Parallel state
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The "Parallel State" is a term coined by American historian Robert Paxton to describe a collection of organizations or institutions that are state-like in their organization, management and structure, though they are not officially part of the legitimate state or government, and serve to promote the prevailing political and social ideology of the state.
The Parallel State differs from the more commonly used "state within a state" in that they are usually endorsed by the prevailing political elite of a country, while the "state within a state" is a pejorative term to describe state-like institutions that operate without the consent of and even to the detriment of the authority of an established state (e.g. Churches and religious institutions or secret societies with their owns laws and court systems).
Parallel States are common in [totalitarian] societies, such as Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, the Soviet Union and North Korea, and comprise of youth organizations, leisure organizations, work/labor collectives, unions and militias.