Tibetan Buddhist Approach to International Relations.  The Teaching of the Dalai Lama
				We are currently unable to ship to the EU countries at this time.  We apologize for this inconvenience.
				| Author: | Chávez-Segura, Alejandro | 
| Year: | 2012 | 
| Pages: | 300 | 
| ISBN: | 0-7734-1608-0 978-0-7734-1608-6
 | 
| Price: | $199.95 + shipping | 
|  | (Click the PayPal button to buy) | 
This monograph examines the theological paradigms within Buddhism, a religion that interacts with the world without narratives of genesis and eschatology.  This book argues that there is a need to study and understand this interdependent relation between the religious and the secular political world.
Reviews
“I am delighted to present this work that makes a seminal and challenging contribution to the contemporary debates on religion and politics and the role and extend of theology and international relations within a multi-disciplinary approach to the study and understanding of contemporary politics.”-Prof. Mario I. Aguilar, University of St. Andrews
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
LIST OF TABLES 
LIST OF FIGURES 
PREFACE 
INTRODUCTION
I THE BUDDHIST THEOLOGICAL APPROACH: A SOCIALLY ENGAGED METHOD 
The Buddhist Theological Approach 
Justification and Aims of the Buddhist Theological Approach
Understanding Religion	
Understanding the Sacred	
Buddhist Ethics	
Engaged Buddhism	
Individual Awakening for Social Awakening	
Developing the ‘Interbeing’ Awareness	
II INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: CONSTRUCTING OUR RELATIVE REALITY
International Relations: A Historical Perspective 
From the ‘Two-Swords’ Model to the Reformation 
Wars of Religion in Europe and the Peace of Augsburg	
The Thirty Years’ War	
The Peace of Westphalia	
Secularization: Desacralizing Reality	
Constructing International Relations and Its Theories: Reflections of Relative Truth 
Understanding International Relations	
Theorizing Relative Reality	
Janus-Faced Perception of Religion in International Relations 
Religion in International Relations Theories	
The Resurgence of Religion	
Interaction among Forces of the State and Religion	
IIITHE FOURTEENTH DALAI LAMA: COMMON HUMANITY AND UNIVERSAL RESPONSIBILITY
Historical Background	
Buddhism in the ‘Land of Snows’ and the ‘Three Great Religious Kings’	
The Adamantine Path	
The Gelugpa School and the Rise of the Dalai Lamas	
Under the Arms of Avalokiteshvara: A Theological Framework	
Tülku and the Trikaya Doctrine	
Rebirth	
The Embodiment of Compassion: Chenrizi	
Tenzin Gyatso, the Rise of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama	
Background and Early Years	
The ‘Land of Snows’ under Chinese Occupation	
Call for Non-violent Resistance and Exile	
Politics of Hatred in Tibet	
Wisdom and Compassion: the Way of the Bodhisattva in Modern World	
The ‘Middle Way’	
The Five Point Peace Plan	
The International Advocate of ‘Common Humanity’ and ‘Universal Responsibility’	
Dalai Lama’s Threefold Mission	
IVBUILDING BRIDGES OF JUSTICE: ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU AND GOD’S DREAM IN SOUTH AFRICA	
Politics of Hatred: Church and State’s Acts of Apartheid	
The Church of Apartheid: Theological Justification of Separate Development	
Systematizing Apartheid: The Acts	
Desmond Tutu: The Great Liberation Trek	
Early Years	
A Taste of Freedom: Tutu On and After Britain	
Black Theology: The Role of Steve Biko and Tutu	
Tutu on Duty: The SACC and the Eloff Commission	
Not a Politician, but a Vicar of God	
Tutu and the Nobel Peace Prize	
The Time has Come: Kairos Document and Statement of Affirmation	
The Divine Intention: The Transfiguration of Suffering into Liberation	
South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission	
SATRC at Work: Not to Forget but to Forgive	
Tutu through the Buddhist Theological Looking-Glass: The Sacred, the Four Noble Truths, Interdependence and Karma	
V THE NATURE AND SCOPE OF A THEOLOGY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS	
Re-thinking the Role of Religion in International Relations: Constructing Peace in Times of War	
Overcoming Terror through Sacred Non-violence	
Religious Peacemakers	
Toward a More Humane-Compassionate World	
Defining A Theology of International Relations	
TIR Aims	
Theology	
Political Science	
The Four Truths of the TIR	
Truth of Individuality	
Truth of Intersubectivity	
Truth of Congeniality	
Truth of Internationality	
Basic assumptions of the TIR	
The Two Cycles of Reality	
Analyzing Religion in International Relations: A Theological Method	
CONCLUSION	
BIBLIOGRAPHY	
INDEX	
Other Buddhist Studies Books