"Fifteen years after Toyota announced it would build a
manufacturing plant in the heart of the Bluegrass, Kentucky crafts
are being used to help sell Camrys at car dealerships in Japan and
sushi and Japanese condiments are widely stocked on grocery shelves
in a number of cities across Kentucky. In early 2000, the state
boasted more than 100 Japanese companies representing a total
investment of more than seven billion dollars, employing more than
33,000 Kentuckians. Japan in the Bluegrass is the first book to
focus on the regional and local impact of the globalization of
Japanese businesses, particularly Toyota, in the United States.
Fourteen American and Japanese contributors include geographers,
political scientists, sociologists, and an economist, urban
planner, and environmental scientist, and their essays go beyond
the traditional exploration of politics and economics to examine
the social, cultural, and environmental effects of Japanese
investment in Kentucky. The authors examine the factors that
brought these companies to this part of the United States, which
range from a well-developed system of highways to cooperation from
state and local governments to hefty incentive packages. They
discuss the significant influence of Toyota and its suppliers on
local communities in Kentucky as well as in Toyota City, Japan.
Essays also cover the social and cultural shifts that have resulted
from Japanese investment, including educational activities in
public schools, the relationship between business and local media,
and the integration of Japanese managers and their families into
Kentucky communities.
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