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As more people move across borders in pursuit of a “Good Life,” Asia is becoming increasingly diverse or multicultural. I argue that political elites in non-socialist Northeast Asia and Mainland Southeast Asia refer to two conceptualizations of moral personhood derived mostly from Confucian and Theravada Buddhist ideas in dealing with an increasing ethnic plurality and determining on which types of newcomers make the best fit in their society. In this framework, influential political actors play an important role in the creation of the citizen or moral person, as they determine which aspects of the person they feel it is necessary to standardize and which can remain uncalibrated. Those people who are incapable of contributing to the common good are justly excluded from becoming a member of a political community. I employ two conceptualizations of personhood to explore citizenship and minority policies in non-socialist Asia. My research compares those policies in Northeast Asia (Japan, Korea, and Taiwan) and Mainland Southeast Asia (Cambodia, Myanmar, and Thailand). I posit that the concept of moral personhood has impacted how a political society defines its citizenship and set requirements for membership during the modern era. These requirements include moral values that elite members of society perpetually debated among each other, especially during times of crisis or social change, and come to accept them as their guiding principles for what they consider as the “Good Life” in their images of the “Good Society.” During the founding of a modern nation-state, political elite have thought and debated on their visions/ideals of a “Good Society,” especially on how citizens should live their lives and what type of a moral person one ought to be.
Apichai W. Shipper is an Adjunct Associate Professor of Asian Studies at Georgetown University and the Asia Regional Chair at the Foreign Service Institute of the U.S. Department of State. After receiving his Ph.D. in political science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard University Program on U.S.-Japan Relations before joining the faculty at the University of Southern California with a joint appointment in the Department of Political Science and the School of International Relations. He has been a visiting researcher at UCLA, University of Tokyo, University of Kyoto, Hitotsubashi University, Stockholm University, Japan Institute of Labor Policy and Training, and Swedish Institute of International Affairs. He is the author of Fighting for Foreigners: Immigration and Its Impact on Japanese Democracy (Cornell University Press, 2008; paperback 2016) and has edited a Special Issue (2010) on “Citizenship and Migration” in Pacific Affairs. His publications have also appeared in Asian Politics & Policy, Critical Asian Studies, Journal of Japanese Studies, International Studies Quarterly, North Carolina Journal of International Law & Commercial Regulation, among others. He serves as an associate editor and on the executive committee of Pacific Affairs.