We are thrilled to announce the launch of the Yin-Cheng Journal of Contemporary Buddhism. This open access peer-reviewed academic journal examines how Buddhist thought and practice can illuminate the major ethical, environmental, and social questions of our time.
The Yin-Cheng Journal of Contemporary Buddhism is published in English through Cambria Press and in Chinese through Linking Publisher. The journal is part of the Yin-Cheng Network for Buddhist Studies, a partnership between the University of Cambridge, Harvard University, l’Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (Inalco), the University of Oxford, Peking University, Princeton University, and the University of British Columbia.
The inaugural issue (Volume 1 No.1) can be accessed at here and the ToC follows below.
Volume 1 No.1
- Donald S. Lopez Jr.
The Trial of Ānanda: Some Thoughts for Modern Times - Joy Brennan and Ann Gleig
“Whiteness is a Sankhara”: Racial Justice as Buddhist Practice - Parimal G. Patil
Philosophy, Philosophers, and Buddhist Scholastic Texts (Śāstra) - Stefania Travagnin
Fostering Education Beyond the Classroom: Examples from Republican Buddhism and their Legacy Today - Wei Daoru 魏道儒
All is One: The Profound Influence of Huayan Buddhism on Chinese Philosophy, from the Past to the Present - Rey Sheng Her 何日生
Exploring the Future of Buddhism Through a Historical Perspective: Tzu Chi Buddhism as a Case Study - Clair Brown
Buddhist Economics: The Foundation for an Equitable, Sustainable, Caring Economy - Shih Chao-Hwei 釋昭慧
The Interpretation of the Original Text of the Eight Deferential Rules (P. aṭṭhagarudhammā) - Venerable Yinshun 印順 and The Yinshun Cultural & Educational Foundation Translation Team 印順文教基金會翻譯組
Ānanda’s Faults
The Yin-Cheng Journal of Contemporary Buddhism invites submissions on any aspect of contemporary Buddhism. Essays exploring the continued or renewed salience of “traditional” Buddhist ideas for emerging forms of contemporary Buddhist identity and practice are especially welcome. Essays may focus on any Buddhist tradition, country, or culture, and engage a range of methodological and/or interdisciplinary approaches (including but not limited to Buddhist ethics, history, philosophy, literature and narrative, ethnography, art history, material culture, race, gender, environmental humanities, media studies, and so on). Details on the journal and our submission process can be found on the journal website.