Resources to Help You Be a Stronger Voter, Citizen, and Person
By sharpening your democracy capabilities you also develop yourself and people you interact with. These are newly challenging times. Here are some resources to help you think more clearly, stay grounded, and act more effectively.
Think clearly
Understand power, information, and the Constitution so you can see issues more clearly.
The U.S. Constitution: A Comprehensive and Annotated Guide for the Modern Reader, Melissa Murray
If you want to understand what is really at stake in today’s fights about rights and government, this book helps you read the Constitution with context and confidence. It is an annotated, modern guide that explains the Constitution amendment by amendment with historical context and present-day relevance.
News Literacy Project
When you are flooded with news, posts, and opinions, the News Literacy Project helps you sort fact from spin. While focused on K-12, it is useful for adults, too. It offers news-literacy resources and tools designed to strengthen critical thinking and help people evaluate the credibility of information.
The Shadow Side of Power: Lessons for Leaders and Their Supporters, Patricia McLagan
A short fantasy tale where you take a journey into the Leadership Inferno with a newly appointed leader and his guide. Drawing inspiration from Dante’s Inferno, myth, and literature, you learn seven temptations that accompany institutional power, and seven “virtues” to look for and cultivate in leadership today.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble
Stay grounded
Stay rooted in your values, but remain open to facts and other opinions.
The Righteous Mind, Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion, Jonathan Haidt
This widely read book helps you understand why people with different moral intuitions often see politics so differently. It can deepen self-awareness and make it easier to understand, rather than simply dismiss, people who vote differently from you.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble Publisher
The Courageous Follower, Ira Chaleff
This book invites you to think of yourself not as a passive follower, but as someone who shares responsibility for what leaders do. It helps you find the courage to support good leadership, question harmful decisions, and step up when your values are at stake.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble Publisher
The Shadow Side of Power: Lessons for Leaders and Their Supporters, Patricia McLagan
A short fantasy tale where you take a journey into the Leadership Inferno with a newly appointed leader and his guide. Drawing inspiration from Dante’s Inferno, myth, and literature, you learn seven temptations that accompany institutional power, and seven “virtues” to look for and cultivate in leadership today.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble
Essential Partners
If political conversations often feel pointless or painful, Essential Partners offers another path.
Its dialogue practices help you listen, be heard, and stay in relationship even when you disagree, so you do not have to choose between speaking up and staying connected.
Information-integrity and dialogue guides
Build everyday habits for checking information and improving political conversations.
Check with your library and civics organization for short guides that can help you build practical habits for checking sources, slowing down before sharing, and having better political conversations. These skills matter when the information environment feels chaotic, fast, and emotionally charged.
Braver Angels
Braver Angels is a citizens’ organization that works to bridge the partisan divide and strengthen democratic life by bringing people from different political viewpoints into constructive conversation. Its workshops, debates, and local alliances are designed to help people disagree more respectfully, listen better, and find common ground without requiring political conformity.
The Power Mesh
The Power Mesh is a regular, free article series on substack.com that helps you see how power operates around and in you in politics, institutions, and everyday leadership and followership. Its essays explore how leaders and citizens shape one another, and how you can use your own power more consciously rather than feeling pushed around by events.
Managing Misinformation and Disinformation
Become a reality detective in an increasingly misleading media world.
PEN America – Media Literacy Toolkit
Brief, plain-language tips to help adults pause before sharing, separate news from opinion, check images, and verify claims.
Poynter / MediaWise – How to Spot Misinformation Online
Short (some are 15 seconds), highly accessible lessons that teach you how to recognize false or misleading content and find more trustworthy sources. Well worth browsing.
News Literacy Project – Public Resources
Nonpartisan lessons, explainers, quizzes, and tools that help people distinguish fact from opinion, spot misinformation, and evaluate sources. Designed for K–12, but relevant to adults as well.
Denver Public Library – Fact Checking Tools
Easy-to-use guide that collects fact-checking, image-checking, and source-evaluation tools in one place.
Maryland Media Literacy – Tips & Resources
Simple tips and curated resources to help adults and seniors evaluate online information, understand news and social media, recognize scams, and avoid sharing misinformation.
Deeper dives
Gain deeper, research-based insight into voters, democracy, and political judgment.
How Voters Decide by Richard R. Lau and David P. Redlawsk
If you want to understand how people actually process campaign information, this book offers a research-based look inside voter decision-making. It is especially useful for seeing how shortcuts, overload, and decision strategies shape political judgment.
Democracy for Realists by Christopher H. Achen and Larry M. Bartels
This influential book challenges the assumption that voters usually make decisions through careful policy reasoning alone. It is a strong deeper read if you want to reflect on the role of identity, group loyalty, and retrospective judgment in democratic politics.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble
Direct Democratic Choice by Hanspeter Kriesi
This book, based on Switzerland’s experience with democracy, examines how citizens make decisions in direct-democracy and argues that many people can make competent choices when they have access to arguments and structure. It is best for readers who want a more empirical and comparative perspective on democratic judgment. It is expensive.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble
VOTE and Act effectively
Register, research candidates and issues, and make your ONE unique voice heard as a citizen and voter.
USAFacts
USAFacts is a nonpartisan civic initiative that makes government data easier to access and understand. It provides public statistics, visualizations, and analysis drawn from government sources so readers can explore spending, demographics, and policy outcomes with less noise and more context.
USA.gov — Find your polling place
USA.gov’s polling-place page helps you locate your assigned voting location and directs you to official state or local election offices for current instructions. It is useful for confirming where to vote, checking whether your location has changed, and finding official guidance before Election Day.
Vote.org — Check your voter registration
Vote.org’s voter registration tools help people check whether they are registered, update their information, and find state-specific voting guidance. It is a practical starting point when you want to confirm your status or avoid registration problems before an election.
U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC)
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission is an independent bipartisan federal commission that supports accessible, accurate, and secure elections. It offers voter resources, election-administration guidance, and information on voting systems and standards.
VOTE411
When you are ready to vote, VOTE411 helps you find practical election information in one place. You can check rules, see what is on your ballot, and prepare to participate with more confidence.
Critical Voter, Jonathan Haber
This book is designed to help you use an election as a course in critical thinking. It helps readers analyze arguments, test evidence, and become less vulnerable to manipulation.
Book links: Amazon Barnes & Noble
Voting Your Center, Kurt Smith
This book helps you connect your political choices to your deeper values and standards. It is a short book for active citizens who want to take their voting to the next level by applying logical consistency and character-based reflection to political decision-making.
Book links: Barnes & Noble
Ballotpedia
Once you know what matters most to you, Ballotpedia can help you dig into candidates, issues, and ballot choices. It is especially useful when you want to compare options and apply your own standards more deliberately.
Vote Smart
Vote Smart helps you research candidates and public officials using issue positions, voting records, biographies, and public statements. It is useful when you want a single place to compare candidates using structured background information.
USAFacts
USAFacts is a nonpartisan civic initiative that makes government data easier to access and understand. It provides public statistics, visualizations, and analysis drawn from government sources so readers can explore spending, demographics, and policy outcomes with less noise and more context.
BallotReady
BallotReady is a nonpartisan voter guide that helps people research their entire ballot, including candidates and ballot measures, before Election Day. It offers verified information, polling-place tools, voter registration help, and ballot-planning features in one place.
Congress.gov
Congress.gov is the official website for U.S. federal legislative information. It provides public access to bills, the Congressional Record, member information, and other timely legislative resources.
GovTrack
GovTrack is a civic tracking tool focused on legislation and members of Congress. It is useful for following bills, checking voting activity, and keeping up with congressional developments in a more searchable, user-friendly format.
Closing thought
These are fast changing times. The issues we must address together are both immediate (today’s cost of living) and on the horizon (AI, climate, and a new kind of citizenship). Come back often and please share with others.
