Northern Ireland remains a deeply polarized, segregated, and sectarian society as intra-group inequalities harm vulnerable marginalized intra-group members while ethnopolitical entrepreneurs fluctuate between compromise and threat politics. Professor Curtis Holland used a mixed method case study to draw on data generated from forty-one in-depth interviews with Belfast community leaders and politicians and a content analysis of British and Irish newspapers. This wonderful, well written, and highly accessible book uses a constructivist and intersectional approach to analyze the impact of relational and ethno-social fields of power, resistance narratives, and class inequalities that shape local everyday peoples agencies across and within their ethnopolitical groups in post-peace-accord Northern Ireland. This excellent study deserves a broad readership from academics, community activists, peacebuilders, policymakers, politicians, students, and those interested in the top-down and bottom-up dynamics of post-peace-accord societies like Northern Ireland. -- Sean Byrne, University of Manitoba