AndersonJervis1986. A. Philip Randolph: A Biographical Portrait.Berkeley: University of California Press.
2.
BatesBeth1997. A New Crowd Challenges the Agenda of the Old Guard in the NAACP, 1933–1941.The American Historical Review102(April):
3.
CapeciDominic1984. Race Relations in Wartime Detroit: The Sojourner Truth Housing Controversy in 1942.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
4.
FusfeldDaniel, and BatesTimothy. 1984. Political Economy of the Urban Ghetto. (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
5.
GabinNancy1998. Review.Labor HistoryXX
6.
GarfinkelHerbert1959. When Negroes March: The March on Washington Movement in the Organizational Politics for FEPC.Glencoe, MI: The Free Press.
7.
HillHerbert1998. Lichtenstein's Fictions: Meany, Reuther, and the 1964 Civil Rights Act.New Politics7(Summer):
8.
KesselmanLouis1948. The Social Politics of FEPC: A Study In Reform Pressure MovementsChapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
9.
KorstadRobert, and LichtensteinNelson. 1988. Opportunities Found and Lost: Labor, Radicals, and the Early Civil Rights Movement.Journal of American History75(December):
10.
LichtensteinNelson1995. The Most Dangerous Man In Detroit: Walter Reuther and the Fate of American Labor.New York: Basic Books.
11.
LipsitzGeorge1994. Rainbow at Midnight: Labor and Culture In the 1940s. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
12.
MeierAugust, and RudwickElliot. 1979. Black Detroit and the Rise of the UAW.New York: Oxford University Press.
13.
NAACP Papers, General File, II-A-252; “Forward with Action,” Annual Report 1943, Detroit NAACP, II-C-87.
14.
SugrueThomas1996. The Origins of the Urban Crisis.Princeton: Princeton University Press
15.
SugrueThomas1998. Review.Labor History.XX.
16.
SullivanPatricia, 1996. Days of Hope: Race and Democracy in the New Deal Era.Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
17.
TrotterJoe1998. Review.Labor HistoryXX: .
18.
WeaverRobert1943. Detroit and Negro Skill.Phylon, 4.
19.
WeaverRobert1946. Negro Labor: A National Problem. (New York: Harcourt, Brace.
20.
WhiteWalterOpen Letter to Negro Workers.Chicago Defender, May 1, 1943.