The first section, entitled "Windows of Dissent", begins with an article written for
The New York Times, wherein she covers the
1999 Seattle protests, which she calls the coming-out party of the anti-globalization movement. The remaining five articles in the section come from
The Globe and Mail, with one from
The Nation; they cover the
World Bank,
International Monetary Fund, and
World Trade Organization (WTO) protests in
Washington, D.C.,
Prague, and
Toronto from April to September 2000. She describes the protesters as hundreds of decentralized groups with various independent interests, leaderless but organized, and searching for a strategy. The next section, "Fencing in Democracy", consists of articles from
The Globe and Mail and the transcript of a speech. The section is divided into two sub-sections. The first explores some of the impacts that
economic globalization has had on communities, focusing on Mexico and Argentina, and misconceptions that supporters of the WTO-associated organizations have of the anti-globalization movement. The second focuses on the co-opting of
the commons, such as genetics, culture, and public sector infrastructure, for private economic gains. The third section, "Fencing in the Movement", chronicles the escalation of security tactics to counter protesters. Klein finds that police have been removing the distinction between
civil disobedience and violence and purposefully normalizing violence so it is the expected outcome, not a rare event. She matches the decline of
civil liberties and
freedom of speech with the rise of
free speech zones, indiscriminate use of tear gas and pepper spray, plain clothes officers, surveillance, and pre-emptive arrests. The fourth section, "Capitalizing on Terror", discusses opportunism that used the
September 11 attacks to further political and economic objectives. In an editorial piece for the
Los Angeles Times, Klein argues that the US has sold its image too well as the land of opportunity and plenty and that rising
anti-Americanism was the result of the US inability to share this. The final section, "Windows to Democracy", contains two articles written for
The Nation, two for
The Globe and Mail and one for
The Guardian. These articles examine potential directions for the movement to take, focusing upon the
World Social Forum,
Mexican Zapatistas, and political parties. The final article calls upon the movement to shift from attacking symbols of globalization at protests and use the decentralized local groups to provide alternatives: define themselves as fighting for, rather than against, something. Most of the book's content is freely and legally available in the form of individual articles on Klein's website. The printed text has often been edited or reworked, in some cases very heavily. ==Style and themes==