A Plea for an Ethics of Citizenship: Inviting the Catholic Church to Respond to the Democratic Deficit in Southeast Asia

A Plea for an Ethics of Citizenship

Inviting the Catholic Church to Respond to the Democratic Deficit in Southeast Asia

Autores/as

  • Francis Aung Thang Shane Diocese of Hakha in Chin State, Myanmar

Palabras clave:

Ethics of Citizenship, Democratic Recession, Catholic Social Teaching, Southeast Asia

Resumen

Southeast Asia is undergoing an uneven democratic recession, part of a global slide since 2006. Rights and institutional checks are eroding—evident in Myanmar’s coup, Thailand’s continued military tutelage, and backsliding in the Philippines under Rodrigo Duterte. Yet across the region many religious actors, including Catholic institutions, have been reticent or ambivalent toward public democratic engagement—constrained by repression, appeals to neutrality, or institutional self-preservation. Against this backdrop, the article traces the Catholic Church’s historical movement from early skepticism to active support for democracy within its magisterium and explores how Catholic Social Teaching (CST) in its ethical teaching can more holistically respond to democratic erosion in Southeast Asia. It argues that CST provides a foundational moral framework centered on human dignity, the common good, solidarity, and subsidiarity, yet lacks an explicit ethics of citizenship to guide active participation in politically constrained contexts. Building on this gap, the article proposes a four-dimensional, virtue-based framework of citizenship across political, economic, cultural, and ecological life, rooted in CST’s moral anthropology. It calls for a more explicit and systematic articulation of this ethic within its social teaching and pastoral formation. In doing so, the article moves beyond diagnosis to offer a theological and practical model for forming citizens capable of renewing democracy in Southeast Asia and beyond.

Biografía del autor/a

Francis Aung Thang Shane, Diocese of Hakha in Chin State, Myanmar

Francis Aung Thang Shane is a Catholic priest of the Diocese of Hakha in Chin State, Myanmar, and a doctoral researcher in theological ethics at KU Leuven (Belgium). He holds a B.A. in History, an S.T.B. from the Pontifical Urbaniana Affiliation in Yangon, an M.A. and S.T.L. from KU Leuven. His doctoral work examines Catholic Social Teaching and democratization in Southeast Asia, with particular focus on the Church’s prophetic role amid political repression and systemic injustice. As a member of both an ethnic and a religious minority, his research—grounded in lived experience—explores how principles such as the preferential option for the poor, subsidiarity, solidarity, and the common good can advance justice and human dignity in fragile democracies.

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Publicado

2026-01-15

Cómo citar

Shane, Francis Aung Thang. 2026. «A Plea for an Ethics of Citizenship: Inviting the Catholic Church to Respond to the Democratic Deficit in Southeast Asia». MST Review 27 (2):134-74. https://mstreview.com/index.php/mst/article/view/1000.

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