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book: Cash on the Block
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Cash on the Block

The Broken Promise of Reinvestment in Black Urban Neighborhoods
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2026

About this book

An incisive history of government and corporate failures to infuse capital into Black urban neighborhoods—as well as the organizers and activists who stood up to predatory financial practices.

In the 1960s, conditions in impoverished Black neighborhoods attracted mainstream attention as civil unrest erupted in hundreds of cities across the United States. Finally recognizing the dire effects of racial segregation and urban disinvestment, politicians and corporations joined community activists to call for capital infusion, or reinvestment, in struggling communities. Proposals for reinvestment universally claimed the shared goal of reviving Black neighborhoods, but most of these efforts—some well-meaning, others cynical and predatory—failed to do so.

As renowned historian Beryl Satter shows, private and government interests have long manipulated reinvestment programs to benefit outside business, finance, and real estate professionals. Because these programs focused on corporate tax breaks and federal insurance for lenders, they were easily exploited by private interests to divert funding from poor urban neighborhoods. Meanwhile, community organizers proposed much bolder reinvestment plans that directly confronted institutionally racist practices. They called for a significant reallocation of resources, including government investments in depleted areas and guaranteed incomes for poor people. Activists, often working-class women, also united across racial divides to challenge predatory finance and real estate practices. Yet while they successfully advocated for laws to impede such behaviors, reform legislation often contained loopholes that accommodated racism and corporate greed.

To revive impoverished neighborhoods, we must not only challenge institutional racism in finance and real estate but also resist government policies that enable predatory practices. Cash on the Block envisions a future in which reinvestment policy, guided by community leaders, at last benefits those it is meant to serve.

Reviews

Beryl Satter, author of the acclaimed book Family Properties, does it again. Cash on the Block is a masterpiece that, for decades to come, will be essential reading for scholars, policymakers, and anyone who wants to understand the economic exploitation of Black Americans. With extraordinary archival depth and analytic clarity, Satter reveals how ostensibly race-neutral laws, financial instruments, and bureaucratic incentives systematically extracted wealth from Black urban communities. The result is one of the most incisive accounts of why reinvestment efforts have repeatedly failed—and what genuine equity would require.
-- Bernadette Atuahene, author of Plundered: How Racist Policies Undermine Black Homeownership in America

What happens when government outsources the revival of impoverished neighborhoods to private profit-seeking lenders? Predation, plunder, and extraction of wealth from already struggling families, as Beryl Satter shows in this searing, wise, and haunting history. Just as importantly, Satter explains how the savvier reinvestment strategy first proposed by Black thinkers and then elaborated by interracial community organizers in the 1970s could still work in our time—with greater power and stronger political will.
-- Nancy MacLean, author of Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America

A devastating and revelatory history of institutional racism in America. Balancing incisive analysis with her gift for storytelling, Beryl Satter boldly recounts how self-serving government and corporate programs have perpetuated Black disadvantage and deepened inequality in the past—and how they continue to do so today. This is a history that shatters myths, speaks fearlessly to the urgent concerns of the present, and provides the clarity that we need to find a new way forward.
-- Andrew W. Kahrl, author of The Black Tax: 150 Years of Theft, Exploitation, and Dispossession in America

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
May 12, 2026
eBook ISBN:
9780674305151
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Downloaded on 14.4.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.4159/9780674305151/html
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