Books and Publications

Books

The Institute publishes several books. These books can be purchased via any of the means detailed below.

Title Price
Reaching the Top? All Paths are True on the Right Mountain Online below free
Folk Sayings Online below free
AgriDhamma: The Duty of Professional Agriculturists Online below free
Food Environment and Education; Agricultural Education in Natural Resource Management (limited numbers available) AU$10.00
An Introduction to Working Animals AU$10.00
International Consulting free + pp
Thai Agriculture:
Golden Cradle of Millennia
Online here/below:
book purchase Amazon or KUPress
The Buddha’s Gospel:
A Buddhist Interpretation of Jesus’ Words
AU$10.00
Buddhist and Christian Parallels Online below free
Sustainability: Elusive or Illusion?
Wise Environmental Intervention
AU$10.00
Fields of Grass -
Portraits of the Pastoral Landscape and Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas
Out of Print
Religion and Agriculture: Sustainability in Christianity and Buddhism AU$20.00
All prices above are inclusive of GST.
Please add $5.50 for postage and handling.


Purchase a book using one of the following methods:

Send a cheque or money order.
Please send a cheque or money order made out to "The Institute for International Development" for the cost of the book (as indicated above). Please add AU$5.50 per book for postage. The books will be posted immediately following receipt of the cheque or money order. Click here to print an order form to include with your payment. Payment should be posted to:
    The Institute for International Development
    Attention : Ms Ruth Rouse
    90 Carrington Street.
    Adelaide, South Australia 5000
    Australia

Electronic transfer.
Please transfer/deposit the cost of the book (as indicated above) directly into our account, and fax or email proof of the deposit to us. Click here to print an order form to include with your fax. Please add AU$3.50 per book for postage. The books will be posted immediately following receipt of proof of deposit. Our bank account details are:
    Bank : ANZ
    BSB : 015010
    Account Type : Cheque
    Account Number : 354071869
    Account Name : The Institute for International Development
    Fax confirmation : +61 (0)8 8232 1600
    or Email: rrouse@iid.org

For more information.
Please contact Ruth Rouse at the Institute:
    Phone: +61 (0)8 8232 4500
    Email: rrouse@iid.org


Publications



Folk Sayings

Professor Dr Charan Chantalakhana and Ms. Pakapun Skulman


Published by: 'Sukhothai Thammatirach University'

Click here to download publication (236KB)




Reaching the Top?
All Paths are True on the Right Mountain

Professor Lindsay Falvey


Summary:

This is the story of Lazuli, an average man with ordinary problems which, in his case, were enough to open his mind to something wonderful. Something that was already right in front of this nose - a mountain in the middle of his city that was virtually ignored. Improbable? Possibly, but then the events that follow somehow seem as natural and important as anything could be. And the story is simple, based on climbing a mountain and coming down again. But while access to the mountain is easy, it seems very few are interested in it. Lazuli and his colleagues resolve to explore the forgotten mount, their paths reflecting their individual characters, and the most common outcome is boredom leading them to return to the more interesting diversions of everyday life. But for Lazuli and his friend, and a few others they meet on the way, a new discovery awakens in them and they are never the same again - they are content. A short and postive tale; a parable.

Click here to view publication online
Click here to download publication (332KB)




AgriDhamma:
The Duty of Professional Agriculturists

Buddhadasa translated by Professor Lindsay Falvey


Summary:

A Lecture by Buddhadasa Bhikkhu to Agricultural Teachers and Officials on 25 March 1991 at Suan Mokkhapharam, Chaiya, Surat Thani Province, Thailand.



Click here to view publication online
Click here to download publication (297KB)




The Buddha’s Gospel:
A Buddhist Interpretation of Jesus’ Words

Professor Lindsay Falvey


Summary:

Described as 'unique and a great service to understanding', this book is intended for three groups; Western Buddhists, that bulk of the West that have no religious affiliation yet know there is something more to life, and Buddhists in Asia who follow the encounter of the dharma with the West. It highlights the pervasive similarities in the teachings of Jesus and the Buddha as they were probably originally presented. In its six chapters and appendix, it compares the two great teachers, the Buddha and Jesus, briefly charts the process by which experts have produced words readily attributed to Jesus and presents a Buddhist 'imitation' of these words based on the hypothetical 'Sayings of Jesus'. It then considers congruence between the Buddha's and Jesus' teachings before offering both Buddhist and Christian interpretations. An appendix re-presents the Buddhist imitation of Jesus' words as a continuous text. Dr. Falvey introduces his work ... 'Jesus speaking the Buddha's words' exudes audacity and ignorance, yet this work essentially wrote itself as a product of my socialization, a modicum of Christian theological study and its explication through three decades of casual association with Thai Buddhism. Differences between the two traditions - such as Christianity relying on a God while Buddhism denies the existence of a God proved themselves facile upon consideration of the metaphorical intent of teachings of both traditions.

Click here to view publication online
Click here to download publication (372KB)




Sustainability:
Elusive or Illusion?:
Wise Environmental Intervention

Professor Lindsay Falvey


Summary:

Sustainability of the environment contains both wishful thinking and ignorance - ignorance of the reality that natural systems are complex and unfathomable by scientists, and that repetition of their outputs depend on repetition of initial and all subsequent conditions. Scientific insights provide knowledge, but it is partial in most cases, and when applied is often subject to conflicting objectives, which in turn produce conditions that affect outcomes thus our best efforts to predict natural outcomes are usually flawed. We further display our ignorance in seeking social sustainability while we behave inequitably towards groups other than 'us' and invoke spurious reasoning to justify further research. The effect of ignorant self-interest is played out daily in our largest intervention in the natural environment - agriculture, which is why agriculture provides perhaps the best model for consideration of the ideal of sustainability.

Click here to view publication online
Click here to download publication (757KB)




Thai Agriculture:
Golden Cradle of Millennia

Professor Lindsay Falvey


This publication is available in both Thai and English. The Thai version is available for FREE. The Thai translation was made possible by a generous donation - please see the acknowledgements section.

Summary:

Thai agriculture is traced through prehistory, agro-cities, and religious empires with immigrant Tai, to a sustainable wet glutinous rice culture which shaped institutions for an exporting society. Agriculture's provision of security and wealth increased with population and Chinese and European agribusiness, until accessible land was expended. Employment, crisis resilience, self-sufficiency, rural social support, and culture were maintained through agriculture, although hampered by institutional orientations to taxation more than research and education. By the 1960s, agribusiness contrasted with small-holders. Thailand is one of the world's few major agricultural exporters, leading in rice, rubber, canned pineapple, black tiger prawn, and regional chicken meat production and export, and feeding four times its population from less intensive agriculture than its neighbours. Issues remain in poverty, education, research, governance, national debt, and sensitive alternatives for small-holders. Past specialties in irrigation, administration, export, multinational agribusiness, negotiation, retained potential, and acceptance of new ideas, suggest that Thailand should remain a major agricultural country as environmental and religious concerns contribute to its unique agriculture.

View the English publication here


View the Thai publication here





Buddhist and Christian Parallels

René Salm www.kevalin.org


Click here to view publication online
Click here to download publication (640KB)

 



Fields of Grass - Portraits of the Pastoral Landscape and Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas

IID member Mr Daniel Miller


IID member Mr Daniel Miller, in collaboration with ICIMOD (International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development) has published his third book, entitled Fields of Grass - Portraits of the Pastoral Landscape and Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas. The text and hundreds of his photographs explore the landscape, grazing lands, wild herds, nomadic society and changes to traditional pastoral life. Preservation of ecological functionality of these high Himalayan grasslands is a matter of international importance as they constitute the headwaters of about half the world's great rivers.

Copies can be obtained from ICIMOD at PO Box 3226 Kathmandu, Nepal.




Nomad woman, Phala, Tibet, China 1997 from Fields of Grass - Portraits of the Pastoral Landscape and Nomads of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas.



Religion and Agriculture: Sustainability in Christianity and Buddhism

IID member Professor Lindsay Falvey


Summary:

Religion is a powerful expression of culture that is most obviously expressed in our relationships with nature. As our major meeting point with nature is food, this provides a fertile field for cultivating the wisdom that Professor Falvey concludes is the essence of all sustainability. By bringing sustainability, agriculture, global issues, Buddhism, Christianity and a host of other factors into play, we see that our motivations belie our rhetoric - in environmental actions through to trade and aid. This open-spirited book contains a wealth of analysis and alternative logics that make it essential to serious readers about nature, the environment, spirituality and religion, Asia and ourselves. Beginning with science and spirituality, the discussion moves from immortality to theology to literal misinterpretations and unifies these themes around unacknowledged Western core values. Shifting to philosophy, ethics, and rights, an ecological argument about our selective 'liberation' of nature is proffered as an introduction to global issues, including traditional values of poor countries and lost traditions in the West. An engrossing hybrid Oriental-Western dialectic allows chapters to be read alone or as part of an accumulating thesis. Thus Buddhist and Christian teachings are applied to agriculture and sustainability - and they are found to be at one with each other. Whether it is biblical metaphor, karmic logic or enlightened self-interest, the continuous thread of a strong suture stitches a complex set of subjects into a coherent sutra that will vivify the current moribund dialogue between agriculture, science and religion.

Some Reviews:

"This work is unique and fills the gap that neither theologians nor scientists will readily attempt to fill; it has not been done before and is critically important"
Will Johnston, late of University of Massachusetts, currently of Melbourne College of Divinity

"the sutra of sustainability in the final chapter will certainly become a classic"
Gabriel Fragnière, Ancien Recteur du Collège d'Europe (editor Dieux, Hommes et Religions

Publisher: Institute of International Development, 90 Carrington Road, Adelaide SA 5000, Australia www.iid.org

Distributor: Silkworm Books / Mekong Press, 104/5 Chiang Mai-Hot Road, Suthep, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand www.SilkwormBooks.info


Free for those eligible via SpiritOfAgriculture@iid.org

Click here to download the flyer(40KB).
Click here to download the book(1MB).