About Us

The 108 Peace Institute was founded in December 2023 by Dr. Lobsang Sangay, former Sikyong of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA). It is registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization in the United States. Dedicated to advancing peaceful solutions to some of the most pressing global challenges that threaten the freedom of individuals and communities and global stability, the institute was conceived under the guiding influence of the number 108, deeply significant across various cultures, symbolizing the interconnectedness of the universe and human experience, embodying the principles of peace and balance.

At the intersection of four focus frameworks: freedom, democracy, climate action, and leadership, all of which is inspired by the life and legacy of His Holiness the Great 14th Dalai Lama, 108 Peace invites partners, stakeholders, and communities worldwide to join us in this critical mission. Together, we aim to tackle the complex challenges of the 21st century.

A dove representing universal peace, unlike
others, has wings of fire. this design
emphasizes that no matter what, the core
must always remain peaceful, as peace is
the ultimate solution, even in the most
intense circumstances. This relentless and
patient peace dove underscores the
enduring commitment to maintaining
tranquility and resolution.

The design of the 8, by nature, has two
interconnected circles, connoting the
coming together and bonding of two
ideas, ideologies, or communities. The
shape of the number 8 also represents an
infinity symbol, signifying and enduring
connection that lasts forever.

The design of the '1' in '108' represents the
upward arrow movement inspired by a
steadfast dedication to elevating the
principles of freedom, democracy, climate
action, and leadership. It embodies
the commitment to advancing these ideals.

The '0' is shaped like the traditional Tibetan
sun and moon, symbolizing the union of
wisdom and compassion. The sun stands
for clarity and wisdom, while the moon
represents compassion and guidance.
Together, they create harmony, giving rise
to peace, embodied by the dove.

The logo represents the profound significance of 108 across cultures, symbolizing completeness and the interconnectedness of the universe and human experience, embodying principles of peace and balance.

Our Vision

At the 108 Peace Institute, we envision a world where freedom, stability, and sustainability are not mere ideals but the lived reality of every individual and the global community.

Our Mission

The 108 Peace Institute is dedicated to addressing some of the most pressing issues of our time. Through a measured and collaborative approach, we integrate the promotion of religious freedom, the empowerment of democratic values, climate action, and responsible leadership.

Our Approach

Our approach is multifaceted, reflecting the complexity of the challenges we face:

Champion Freedom and
Expression

Advocate for Democracy in Non-
Traditional and Exile Contexts

Confront Climate Change with
Urgency and Informed Action

Promote Leadership Based on
the Dalai Lama’s Vision

Champion Freedom and Expression

Advocate for Democracy in Non-Traditional and Exile Contexts

Confront Climate Change with Urgency and Informed Action

Promote Leadership Based on the Dalai Lama’s Vision

108 Peace Team

Dr Lobsang Sangay

Founder and President

Tenzin Donzey

Program Manager

Tsering Youdon

Program Manager

Lobsang Dakpa

Operations Director

Dr Lobsang Sangay

Founder and President

Tenzin Donzey

Program Manager

Tsering Youdon

Program Manager

Lobsang Dakpa

Operations Director

Collaborators

The 108 Peace Institute aspires to effect meaningful change through our dedicated efforts across these critical areas, inspiring perception, policy, and practical shifts. By fostering partnerships, encouraging dialogue, and mobilizing action, we invite communities, stakeholders, and individuals from all corners of the globe to join us in this important mission. We seek to protect and promote the principles we hold dear and to empower a global movement towards a more just, free, and peaceful world.

Partner Organizations and Individuals

The success of 108 Peace Institute relies heavily on cultivating and strengthening partnerships with diverse groups of scholars, academic institutions, policy organizations, democracy organizations, exiled governments, political entities, and advocacy organizations across the globe. Currently, 108 Peace maintains partnerships with academic institutions such as the Harvard Asia Center, Harvard Divinity School, and scholars network such as the Leadership, Devotion and Succession of the Dalai Lama (LEAD). We have also found partners in Liberty Games, Hoover Institute at Stanford, the World Liberty Congress, the Human Rights Foundation, and the Milton Eisenhower Foundation. We are already working with representatives and members of formal quasi-governments in exile, such as those of Belarus, Syria, Burma, and Congo, as well as with diaspora communities from areas lacking formal exile governments, including Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, and Venezuela. Additionally, we have engagements with diaspora groups from regions under Chinese occupation, such as the Uyghurs, Hong Kong, and Southern Mongolia. Moreover, we will leverage the expertise and resources of individuals and organizations with whom we have established professional relationships while seeking new partnerships focusing with entities, groups, and key leaders crucial to the success of our endeavors. These partnerships will provide invaluable insights and support and amplify our collective impact, driving our mission to bolster democratic governance among exile communities worldwide.

Collaborators

The 108 Peace Institute aspires to effect meaningful change through our dedicated efforts across these critical areas, inspiring perception, policy, and practical shifts. By fostering partnerships, encouraging dialogue, and mobilizing action, we invite communities, stakeholders, and individuals from all corners of the globe to join us in this important mission. We seek to protect and promote the principles we hold dear and to empower a global movement towards a more just, free, and peaceful world.

Partner Organizations and Individuals

The success of 108 Peace Institute relies heavily on cultivating and strengthening partnerships with diverse groups of scholars, academic institutions, policy organizations, democracy organizations, exiled governments, political entities, and advocacy organizations across the globe. Currently, 108 Peace maintains partnerships with academic institutions such as the Harvard Asia Center, Harvard Divinity School, and scholars network such as the Leadership, Devotion and Succession of the Dalai Lama (LEAD). We have also found partners in Liberty Games, Hoover Institute at Stanford, the World Liberty Congress, the Human Rights Foundation, and the Milton Eisenhower Foundation. We are already working with representatives and members of formal quasi-governments in exile, such as those of Belarus, Syria, Burma, and Congo, as well as with diaspora communities from areas lacking formal exile governments, including Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, and Venezuela. Additionally, we have engagements with diaspora groups from regions under Chinese occupation, such as the Uyghurs, Hong Kong, and Southern Mongolia. Moreover, we will leverage the expertise and resources of individuals and organizations with whom we have established professional relationships while seeking new partnerships focusing with entities, groups, and key leaders crucial to the success of our endeavors. These partnerships will provide invaluable insights and support and amplify our collective impact, driving our mission to bolster democratic governance among exile communities worldwide.

partnership requests

Career and internship

General Inquiries

Tsering Youdon

Program Manager

Tsering Youdon is the Program Manager at 108 Peace Institute. She has 6 years of experience as a project officer and program coordinator in the Central Tibetan Administration’s Nepal branch. Her expertise includes planning, designing, and monitoring projects and supporting the capacity building of local organizations and individuals. Tsering is an MBA graduate from Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in New York.

Tenzin Donzey

Program Manager

Tenzin Donzey is a Program Manager at the 108 Peace Institute. She has served in the Department of Information and International Relations (DIIR), Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) as a Project Officer and Tibet Support Groups’ Liaison Officer. Tenzin has extensive experience in planning, designing, and managing programs. She is a recipient of the Tibetan Scholarship Program under which she obtained an MBA from Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), New York.

Dr Lobsang Sangay

Founder and President

Lobsang Sangay is a Senior Visiting Fellow at East Asian Legal Studies Program, Harvard Law School. He was a democratically elected Sikyong (President) of the Central Tibetan Administration and served two terms (2011-21). Lobsang completed his BA and LLB from Delhi University. He did his LLM ’95 and SJD ‘04 from Harvard Law School and received the Yong K. Kim’ 95 Memorial Prize for excellence in dissertation and contributions to the understanding of East Asia at the Harvard Law School. While at Harvard, akin to track III, he organized seven rounds of meetings/conferences between Tibetan, Western, and Chinese scholars, most notably, the first-ever meeting between HH the Dalai Lama and Chinese scholars and students.

སྤྱིར་བཏང་གི་འདྲི་རྩད།

ལས་ཀ་དང་ཉམས་གསོག

མཉམ་ལས་ཀྱི་རེ་འདུན།

Lobsang Dakpa

Operations Director

Lobsang Dakpa currently serves as the Operations Director of the 108 Peace Institute. He was a democratically elected Member of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile from 2016 to 2021. Lobsang holds a BA and LLB, having studied at the National Law School of India University in Bengaluru and JSS Law College in Mysuru. He also earned his LLM from Christ University, Bengaluru. From 2015 to 2016, he worked as a senior Chinese-language reporter for Voice of Tibet. He is a founding member of the Tibetan Legal Association (TLA), where he served as General Secretary from 2013 to 2016 and was later elected as President, serving from 2016 to 2022. Throughout his career, Lobsang has provided legal awareness and education to thousands of Tibetans and non-Tibetans across settlements, monasteries, and schools. He has also offered free legal assistance to many individuals in need. During his term in Parliament, he was invited to participate in numerous national and international conferences, representing the Tibetan community and advocating for justice and human rights.

洛桑扎巴

运营总管

洛桑扎巴目前担任108和平研究院的运营总监。他曾于2016年至2021年间,作为民选代表在西藏人民议会任职。 洛桑拥有文学学士(BA)和法学学士(LLB)学位,曾就读于印度班加罗尔国家法学院(National Law School of India University)和迈索尔JSS法学院(JSS Law College)。他还在班加罗尔基督大学(Christ University)获得了法学硕士(LLM)学位。 2015年至2016年期间,他曾担任“西藏之声”电台的资深中文记者。他是西藏法律协会(Tibetan Legal Association, TLA)的创始成员之一,并于2013年至2016年担任该协会的秘书长,随后于2016年至2022年担任会长。 在其职业生涯中,洛桑致力于为西藏定居点、寺院和学校的成千上万名藏人及非藏人提供法律知识普及和教育。他还为许多有需要的人士免费提供法律援助。 在其议员任期内,他受邀参加了众多国内外会议,代表藏人社区发声,积极倡导正义与人权。

བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ།

ལག་བསྟར་སྤྱི་ཁྱབ་འགན་འཛིན།

བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ་ནི་༡༠༨ཞི་བདེ་ལྟེ་གནས་ཀྱི་ལག་བསྟར་འགན་འཛིན་ཡིན།ཕྱི་ལོ་༢༠༡༦ནས་༢༠༢༡དབར་ཁོང་གིས་བོད་མི་མང་སྤྱི་འཐུས་ཀྱི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་།ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་མཐོ་སློབ་ National Law school of India University, Bangalore དང་Mysore JSS Law School བརྒྱུདཁོང་ཉིད་་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་རབ་འབྱམས་པ་ (LL.B) སློབ་མཐར་སོན། ཕྱི་ལོ་ ༢༠༡༤ ལོར་རྒྱ་གར་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་མཐོ་སློབ་Christ Law School, Bangalore ནས་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་གཙུག་ལག་རབ་འབྱམས་པ (LL.M) མཐར་ཕྱིན་པ་གནང་པ་མ་ཟད།ཁོང་ནི་བོད་མིའི་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་རིག་པ་བའི་ཚོགས་པ་གསར་འཛུགས་གནང་མཁན་ཁོངས་ཀྱི་མི་སྣ་ཞིག་ཡིན་པ་དང་།ཕྱི་ལོ་༢༠༡༣ནས་༢༠༡༦བར་ཚོགས་པ་དེའི་སྤྱི་ཁྱབ་དྲུང་ཆེའི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་པ་དང་།ཕྱི་ལོ་༢༠༡༥ནས་༢༠༡༦དབར་ལོ་གཅིག་རིང་ནོར་ཝེ་བོད་ཀྱི་རླུང་འཕྲིན་ཁང་གི་རྒྱ་སྐད་གསར་འགོད་པ་རྒན་པའི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་ཡོད།ཕྱི་ལོ་༢༠༡༦ནས་༢༠༢༢དབར་བོད་མིའི་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་རིག་པ་བའི་ཚོགས་པའི་ཚོགས་གཙོའི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་པ་རེད།དུས་ཡུན་དེ་དག་གི་རིང་།ཁོང་གིས་བཙན་བྱོལ་བོད་མིའི་དགོན་སྡེ་ཁག་དང་སློབ་གྲྭ་ཁག།གཞིས་ཆགས་ཁག་ཏུ་བསྐྱོད་ནས་བོད་མི་ཁྲི་སྟོང་མང་པོ་ལ་ཁྲིམས་ལུགས་ཀྱི་གོ་རྟོགས་སྤེལ་པ་མ་ཚད།ཁྲིམས་དོན་གྱི་དཀའ་ངལ་འཕྲད་པའི་བོད་མི་རྒྱ་ཕྲག་མང་པོ་ལ་ཕྱག་རོགས་གནང་ཡོད།ཁོང་གིས་བོད་མི་མང་སྤྱི་འཐུས་ཀྱི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་ཡུན་རིང་།རྒྱལ་ནང་དང་རྒྱལ་སྤྱིའི་ཚོགས་སྡེ་འདྲ་མིན་ཀྱིས་གདན་ཞུས་གནང་ཏེ་བརྗོད་གཞི་འདྲ་མིན་ཐོག་ཚོགས་འདུ་ཆེ་ཆུང་མང་པོ་ལ་ཆ་ཤས་གནང་ཡོད་པ་རེད།