Acknowledgements
Chapter One, Introduction
Chapter Two, A Buddhist Philosophical Foundation for Social
Theory
Chapter Three, A Buddhist Approach to Politics and Economics
Chapter Four, Bhutan's Nascent Democracy
Chapter Five, Gross National Happiness: A Buddhist Model of
Development
Chapter Six, Current Challenges: Globalization and National
Identity, Inter-Generational Transfer of Values and Protection of
Minority Rights
Chapter Seven, The Dragon's Roar: The Wider Relevance of Bhutan's
Buddhist Approach to Democracy and Development
References
Index
William J. Long is Professor in the Global Studies Institute and
Department of Political Science at Georgia State University, and
the former dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. He is the
author of five books and numerous articles. Dr. Long is the
recipient of research and teaching awards and grants from the
Hewlett, Pew, Sloan, and MacArthur Foundations, the Fulbright
Commission, the Carnegie Corporation, the European Union, and the
U.S.
Department of Education.
"William J. Long's Tantric State...is an excellent book...It
seriously and profoundly employs and explains general Buddhism as
paradigm, and it does so in outstanding, very erudite preliminary
chapters that explain, better than any other recent work on
Buddhist Economics for instance (my own included), what the
Buddhist scriptural tradition here is." -- , Wolfgang Drechsler
Asian Affairs
"In our troubled times, Tantric State provides us hope with a
Buddhist approach to holistic, sustainable, and democratic
development. He makes Mahayana Buddhism accessible, and engages the
reader to think creatively about how small Bhutan can teach the
rest of the world to live with awareness of our interdependence
with others and the planet. This inspiring book provides us with
the know-how and the will to move beyond consumption to true
happiness."-Clair Brown, author of Buddhist Economics: An
Enlightened Approach to the Dismal Science
"Tantric State is a carefully researched study of Bhutan's daring
experiment in blending democratic and Buddhist values-an experiment
in political organization and policy-making premised on the reality
of deep interdependence between humanity and nature and across
generations, and the conviction that humane politics must privilege
compassion over competition. Long looks critically under the hood
of Bhutanese efforts to heighten 'gross national
happiness,' assessing their impacts over the decade since Bhutan
made the world's first struggle- and violence-free democratic
transition. But, he also holds the Bhutanese experiment up as a
mirror in which to see our
own political practices and prejudices from new angles. The view
afforded by the Tantric State, in both directions, is
revealing."-Peter D. Hershock, author of Valuing Diversity:
Buddhist Reflection on Realizing a More Equitable Global Future
"In Tantric State, Professor Long convincingly examines how a small
state like Bhutan, with Buddhist influence, enabled itself to face
the challenges of political transition without compromising the
ethos of development. An excellent insight into the foundation of a
happy and modern democracy."-Rajesh S. Kharat, School of
International Studies (SIS), JNU New Delhi
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