Alabama Democratic Conference. (1978). Congressional district voting information: Seventh congressional district [table]. Montgomery, AL: Author. (Available from Alabama Democratic Conference, P.O. Box 6233, Montgomery, AL. 36106.
2.
Babbie, E. (1973). Survey research methods. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
3.
Barker, L.J., & Jones, M.H. (1994). African Americans and the American political system . Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice Hall.
4.
Bethell, T.N. (1982). Sumter County blues: The ordeal of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives. Washington, DC: National Committee in Support of Community Based Organizations.
5.
Black, E. (1976). Southern governors and civil rights. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
6.
Bond, J. (1981). Comments. Monthly Bulletin, 3(1), 4-5.
7.
Boykin, M.L. (1972). The emergence of a Black majority: An analysis of political participation in Greene County, Alabama. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa .
8.
Brown, W. (1979, September 19). Federation of Southern Cooperatives stirs political dispute. The Washington Post, p. D1.
9.
Bullock, C.S. Iii. ( 1975). The election of Blacks in the South: Preconditions and consequences. American Journal of Political Science, 19, 727-739.
10.
Button, J.W. (1989). Blacks and social change: Impact of the civil rights movement in southern communities. Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press.
11.
Clemons, M.L. (1987). The impact of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives on the process of political development in Sumter County, Alabama. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Atlanta University, Atlanta.
12.
Coombs, D.W., Alsikafi, M.H., Bryan, C.H., & Webber, I.L. (1977). Black political control in Greene County, Alabama . Rural Sociology, 42, 398-446.
13.
Co-op crackdown. (1980, November 22). The Nation , 231, 536-537.
14.
Eppler, A. (1983). Black Alabamians register to gain political control . Mountain Life and Work, 59(7), 40.
15.
FBI/federal grand jury investigation ends. (1981). Federation of Southern Cooperatives Monthly Bulletin, 3,(1),1-2.
16.
Federation of Southern Cooperatives (FSC). ( 1974). Articles and bylaws. Epes, ALCooperator Press.
Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund (FSC/LAF) (1992). 25th anniversary journal. Atlanta, GA: Author.
20.
Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund (FSC/LAF. (1994). 27th annual report. Atlanta, GA: Author.
21.
Gamson, W. (1975). The strategy of social protest. Homewood, IL: Dorsey.
22.
Giles, M.W. (1977). Percent Black and racial hostility An old assumption reexamined. Social Science Quarterly, 58, 412-417.
23.
Giles, M.W., & Evans, A. (1986). The power approach to intergroup hostility. journal of Conflict Resolution, 30, 469-485.
24.
Hanks, L.J. (1987). The struggle for Black political empowerment in three Georgia counties. Knox ville: University of Tennessee Press.
25.
Holmes, R.A. (1981). Transportation and housing energy policies: The energy crisis, minorities, low income and elderly persons in rural and urban perspectives in the southeastern United States (Project Rep. No. OMEI-80-NP-1-01 . Atlanta, GA: Atlanta University .
26.
Hudlin, R., Lewis, S., Ellis, K., & Fisher, M (1982). Survey of Black school board members in the South. Atlanta, GA: Voter Education Project.
27.
Joint Center for Political Studies. (1971- 1982). National roster of Black elected officials (Vols. 2-12). Washington, DC: Author.
28.
Joint Center for Political Studies. (1984- 1985). Black elected officials: A national roster (Vols. 13-15). New York : UNIPUB
29.
Jordon, V. (1980, December 9). Feds harass Black co-ops in South . Washington Afro-American, p. 1.
30.
Key, V.O. Jr. (1949). Southern politics in state and nation. New York: Vintage.
31.
Knoke, D., & Kyriazis, N. (1977). The persistence of the black-belt vote: A test of Key's hypothesis. Social Science Quarterly, 57, 898-906.
32.
Lee v. Macon County Board of Education. 221 F. Supp. 297 (M.D. Ala. 1963).
33.
Liebow, E. (1967). Tally's corner. Boston: Little, Brown.
34.
Longoria, T. Jr. (1996). White attitudes toward minority electoral districts: Minority population size, national politics, and local policy. Social Science Quarterly, 77(4), 867-887.
35.
Matthews, D.R., & Prothro, J. (1966). Negroes and the new southern politics. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World.
36.
McAdam, D. (1985). Political process and the development of Black insurgency. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
37.
Metropolitan Applied Research Center, Inc., Voter Education Project & Southern Regional Council. (1970). National roster of Black elected officials. Washington, DC: Author.
38.
Morris, A. (1984). The origins of the civil rights movement. New York: Free Press.
39.
Morrison, M.K.C. (1987). Black political mobilization: Leadership, power and mass behavtor. Albany: State University of New York Press.
40.
Neel, J. (1979, January 3). Blacks seek ouster of White principal . The Home Record, pp. 1-2.
41.
Oberschall, A. (1973). Social conflict and social movements. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice Hall.
42.
Perry, H.L. (1980). The socioeconomic impact of Black political empowerment in a rural southern locality. Rural Sociology, 45(2), 207-222.
43.
Southern Rural Alliance (n.d.) A plan for southern development. Atlanta, GA: Author.
44.
Tilly, C. (1978). From mobilization to revolution. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
45.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. (1883). Compendium of the ninth census (Pt. 1. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office .
46.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. (1918a). Compendium of the tenth census (Pt. 1. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office .
47.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. (1918b). Negro population, 1790-1915. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.
48.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. (1935). Negroes in the United States, 1920-1932. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office .
49.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. (1940-1980). U.S. Census ofpopulation, characteristics of the population: Vol. 1, Pt. 2. Alabama. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office.
50.
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. (1968). Political participation. Washington, DC: Author.
51.
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. (1915). The Voting Rights Act: Ten years after. Washington, DC : Author.
52.
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. (1983). Fifteen years ago ... Rural Alabama revisited (Clearinghouse Publication No. 82Washington. DC: Author.
53.
Vodicka, J. (1980, July-August). The Federation of Southern Cooperatives under siege. Southern Changes, 2, 18-21.
54.
Walton, H. Jr. (1972). Black politics: A theoretical and structural analysis. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott .
55.
Walton, H. Jr. (1994). The political use of absentee ballots in a rural black-belt county: Dr. Merolyn Stewart-Gaulden's election campaign for Taliaferro county school superintendent. In H. Walton Jr. (Ed.), Black politics and Black political behavior: A linkage analysis. Westport, CT: Praeger.
56.
White voter gain outstrips rise in Negro registrations. (1962 , June 10). Alabama Register
57.
Woodard, M.D. (1986). Voluntary association membership among Black Americans . The post-civil rights era. Sociological Quarterly, 28(2), 285-301.
58.
Wright, G.C. Jr. (1977). Contextual models of electoral behavior: The southern Wallace vote. American Political Science Review, 71, 497-508.