Answer:
Totalitarian societies were more common after the period of decolonization in Asia because, given the political and social fragility of these peoples accustomed to foreign rule and the lack of experience in terms of self-government, their peoples were not able to determine democratically the form of government, which gave rise to internal conflicts that were resolved with the appearance of dictators, revolutions and other undemocratic alternatives. Thus, for example, the Khmer Rouge appeared in Cambodia after the end of French colonization.