“…Since education is a key commodity, political leaders of homogeneous suburban communities work to maintain exclusionary boundaries in the hopes of attracting new residents (Buendía & Humbert-Fisk, 2015). While comprehensive school desegregation plans that de-emphasize urban-suburban boundaries can mitigate white flight (Green, 1985; Orfield, 2001; Orfield & Frankenberg, 2014), a recent causal study of Charlotte-Mecklenburg, North Carolina, found that once such plans end, white families are considerably more inclined to move to a neighborhood (and school) with higher shares of other whites (Liebowitz & Page, 2014). In fragmented metropolitan areas with numerous school districts, the boundary lines that separate central city districts from multiple suburban ones partly explain high levels of school segregation between districts (Bischoff, 2008; Fiel, 2013, 2015; Frankenberg, 2009; Reardon, Yun, & Eitle, 2000).…”