North Korea remains the clearest case of near-total state domination across speech, information, movement, religion, labor, and daily survival. Human Rights Watch says 2025 brought tighter surveillance, harsher information controls, wider forced labor, stronger restrictions on border crossings, and continued severe punishment for political offenses; a February 2026 HRW update says the Party Congress was set to deepen repression still further. Freedom House continues to score the country at 3/100, describing pervasive surveillance, arbitrary detention, and severe punishment for political offenses. This is the most structurally totalizing state-pressure environment in the ranking.
Totalitarian control enforced through surveillance, forced labor, censorship, and collective fear.
Public worship, conscience, truthful information, and ordinary faithfulness are all constrained by a regime that leaves almost no independent civic space.
Key current sources used: Human Rights Watch’s World Report 2026 North Korea chapter and February 2026 updates; Freedom House Freedom in the World 2026.

