Michael K. Honey (born 1947[1]) is an American historian, Guggenheim Fellow and Haley Professor of Humanities at the University of Washington Tacoma in the United States, where he teaches African-American, civil rights and labor history.[2][3]
In 2008 his book Going Down Jericho Road: The Memphis Strike, Martin Luther King's Last Campaign won the Liberty Legacy Foundation Award, awarded annually for the best book written by a professional historian on the fights for civil rights in the United States anytime from 1776 to the present.[6] It also received the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights 2011 Book award given annually to a novelist who "most faithfully and forcefully reflects Robert Kennedy's purposes - his concern for the poor and the powerless, his struggle for honest and even-handed justice, his conviction that a decent society must assure all young people a fair chance, and his faith that a free democracy can act to remedy disparities of power and opportunity."[7]
Southern Labor and Black Civil Rights: Organizing Memphis Workers (1993) ISBN978-0-252-06305-3
"Black Workers Remember: An Oral History of Segregation, Unionism, and the Freedom Struggle (1999) ISBN0-520-21774-8
Going Down Jericho Road: The Memphis Strike, Martin Luther King's Last Campaign, W. W. Norton (2007) ISBN978-0-393-33053-3
All Labor Has Dignity (ed., 2011) ISBN978-0-8070-8600-1, Martin Luther King's speeches on labor rights and economic justice, in the King Legacy Series of Beacon Press
To the Promised Land: Martin Luther King and the Fight for Economic Justice, W. W. Norton (2018) ISBN978-0-393-65126-3