Our Sources

This guide is built on research, legal expertise, and guidance from established organizations. Here's where our information comes from.

Academic Research

Nonviolent Resistance

  • Erica Chenoweth (Harvard Kennedy School) — Research on civil resistance, including the finding that nonviolent campaigns are twice as likely to succeed as violent ones
  • Gene Sharp — "The Politics of Nonviolent Action" and documentation of 198 methods of nonviolent action
  • International Center on Nonviolent Conflict — Research database on civil resistance movements

Polarization and Democracy

  • Steven Levitsky & Daniel Ziblatt — "How Democracies Die" research on democratic erosion
  • More in Common — Research on the "exhausted majority" and affective polarization
  • Jonathan Haidt — Research on moral psychology and political division

Community Resilience

  • Robert Putnam — Research on social capital and community connections
  • Eric Klinenberg — Research on social infrastructure and disaster resilience

Legal & Civil Liberties Organizations

Democracy & Governance Organizations

Civic Engagement Resources

Bridge-Building & Dialogue

Our Standards

  • We cite our sources. Major claims link to underlying research or authoritative organizations.
  • We distinguish fact from opinion. When presenting analysis or recommendations, we make clear they're based on research, not just our views.
  • We correct errors. If you find something inaccurate, please contact us.
  • We don't give legal advice. This is educational information. Consult an attorney for specific legal questions.
  • We update regularly. Laws, situations, and best practices change. We review and update content to stay current.