1st Edition

Beyond Global Crisis Remedies and Road Maps by Daisaku Ikeda and His Contemporaries

Edited By Terrence Edward Paupp Copyright 2012
    456 Pages
    by Routledge

    455 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this volume, Terrence Paupp critically describes the various dimensions of today's global crisis. Among other things, this volume analyzes nuclear weapons proliferation climate change, and international lawlessness in the form of wars of aggression. Paupp argues that much human conflict and environmental degradation is the direct consequence of poverty and inequality. Until these issues are addressed, many of the world's problems will remain.

    Paupp asserts that around the world, peoples and nations are becoming more open to a strategy and culture of peace that evolves through discovering a commonality of interests, the value of mutual cooperation, and the desirability of forging consensus. By using various road maps and remedies supplied by noted Japanese peace activist Daisaku Ikeda and his contemporaries, viable solutions will emerge.

    In this new endeavor, equipped with some of the proposed solutions and strategies that this book provides, humanity will collectively become engaged in remaking the character of global governance in order to build a global culture of peace.

    Foreword, by Olivier Urbain
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    Part I. Ikeda's Vision for Realizing a Global Civilization:
    The Power of Inner Transformation and Dialogue
    1 The Global Crisis through the Lens of Ikeda
    and His Contemporaries
    2 Where We Are Now—and What Is Required to Achieve
    a Peaceful Global Civilization
    Part II. From Individual to Global Transformation:
    Multiple Pathways
    3 Case Study—The Inner Transformation of JFK
    and the End of the Cold War
    4 The Power of Self-Transformation as the Beginning
    of Internal and External Liberation: The Nexus of
    Buddhism, Liberation Theology, and Law
    5 Dialogue and Dialogic Mechanisms: Creating a Global
    Framework for Deliberative Democracy, Human Rights,
    and Cultural Pluralism
    Part III. Visualizing a Global Civilization of
    Harmony and Interdependence in Concrete Terms
    6 The Converging Theoretical and Empirical Elements
    of Global Civilization: International Relations,
    Inclusive/Humane Governance, and Cosmopolitan
    Democracy
    7 Emerging Pillars of a Peaceful Global Civilization:
    Nuclear Disarmament, United Nations Reform,
    and the International Criminal Court
    8 The Challenge of Climate Change: Searching for
    Human Solidarity in a Divided World
    9 Conclusion: Contextualizing Ikeda in the
    Struggle to Restructure International Politics
    Afterword, by Brian J. Foley
    Appendix Preamble of the Rome Statute of the
    International Criminal Court
    Bibliography
    Index

    Biography

    Terrence Edward Paupp