1. Batchelor M, Brown K (eds) (1992) Buddhism and Ecology. Cassell Publishers, London. One of five introductory volumes on the five major world religions and the environment, this set of essays addresses Buddhist teachings and practice and how they apply to ecological issues
2. Boston Research Centre for the 21st Century (1997) Buddhist perspectives on the Earth Charter. Boston Research Centre, Cambridge. A range of reflections on the potential for the Earth Charter to support Buddhist values in contemporary challenges to sustainability and peace
3. Gross R (1998) Interdependence and attachment: toward a Buddhist Environmental Ethic (pp 75–93) and Buddhist values for overcoming Pro-Natalism and Consumerism” (pp 108–124). In: Soaring and settling. Continuum, New York. Thoughtful and challenging reflections on difficult environmental subjects, bringing fresh interpretations of fundamental Buddhist principles
4. Habito RLF (1993) Healing breath: Zen Spirituality for a wounded earth. Orbis Books, Maryknoll, N.Y. An introduction to Zen practice in the context of personal and planetary woundedness, approached here through the Christian frame of love as well as the Buddhist emphasis on awareness
5. Harris I (2002) Buddhism and Ecology. In: Keown D (ed) Contemporary Buddhist Ethics. Curzon Press, Richmond, Surrey, pp 113–136. The author provides historical and philosophical evidence for and against the existence of a Buddhist environmental ethic