Forthcoming

Buddhism and the Political: Organisation and Participation in the Theravada Moral Universe

Walton argues that there is a fundamental ambivalence in Buddhist thought towards the legitimacy of mass participation in politics.


AuthorMatthew J. Walton
ISBN9781849048385
Published LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2024
PublisherC Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
BindingHardback
Original Price£35
Pages256
SKU: HC-204 Categories: , Tags: ,

Description

Popular participation is one of the hallmarks of modern politics. So why have democracy and democratic norms generally failed to take root in the Theravada Buddhist countries of South and Southeast Asia? This book explores traditions of Buddhist political thought in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia.

Matthew Walton considers each country’s trajectory towards independence, the controversial issue of monastic political engagement, the influence of other political forces, and persistent attempts to restrict participation, even in contemporary democratic states. He also contextualises this landscape within the Theravada Buddhist arguments for and against greater political participation, probing the dualistic understanding of human nature that questions ability to self-govern while valuing moral improvement through free action.

Secular rationales in favour of democracy are unlikely to be effective unless they heed Walton’s assessment of the region’s politico-religious nexus, but also engage with the fundamental ambivalence he identifies in Buddhist perspectives on the legitimacy of mass participation.

About the author
Matthew J. Walton is the Aung San Suu Kyi Senior Research Fellow in Modern Burmese Studies at St Antony’s College, Oxford. His research focuses on religion and politics in Southeast Asia. His first book, Buddhism, Politics, and Political Thought in Myanmar, was published in November 2016.

Additional information

Author

ISBN

Published Language

Publication Year

Publisher

Binding

Original Price

Pages

256