Adamson, M. & Borgos, S. (1984). This mighty dream; Social protest movements in the United States. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Ansara, M. (1975). The people first: An organizer's notebook.Working Papers for a. New Society. 2, 26-38.
H.C. Boyte
Burghardt, S. (1982). Organizing for community action. Beverly Hills: Sage.
Cincotta, 6. (1988). "We found the enemy." In A.V. Garland (Ed.), Women activists; Challenging the abuse of power (pp. 37-55). New York: Feminist Press.
Delgado, Gary. Organizing the Movement: The Roots and Growth 0f AC0/W Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1986.
Gary Delgado
Dellinger, Dave. Revolutionary Nonviolence. Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1971. -Essays on movements of the 1960s.
Fish, J.H. (1973). Black power, white control; The struggle of the Woodlawn organization in Chicago. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Fisher, R. & Kling, J.N. (1987). Leading the people: Two approaches to the role of ideology in community organizing. Radical America. 2i(l), 31-45.
Gavin, C.D., & Cox, F.M. (1987). A history of community organizing since the civil war with special reference to oppressed communities. In Cox et. al (Eds.). Strategies of community organization (pp. 26-63).
Gitlin, T. (1987) . The sixties; Years of hope, days of rage. Toronto: Bantam. Goodwyn, L. (1978) . The populist movement ; A short history of agrarian revolt In America. New York: Oxford University Press.
Hall, G.W., Clark, G.C. & Creedon, M.A. (1987). Advocacy in America; Case studies in social change. Lanham, MD:University Press of America.
Hamberg, J., Booth, P., Feingold, M., & Whitman, C. (1967). Where it's at: Research guide for community organizing. Boston: New England Free Press.
Handing, Vincent. There is a River: The Black Struggle for Freedom in America. New York: Random House, 1981.
Horwitt, S.D. (1989). Let them call me rebel; Saul Allinsky –his life and legacy. New York: Alfred E. Knopf .
Miller, A. S. (1987). Saul Alinsky: America's radical reactionary. Radical America, 21(1), 11-18.
National Commission on Neighborhoods. (1979). People building neighborhoods; Final report to, the President and Congress of the United States. Washington, D.C.: GPO No. 052-003-00616-2.
Piven, F.F. & Cloward, R.A. (1979). Poor people's movements; Why they succeed, how they fail. New York: Vintage Books.
Rude, George. Ideology and Popular Protest. New York: Pantheon, 1980.Sharp, Gene. Exploring Nonviolent Alternatives. Boston: Porter Sargent Publisher, 1970. - By major theoretician and historian of nonviolence.
Sharp. Gene. The Politics ofNonviolent Action (3 vols). Vol 1: Power and Struggle. Vol. 2: the Methods ofNonviolent Action; Vol. 3: The Dynamics ofNonviolent Action. Boston: Porter Sargent Piblishers, 1973. -Major work on theory and practice of nonviolence. International examples.
Thompson, E.P. and Dan Smith. Protest and Survive. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1981. -An important book in the early 1980s anti-nuclear war movement by a well-known historian
West, Guida The National Welfare Rights Movement. New York: Praeger, 1981.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
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