Richard Florida is director of the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management and a global research professor at New York University. He is also the author of The Rise of the Creative Class, founder of the Creative Class Group and co-founder of The Atlantic's CityLab.
`Richard Florida is the great pioneer thinker who first explained how the influx of creative people was reviving cities...[he] takes a hard look at the problems and, as usual, comes up with some smart new policies.' -- Walter Isaacson, bestselling author of <i>The Innovators</i> `Deserves to stand alongside Thomas Piketty's Capital as an essential diagnosis of our contemporary ills, and a clear-eyed prescription of how to cure them... Anyone interested in the crisis of inequality and in the vitality of our cities will want to read this book.' -- Steven Johnson, bestselling author of <i>How We Got To Now</i> `A powerful account - packed with evidence - of the forces driving urban segregation and deepening inequality and the way private wealth and power outflanks the poor and powerless.' -- Stewart Lansley, author of <i>A Sharing Economy</i> and co-author of <i>Breadline Britain</i> `Like the superstar cities it describes, this book is dense, complex and stimulating. Florida's well-researched and fluent expose of inequality is a wake-up call to all the major actors engaged in planning, designing and managing cities in the 21st century.' -- Ricky Burdett, Professor of Urban Studies, London School of Economics `Using data as his torch, Richard Florida shines a light on one of the great challenges of our century.' -- Charles Montgomery, author of <i>Happy City</i> `Bracingly confronts this tension between big-city elites and the urban underclass.' * <i>Wall Street Journal</i> * `The New Urban Crisis is well worth reading for the original research, clear-headed critique and the skilled analysis of solid data... Florida writes in personally positioned transparent language without taking refuge in academic jargon, making the book accessible to a broad audience.' * <i>New York Journal of Books</i> * `Cites are engines for prosperity and progress, but it's essential that the benefits extend far and wide. Florida proposes promising ideas for building stronger cities that offer greater opportunities for all.' -- Michael Bloomberg, former mayor of New York City `[Florida] vividly expose[s] how gentrification, followed by rising housing costs, concentrated affluence and glaring inequality, has pushed the displaced into deteriorating suburbs far from mass transit, employment, services and decent schools... [The New Urban Crisis is] nuanced and proposes solutions.' * <i>Washington Post</i> *