"The book provides significant new academic contributions. By focusing on Plong Karen, a minority within the Karen group, Chambers demonstrates how the politically expedient idea of a unified single Karen identity doesn’t allow for a nuanced understanding of inter-Karen political, linguistic and religious dynamics."
— Asian Review of Books
"... Pursuing Morality represents an invaluable addition to the fields of anthropological ethics and Southeast Asian studies. Chambers’ meticulous research and empathetic engagement provide a nuanced portrayal of the Plong Buddhist community that illuminates a complex interplay between norms, modernity, and ethical agency."
— Asian Ethnicity
“Pursuing Morality is an excellent ethnography of a little-known area of the world and an under-researched ethnic group…. [this book] is highly recommended for scholars of South East Asia. The detailed ethnography will inspire those working on the anthropology of ethics and morality. Scholars of Buddhism and religion in South East Asia will also benefit from the careful writing and detailed insights of this outstanding book.”
— South East Asia Research
“Justine Chambers’ superb book Pursuing Morality: Buddhism and Everyday Ethics in Southeastern Myanmar is a valuable contribution in correcting an oftentimes one-dimensional characterisation of Plong Karen…. [this] is a superb addition to both Myanmar studies literature and anthropological literature on morality in everyday thinking and decision-making. Crucially, it provides new momentum for engaging with, and learning from, ethnic communities in eastern Myanmar beyond their position as victims and survivors of armed conflict.”
— Asian Studies Review
"Justine Chambers’s Pursuing Morality diversifies what, where, and who we think of as Buddhist in Myanmar. This work presents a compelling reply to the recent call to recognize 'variations in Buddhist belief and practice among different ethnic populations (all nominally Theravada Buddhists).'. . .This book offers a concise and sensitive ethnographic approach to contemporary Buddhism that grounds moral personhood in local landscapes; interpersonal relationships with kin, friends, and spirits; the geopolitics of nationalism and ethnic belonging; legacies of militarization; and transborder trade and migration."
— H-Buddhism
“[This book] stands as one of the rare, and likely one of the last field monographs for some time, given the inaccessibility of Myanmar since the regime of terror established by the Burmese junta in the wake of the February 2021 coup d’état—compounded by the earthquake of March 2025…. Beyond its remarkable epistemological depth—an epistemology of the living—, the humanism that permeates the analysis is one of the work’s most striking features…. In a context where the Plong, like the Karen as a whole, are historically swept into a conflictual maelstrom, Justine Chambers’ tour de force is undoubtedly to highlight the quest for morality as a point of balance in a society under strain—much like the wider civil society of Myanmar itself.”
— Moussons