“It's safe to come, we've got lattes”: Development disparities in Detroit

[1]  Jamie Peck Struggling with the Creative Class , 2005 .

[2]  J. J. Trip Assessing Quality of Place: A Comparative Analysis of Amsterdam and Rotterdam , 2007 .

[3]  David R. Bowes A Two-Stage Model of the Simultaneous Relationship Between Retail Development and Crime , 2007 .

[4]  T. Pedroni Urban shrinkage as a performance of whiteness: neoliberal urban restructuring, education, and racial containment in the post-industrial, global niche city , 2011 .

[5]  Brent D. Ryan Design After Decline: How America Rebuilds Shrinking Cities , 2012 .

[6]  M. Binelli Detroit City Is the Place to Be: The Afterlife of an American Metropolis , 2012 .

[7]  C. Leduff Detroit: An American Autopsy , 2013 .

[8]  Jennifer Bradley,et al.  The Metropolitan Revolution: How Cities and Metros are Fixing our Broken Politics and Fragile Economy , 2013 .

[9]  Detroit: Three Pathways to Revitalization , 2013 .

[10]  I. Vojnovic,et al.  Class/racial conflict, intolerance, and distortions in urban form: Lessons for sustainability from the Detroit region , 2013 .

[11]  Peter K. Eisinger,et al.  Is Detroit Dead? , 2014 .

[12]  Chinese Investors Snap Up Property in Bankrupt Detroit , 2014 .

[13]  M. Skidmore,et al.  Memo from Motown: Is austerity here to stay? , 2014 .

[14]  G. Galster,et al.  Neighborhood Disinvestment, Abandonment, and Crime Dynamics , 2015 .

[15]  William K. Tabb If Detroit Is Dead, Some Things Need to Be Said at the Funeral , 2015 .

[16]  Not Dead Yet: Response to William Tabb’s ‘If Detroit Is Dead, Some Things Need to Be Said at the Funeral’ , 2015 .

[17]  G. Galster A Structural Diagnosis and Prescription for Detroit’s Fiscal Crisis: Response to William Tabb’s ‘If Detroit Is Dead, Some Things Need to Be Said at the Funeral’ , 2015 .