
Naomi Klein's explosive expose reveals how crises enable corporate takeovers and political manipulation. Praised by Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and adapted into a Winterbottom documentary, this "brilliantly conceived" work asks: What if disasters aren't just tragedies, but strategic opportunities for the powerful?
Naomi Klein, a Canadian author and renowned critic of corporate globalization, explores the intersection of neoliberal economics and societal crises in The Shock Doctrine, her groundbreaking analysis of disaster capitalism.
A bestselling author and professor of Climate Justice at the University of British Columbia, Klein’s work blends investigative journalism with anti-capitalist advocacy, informed by her decades of activism and academic research.
Her prior works—including No Logo, a manifesto on brand culture, and This Changes Everything, a climate crisis exposé—have been translated into over 30 languages and cemented her reputation as a leading voice in political economics. The Shock Doctrine was adapted into a documentary by Oscar-nominated director Michael Winterbottom, amplifying its critique of crisis-driven privatization.
Klein’s accolades include the Sydney Peace Prize, the Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize, and the 2024 Women’s Prize for Nonfiction for Doppelganger. Her books are frequently taught in university courses on globalization and environmental policy, with The Shock Doctrine remaining a foundational text in critiques of unfettered capitalism.
The Shock Doctrine critiques how governments and corporations exploit crises—natural disasters, wars, economic collapses—to push through free-market policies that benefit elites while bypassing public scrutiny. Klein argues this "disaster capitalism" strategy, rooted in Milton Friedman’s neoliberal ideology, prioritizes privatization and deregulation during moments of collective trauma. The book traces this pattern from Chile’s 1973 coup to the Iraq War.
This book is essential for readers interested in political economy, activism, or understanding the hidden mechanics of power. Policymakers, students of sociology or economics, and advocates for social justice will find its analysis of crisis-driven capitalism particularly impactful. Klein’s investigative rigor also appeals to fans of critical nonfiction like No Logo.
Yes—it’s a landmark work that reshaped debates about globalization and neoliberalism. Translated into 35+ languages and taught in universities globally, it offers a provocative lens to interpret events like the 2008 financial crash or COVID-19 privatization. The New York Times praised its “exhaustive reporting and muscular prose”.
Disaster capitalism refers to exploiting systemic shocks—wars, natural disasters, pandemics—to impose radical free-market reforms that would face resistance in stable times. Examples include privatizing New Orleans’ schools post-Hurricane Katrina or Iraq’s economy after the U.S. invasion. Klein ties this to economist Milton Friedman’s belief that “only a crisis produces real change”.
Klein outlines a three-phase “shock strategy”:
This framework is illustrated through Chile’s Pinochet-era reforms and Russia’s post-Soviet “shock therapy”.
Critics argue Klein oversimplifies complex events and underestimates grassroots resistance. Some economists contest her portrayal of Friedman, noting his opposition to coercive policies. However, the book’s core thesis—that crises are weaponized for elite gain—has gained traction in analyses of austerity and climate policy.
It expands on No Logo’s critique of corporatism by examining capitalism’s reliance on crisis. Later books like This Changes Everything and On Fire apply the shock doctrine framework to climate change, arguing eco-disasters are exploited to delay climate action.
Modern crises—climate disasters, pandemics, and AI-driven labor shifts—continue to be exploited for privatization and surveillance. Klein’s 2023 book Doppelganger updates these themes, examining how shock tactics fuel conspiracy theories and authoritarianism.
She advocates for:
The term describes the deliberate use of public disorientation post-crisis to implement radical free-market policies. Klein traces its origins to CIA-funded experiments in 1950s electroshock therapy, which inspired Friedman’s belief in “economic shock treatment”.
저자의 목소리로 책을 느껴보세요
지식을 흥미롭고 예시가 풍부한 인사이트로 전환
핵심 아이디어를 빠르게 캡처하여 신속하게 학습
재미있고 매력적인 방식으로 책을 즐기세요
Disasters [are] not as tragedies but as market opportunities.
The economic policy of the junta is not an economic policy alone.
The shock doctrine ensures that neoliberal ideas are always readily available.
Disaster capitalism actively requires disasters.
The shock doctrine의 핵심 아이디어를 이해하기 쉬운 포인트로 분해하여 혁신적인 팀이 어떻게 창조하고, 협력하고, 성장하는지 이해합니다.
The shock doctrine을 빠른 기억 단서로 압축하여 솔직함, 팀워크, 창의적 회복력의 핵심 원칙을 강조합니다.

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Picture a city underwater, its poorest residents stranded on rooftops while helicopters evacuate the wealthy. Now imagine that same catastrophe becoming a business opportunity-a chance to demolish public housing, privatize schools, and reshape an entire community according to corporate blueprints. This isn't dystopian fiction. It's the pattern that repeats whenever disaster strikes in our modern world. From military coups to tsunamis, from financial crashes to pandemics, crises have become profitable ventures for those positioned to exploit them. This systematic opportunism has a name: the shock doctrine. It operates on a simple but chilling premise-populations reeling from collective trauma will accept radical economic transformations they would normally resist. The formula is consistent: shock the system, push through sweeping changes while people are disoriented, then use force if resistance emerges. The shock doctrine didn't emerge by accident. It traces back to economist Milton Friedman, who recognized that "only a crisis produces real change." His insight became a playbook: keep free-market policies ready for the moment disaster strikes. But there's a darker genealogy here. The same theories about disorienting individuals through electroshock-developed in CIA-funded experiments during the 1950s-were scaled up and applied to entire nations. Just as psychiatrists believed they could create a "blank slate" in patients' minds, economic reformers sought to wipe away existing social structures to rebuild from scratch. This isn't merely opportunistic timing. The system actively requires catastrophes, creating perverse incentives where human suffering becomes a market signal. Wars, natural disasters, and economic collapses feed what has grown into a disaster capitalism complex-a network of corporations that view tragedy as their primary business model.