- Development of the Bahá'í Faith in Malwa, The: 1941-1974, by William Garlington (1999-02). A socio-cultural examination of Bahá'í mass teaching as experienced in Central India.
- Dunn, Clara and Hyde, by Graham Hassall (2000-01). Biography of two early Bahá'í teachers and pioneers.
- Dunn, Clara and John Henry Hyde, by Graham Hassall (2009). On the couple who went to Australia in 1920 in response to ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s call for worldwide expansion of the Bahá’í Faith and firmly established it in the Antipodes, designated Hands of the Cause of God by Shoghi Effendi.
- Dunns, The: Keys to Their Success, by Madge Featherstone, Kaye Waterman (1996). John Henry Hyde Dunn(c. 1855–1941) and Clara Dunn (1869–1960) were a pioneer Bahá'í couple in Australia.
- Greenleaf, Charles, by Robert Stockman (1995).
- Religious Contentions in Modern Iran, 1881-1941, by Mina Yazdani (2011). In 20th-century Iran, anti-Bahaism played a role in transforming Shi'i religious piety into the political ideology known as Islamism; Bahá'ís became branded as Iran's internal "other"; role of The Confessions of Dolgoruki. Link to thesis (offsite).
- Sydney Sprague: In Memoriam, by Willard P. Hatch (1945). Sprague (1875-1943) was an American Bahá’í who traveled the East to promote the religion in the early 1900s. He became alienated from the Bahá’í community at some point but reconciled shortly before his passing.
- United States National Spiritual Assembly vs. Mirza Ahmad Sohrab, by Author unknown (1941). In 1941 the National Spiritual Assembly unsuccessfully sued Covenant Breaker Mirza Ahmad Sohrab for his use of the word "Bahá'í." This is the court's conclusions.
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