superdelagates
Here is a list of all the Democratic Party superdelegates.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Democratic_Party_superdelegates,_2016
Unfortunately listed in alphabetical order of the delegate's last name, so you have to search a bit to find the ones for your state.
It is senators, governors, congresspersons, and some former office holders and a raft of DNC members of whom you neither I nor you nor anyone else has ever heard. One thing I noticed was the absence of local office holders. There seem to be no, or very few, mayors or state legislators, folks who might be amenable to pressure from the voters. Hm.... Still, it wouldn't hurt if folks who live in states where Bernie won the primary contact their state's superdelegates about voting with the majority in their states. Let them know their votes will be noted and publicized. The Clintons are not the only people who can take names. For one example, Oregon's appointed governor, Kate Brown, is running for election this year. Oregon is where the GMO labeling bill lost by around 800 votes to the accompaniment of massive expenditure and, I gather, numerous dirty tricks on the part of the biotech industry, and Hillary is the biotech baby, whose state department was trying to push GE crops onto unwilling nations around the world.
I personally doubt that Clinton can carry OR this year, and if she goes down I imagine Kate goes down with her.
I called my daughter in Seattle to ask her to contact the two senators about voting for Bernie at the convention. I believe Sanders carried every county but one in WA, is that right? This is something we can all be doing and there is no need to wait for the Sanders campaign to organize it. Where I live, in NY, Clinton won, but only in NY, Syracuse, Rochester and Buffalo. The counties outside the urbanized areas went big for Sanders, so, naturally, no superdelegates represent those counties. Upstate voters might have to vote overwhelmingly Green or Libertarian to get the DNC to pay any attention to us.
