Geneva · Dharmic Traditions & Global Governance

Universality
Without Uniformity

We translate the philosophical and ethical inheritance of Dharmic traditions into the language and concepts of multilateral policymaking — as architecture, not ornament.

Our purpose

The normative architecture of global governance rests on a narrow epistemological foundation. We call the alternative non-exclusivist universalism — the conviction that truth is shared, but complex enough that no single perspective possesses it completely.

Read our full statement
4
Living traditions — Buddhist, Hindu, Jain & Sikh
20+
Years engaging the multilateral system
1st
Soft-law instrument of its kind, co-authored with OHCHR
ECOSOC
Recommended for UN consultative status
Current flagship project

Pluralising Global Governance

A landmark policy paper series, co-produced with the University for Peace (UPEACE), bringing Dharmic philosophical traditions into systematic conversation with global governance for the first time.

All traditions2026–ongoingActive
Sustainable Development Goals

A key arena where normative architecture is actively shaped

The SDGs are a global vocabulary. We hold them next to a much older one — and ask where the ancient texts illuminate, complicate, or quietly extend the modern frame.

Our approach →
Truth is shared, but complex enough that no single perspective possesses it completely.

— The approach we call non-exclusivist universalism

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