Rajini Srikanth
This impressive book brings together qualitative examination accompanying prolonged immersion in... the field and a sensitivity to issues of race and ethnicity as these factors manifest themselves in the everyday lives of people.... Sanjek makes abundantly clear that Elmhurst-Corona is a microcosm of the racial and ethnic complexity that is and in a few years will even more visibly become characteristic of the entire country.... His appraisal is a healthy and invaluable reminder that the task ahead is not an easy one and requires the committed effort of both individual residents and the government.
Evelyn Hu-DeHart
The dramatic demographic shift in Elmhurst-Corona makes a great story, full of intrigue and personalities, but without the racial violence seen elsewhere in New York City or in Los Angeles. For this reason our nation's leaders would do well to read Roger Sanjek's account of the neighborhood's transformation. And they should pay special attention to how the women in the community-white, black, Latina, Asian, American-born and immigrant-provided the critical leadership during this transition by 'listening to each other.' It behooves the rest of us to listen as well, because this book is about the future of us all!
Frances Fox Piven
For more than a decade, Roger Sanjek immersed himself in the life of a New York City neighborhood on the leading edge of racial and ethnic transition. This rich and readable account of the community life of Elmhurst-Corona is the result. Sanjek shows us people gradually overcoming racial and ethnic categories to recognize each other and work together, forging a vibrant neighborhood politics that sometimes prevails over the 'permanent government.'.
Raymond D. Smith
This is an excellent book and a welcome relief from the muddy stream of depressing studies.... Sanjek devoted most of thirteen years to the part-time study of the Elmhurst-Corona district of the Borough of Queens, thus ensuring as intimate and first-hand knowledge of a complex urban area as we are likely to see. This extended period of study produces a dense array of material on community action in which the purely local is illuminated by careful reference to developments in city, state, and national policy—political, social, and economic.... The overall tone of the study is decidedly optimistic for, as Sanjek rightly says in the very last sentence of the book, 'Nothing is impossible if we believe that people can change.'.
Ulf Hannerz
Roger Sanjek is an extremely knowledgeable anthropologist, tough-minded and with a great knack for synthesis. He is also a street-wise New Yorker who cares deeply about his city. In its skillful interweaving of urban and global political economy with local issues of ethnic diversity and quality of life, The Future of Us All has few equals among recent portrayals of late twentieth-century urban transformation.
Karen Brodkin
The Future of Us All offers a sophisticated theory about race, class, and governance in American cities, while the book's muckraking discussions of local and citywide politics make it a wonderful read. Drawing upon extraordinarily rich data, Roger Sanjek writes with clarity and passion.
From the Publisher
This thoughtful, well-documented study of the life of a neighborhood as it changes over time is must reading for anyone who cares about New York, the life of cities, or the possibilities for integrating populations and creating communities in which everyone has a stake.
David S. Surrey
A blueprint for fieldwork in contemporary urban settings.... Roger Sanjek's The Future of Us All provides us with three gifts. First, we have an excellent ethnography of a diverse urban neighborhood. Second, Sanjek offers an admirable model for contemporary ethnographic context. Third, we are given hope for the future—the future of us all.