Boom Town: How Wal-Mart Transformed an All-American Town Into an International Community
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In 1950, Sam Walton, founder of the Wal-Mart empire, arrived in the Bible Belt town of Bentonville, Arkansas, and discovered that the nondescript Ozarks backwater--population 2,900 white Christians--suited him just fine. Today, six decades later, Walton’s legacy has left its mark. The Bentonville area is headquarters to not only Wal-Mart but also Tyson Foods and J. B. Hunt. The town’s population has grown to around 30,000, and the region is now home to blacks, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Marshall …
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BusinessSocial SciencesNonfictionBusiness HistorySocial Sciences - General & MiscellaneousIndustriesBusiness - General & MiscellaneousConsumer Goods Industry - HistoryConsumer IndustriesCorporate Behavior & ResponsibilityEthnic & Race RelationsRetail Trade - HistoryRetail IndustriesCorporate Values - Case StudiesUnited States - Ethnic & Race Relations



