemployment and the collapse of Weimar coalition governments; he then used Article 48 emergency powers and the Enabling Act to dismantle democracy from within.
How do 'perspectives' differ for the Great Leap Forward (1958-1962)? Official Communist Party accounts claimed record harvests and successful industrialization, while peasant survivors and later demographic research document a mass famine that killed tens of millions — the gap reveals propaganda control and fear of reporting bad news.
What is the strict rule for Section B(b)? You must use at least two examples from at least two different IB regions (Africa & Middle East, Americas, Asia & Oceania, Europe), argued by theme with explicit comparison — not region-by-region blocks.
What made Perón's Argentina significant? Not its scale, but what it reveals: how a leader can combine genuine reform (higher wages, dignity for descamisados) with authoritarian control (censorship, repression) — a populist-authoritarian pattern later seen across Latin America.
What separates a 5-6 mark Section A answer from 3-4? Top band ties EVERY point explicitly back to the named concept using a precise, detailed example. Middle band has accurate facts but only implies the link, or drifts into pure narrative.
Name the concept explicitly and early. Keep Section A to one paragraph, one example. Keep Section B(a) to 4-6 sentences of real detail. For Section B(b), pick your two regions before you write, organize by theme, and compare explicitly in every paragraph — then close with a clear, substantiated judgement.