Over the years, Charles Euchner has written and spoken widely about political activism and related issues. A few examples:
- Undermining the Youth Vote: Case studies on voter suppression in Alabama, Texas, North Carolina, and New York.
- The Case for the 28th Amendment: The only path to undoing the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity.
- The 3.5 percent solution: How getting bodies on the streets–lots of them–can transform politics.
- How the March on Washington transformed America: Looking back on the 60th anniversary here and here. With more reflections here, here, here, here, and here (start at page 50).
- Minute by minute: How the Educational Radio Network covered the March on Washington.
- The other guy’s March on Washington book: Background on the “greatest demonstration for freedom in our nation’s history.”
- The most important person you don’t know: Gene Sharp and the power of nonviolent action.
- Marie Wilson just doesn’t stop: The feminist icon plots a woman’s rise to the White House.
- Perilous moves: Russian chess master Garry Kasparov faces the toughest king.
- Squeaky wheels: The NIMBY threat to wind farms in Massachusetts.
- First, No: How saying ‘No’ often gets you to “Yes’ faster.
- The first woman to run for president: It wasn’t Hillary, or even Shirley Chisholm.
- The miracle of grassroots action: The Guinea Worm Disease was devastating millions of lives in neglected parts of Africa. There was no vaccine. Then Jimmy Carter took it on.
- Landmark: Looking back at the Lau bilingual education case, which established the right to equal education opportunity for nonnative English speaking students.
In the buildup to the publication of Rules of Activism, notes and commentary about the crisis of American democracy–and the response of activists at home and abroad.

