^Larry Eskridge, "Jesus People" in Erwin Fahlbusch, Geoffrey William Bromiley, David B. Barrett, Encyclopedia of Christianity "The beginnings of the Jesus People movement can be traced to the San Francisco Bay area, where in 1965 a group of young bohemian converts began to gather within John MacDonald's First Baptist Church in Mill Valley, California."
Di Sabatino, David. The Jesus People Movement: An Annotated Bibliography and General Resource (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1999).
Jensen, Lori Jolene, Ph.D. (Re)discovering fundamentalism in the cultural margins: Calvary Chapel congregations as sites of cultural resistance and religious transformation. University of Southern California. 2000.
Isaacson, Lynne Marie, Ph.D. Delicate balances: Rearticulating gender ideology and rules for sexuality in a Jesus People communal movement. University of Oregon. 1996.
Smith, Kevin John, D.Miss. The origins, nature, and significance of the Jesus Movement as a revitalization movement. Asbury Theological Seminary. 2003.
Ridout-Stewart, Caroline, M.A. Communitas to structure: a dynamic social network analysis of an urban Jesus People Community. McGill University. 1974.
Shires, Preston David, Ph.D. Hippies of the religious Right: The counterculture and American evangelicalism in the 1960s and 1970s. University of Nebraska, Lincoln. 2002.
Gordon, David Frederick, Ph.D. A Comparison of the effects of urban and suburban location on structure and identity in two Jesus people groups. University of Chicago. 1978.
Bookman, Sally Dobson Ph.D. Jesus People: a religious movement in a mid-western city. University of California, Berkeley. 1974.
Wagner, Frederick Norman, Ph.D. A theological and historical assessment of the Jesus people phenomenon. Fuller Theological Seminary. 1971.
Griffith, Jack Garrison, Jr., Ph.D. Press coverage of four twentieth-century evangelical religious movements, 1967–1997. University of Southern Mississippi. 2004.
Chrasta, Michael James, Ph.D. Jesus people to Promise Keepers: A revival sequence and its effect on late twentieth-century evangelical ideas of masculinity. University of Texas at Dallas. 1998.
Robinson, James, Ph.D. The origins, development and nature of Pentecostalism in Ulster, 1907 – c. 1925: A study in historical and theological contextualisation. Queen's University of Belfast. 2001.
Smalridge, Scott, M.A. Early American Pentecostalism and the issues of race, gender, war, and poverty: A history of the belief system and social witness of early twentieth century Pentecostalism and its nineteenth century holiness roots. McGill University. 1999.
Dayton, Donald Wilbrr, Ph.D. Theological roots of pentecostalism. University of Chicago. 1983.
Ronald M. Enroth, Edward E. Ericson and C. Breckinridge Peters, The Jesus People: Old-Time Religion in the Age of Aquarius (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 1972). ISBN 0-8028-1443-3
Larry Eskridge, "Jesus People" in Erwin Fahlbusch, Geoffrey William Bromiley, David B. Barrett, Encyclopedia of Christianity (Grand Rapids:William B. Eerdmans, 1999). ISBN 0-8028-2415-3
Donald Heinz, "The Christian World Liberation Front," in The New Religious Consciousness, Charles Y. Glock and Robert N. Bellah, eds. (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976) pp. 143–161. ISBN 0-520-03083-4
Edward E. Plowman, The Jesus Movement (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1972). ISBN 0-340-16125-6
Young, Shawn David, Hippies, Jesus Freaks, and Music (Ann Arbor: Xanedu/Copley Original Works, 2005). ISBN 1-59399-201-7