Article contents
Monkish Politics in Southeast Asia: Religious disenfranchisement in comparative and theoretical perspective*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 August 2014
Abstract
In the Theravāda Buddhist polities on the mainland of Southeast Asia, abiding concerns about the proper structuring of the relationship between the ‘two wheels of dhamma’ (i.e. the realm of religion and the realm of politics) have had a profound influence on processes of state formation and political legitimation. This article explores one such religious ‘effect’ on the constitutions and electoral laws of modern Burma/Myanmar, Siam/Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos, namely the official disenfranchisement of Buddhist monks (and, in some instances, Buddhist ‘nuns’ as well as non-Buddhist clergy). The article traces the historical evolution of this Buddhist exception to the democratic principle of equal and universal suffrage, and assesses the extent to which dominant theoretical approaches in the social sciences help us to understand the politics of religious disenfranchisement in Southeast Asia. It finds that neither secularization theory nor the religious-economy approach can explain observed patterns. Instead, the article offers an account of the politics of religious disenfranchisement that emphasizes the role of ideas and historical context.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014
Footnotes
I thank Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière, Ian Harris, Astrid Norén-Nilsson, the two anonymous reviewers for Modern Asian Studies, and participants in the panel on ‘Constitutional Politics in Southeast Asia’ at the EuroSEAS conference in Lisbon and at the POLIS research seminar at the University of Cambridge for helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article. I also thank Puli Fuwongcharoen for excellent research assistance. The usual caveat applies.
References
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16 This self-imposed moral imperative has shaped the basic rules of the political game in a number of ways. In this article, I will focus only on disenfranchisement. In addition, Southeast Asian states have sought to keep Buddhist monks out of ‘politics’ by denying them the right to stand for election, join political parties, and freely engage in political speech.
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