Spiritual Activism
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Engaged Buddhism
Christianity
Nonviolence
Gandhi
Spiritual Activism
World As Lover, World as Self
Joanna Macy
Cultivating Openness When Things Fall Apart
Pema Chodron and bell hooks
Building a Community of Love
bell hooks and Thich Nhat Hanh
Community, Conflict and Ways of Knowing
Parker Palmer
Christianity
What I learned from the Truth Commission on Conscience in War
Downward Mobility in an Upscale World
Shane Claiborne
Jesus and Buddhism: A Christian View
Marcus Borg
Easter: In Need of Reinterpretation!
Bishop John Shelby Spong
Engaged Buddhism
Buddhism, Feminism and the Environmental Crisis: Acting with Compassion
Stephanie Kaza
Letting Life Live Through Us: Healing and Awakening Through our Bodies
Tara Brach
In Engaged Buddhism, Peace Begins with You
Thich Nhat Hanh
The Fourteen Precepts of Engaged Buddhism
Thich Nhat Hanh
The Crisis of Consumerism?
Judith Simmer Brown
Buddhism
and Non-Violence
Sulak Sivaraksa
Non-violence:
A Study Guide
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
The
Budhha Taught Nonviolence, Not Pacifism
Paul Fleischman, M.D.
Buddhism and Peace
Jan Willis
Buddhist Ideas for Attaining World Peace
Ron Epstein
The Personal Roots of Peace
Thich Nhat Hanh
Gene Sharp
From Dictatorship to Democracy
There are Realistic Alternatives
198 Methods of Nonviolent Action
Correcting Common Misconceptions about Nonviolent Struggle
Gandhi
The Gospel of Nonviolence
Training for Nonviolence
The Nonviolent Society
The Power of Nonviolence
The Application of Nonviolence
The Nonviolent State
Between Cowardice and Nonviolence
Nonviolence vs. Violence
My Faith in Nonviolence
** contains audio and written version
5 December 1955 - Address to the first Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) Mass Meeting**
1956
1957
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968


