"The inner city and the suburbs have flipped as low-income residents and people of color are being pushed farther out of Atlanta. Immergluck provides a look into past housing policies that have affected this outcome while also providing a path to a future of more equitable, livable cities."-- "Realtor Magazine Online"
"Immergluck exposes dizzying networks of politicians, developers, financial investors, and cultural brokers--embedded in public and private institutions that span from local government to global markets--that persistently have redistributed wealth and power from Atlanta's (GA) Black to White communities. . . . Immergluck's storytelling has many strengths."-- "Journal of the American Planning Association"
"Immergluck...questions Atlanta's reputation as "the 'Black Mecca'" with this quietly searing book. . . . Readers interested in urban politics in the South, gentrification and redevelopment in southern cities, and inclusive housing policies will find this research necessary reading. Summing Up: Essential. General readers through faculty; professionals."-- "CHOICE"
"In cities from Oakland to Atlanta to Minneapolis, decades of racial housing discrimination have combined with elite-oriented development strategies to create a reality where neighborhoods gentrify, investors profit, and vulnerable people suffer. . . . Immergluck . . . explain[s] how that reality came about--and how we might disrupt it."-- "The New Republic"