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Small Towns and Big Business - Challenging Wal-Mart Superstores (Paperback)
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Small Towns and Big Business - Challenging Wal-Mart Superstores (Paperback)
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During the 1990s, a new type of controversy began occurring across
the United States: controversies over the siting of superstores,
also known as big box stores. In these disputes, which often
involve Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer, local citizens
mount organized opposition to the proposed siting of a superstore
in their town or neighborhood. Opponents criticize Wal-Mart
superstores for putting local independent merchants out of
business, siphoning money from the local economy, providing
substandard jobs, disrupting residential neighborhoods,
contributing to the 'McDonaldization' of society, inducing sprawl,
destroying downtowns and Main Streets, and undermining local
uniqueness and small town charm. More generally, these
David-and-Goliath controversies represent particularly stark
examples of the conflict of interests between local communities and
large corporations that have become common in contemporary society.
Small Towns and Big Business uses fieldwork and archival sources to
comprehensively examine these controversies and the underlying
issues. While Wal-Mart is usually able to site its stores at its
preferred locations, in some cases local opponents have been able
to thwart its plans. Using detailed case studies of anti-superstore
controversies in six small cities in five states, Halebsky employs
a comparative-historical approach to construct an explanation of
how some of these local social movements managed to prevail against
Wal-Mart. This explanation is then extended to provide the basis
for a model of the general conditions under which local communities
may be able to constrain unwanted corporate action. Thus, this is
both a study of social movement outcomes and an investigation of
community-corporate conflict. Small Towns and Big Business provides
insight into the potential of the local state to control large
corporations, the inherently problematic nature of corporate
retailing, the possibilities for resisting McDonaldization, and the
fate of local anti-corporation activism.
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