Passive revolution: A church-military partnership in the Philippines

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Abstract

In the Philippines, a Catholic social movement for local development and broad structural transformation, referred to as Basic Ecclesial Communities, offers a counter-narrative to state development. Predicated on the power of networked local groups, the Diocese of San Carlos has taken the original concept and rescaled it, operating a variety of social-action programmes at the diocese level. The focus of this paper is a unique partnership between the diocese and the Armed Forces of the Philippines, which has produced a number of measurable positive changes in under-serviced areas. We remain uncertain, however, about the extent to which the church is cooperating with, or being co-opted by, the military as it enters into partnership, and many members of the clergy share our scepticism. In this paper we draw upon Gramsci's concept of passive revolution (1971) as a means to conceptualize both the efforts of the church to reform society from within, and the reaffirmation of the hegemonic discourse that seems inevitable. © 2013 Department of Geography, National University of Singapore and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.

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APA

Moxham, C., & Grant, M. (2013). Passive revolution: A church-military partnership in the Philippines. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 34(3), 307–321. https://doi.org/10.1111/sjtg.12039

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