“In shifting attention from elites to the ambiguous attitude of the middle class towards the masses, Kusaka puts forward a new theoretical perspective and analytical approach for the study of politics in young democracies.”
— Anna Marie Karaos, professorial lecturer, Ateneo de Manila University, and associate director of the John J. Carroll Institute on Church and Social Issues
“Kusaka’s argument is based on three years of ethnographic research at an urban poor community in Pechayan, Quezon City. He makes a distinction between the dominant elitist narrative of the civic sphere, composed of the English-speaking elite and middle classes, who valorize education, liberalism and anti-corruption, and the mass sphere, or the lower classes dwelling in slums and streets and value compassionate populists and pro-poor policies.”
— New Mandala
“Moral Politics in the Philippines is a worthy contribution to the wealth of knowledge in a range of disciplines—political science, psychology, and sociology. (Kasaka's) work is highly relevant in rethinking the changing configurations in the developing world.”
— Southeast Asian Studies
“This book is essential reading for anyone interested in Philippine politics. . . . Kusaka has progressed all the way from struggling with the English language during his first visits to the Philippines to casually explaining the success of Duterte in Tagalog TV talk shows. He has immersed himself in the slums and gained the trust of his respondents without the help of (often biased) NGO intermediaries; at the same time, he has given justice to the fears of enclave dwellers who feel threatened and outnumbered by the unruly masses and their populist champions.”
— Pacific Affairs