- Milliken v. Bradley (Detroit Schools Case) Archives at Wayne State University (Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University, December 2017)
- “Housing Is Everybody’s Problem”: The Forgotten Crusade of Morris Milgram (Places Journal, October 2017)
- Chicago 1966: The Chicago Freedom Movement (an interactive chronology and collection of resources)
- Excerpt from “Race: The Power of an Illusion, Part 3 –The House We Live In” (California Newsreel, 2003)
- “Historical Shift from Explicit to Implicit Policies Affecting Housing Segregation in Eastern Massachusetts” – An excellent web-based history lesson from the Boston Fair Housing Center on the history of housing segregation in Eastern Massachusetts (June 2015)
- “Public Housing: Persisting Conundrums,” by Alexander Polikoff (delivered at the “Know Your Chicago Symposium,” Jenner & Block, September 10, 2014)
- Martin Luther King, Jr. and Civil Rights: Relevancy for Today: A 38-page curriculum for grades 3–12 provides grade-specific lessons, resources, and extension activities examining civil rights in the United States – past and present.
- “Putting the Movement Back Into Civil Rights Teaching” (a resource guide from PRRAC and Teaching for Change) We are co-publishers, with Teaching for Change, of this award-winning 500+ page civil rights teaching guide, which stresses the contributions of rank and file activists, and the relation of the Civil Rights Movement to contemporary organizing struggles. The goal is to help empower students and to connect the Movement with present day issues in their communities.
- Syllabus: “African American Struggles for Freedom and Civil Rights, 1865-1965” (2011 NEH Institute for College Teachers, W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, Harvard University)
- “Harvard Trains College Teachers on Black History” (Huffington Post, July 2011)
- Aspects of the Civil Rights Movement – a law school syllabus developed by Florence Roisman
- A Freedom Budget for All Americans (1967)