Robert Perrucci. JAPANESE AUTO TRANSPLANTS IN THE HEARTLAND: CORPORATISM AND COMMUNITY. New York: Aldine de Gruyter, 1994. xii+186 pp. ISBN 0-202-30582-7, $37.95 (hardcover); ISBN 0-202- 30529-5, $18.95 (paper). Reviewed by Carl H. A. Dassbach, Department of Social Sciences, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan, USA Robert Perrucci's JAPANESE AUTO TRANSPLANTS IN THE HEARTLAND is not a study of transplants as factories. There is little or no discussion of work, management relations, or quality control inside Japanese automobile transplants, and anyone interested in these topics would be better served by books such as Kenny and Florida's BEYOND MASS PRODUCTION or Womack et al.'s THE MACHINE THAT CHANGED THE WORLD. Perrucci, in other words, is not interested in transplants as Òthings,Ó he is interested in transplants as ÒprocessÓ and specifically in the factors and forces leading to their location in certain midwestern communities in the United States. [Page 2] As the book correctly points out, this "transplant phenomenon" is the result of both global and national, or what could be called macro, and state and local, or micro, determinants. PerrucciÕs discussion of the macro determinants is probably the weakest part of the book. Not only does he overlook some important points, e.g., the role of MITI or the effects of the VRA (the Voluntary Restraint Agreement between Japan and the U.S.) on aggressive Japanese companies, but he repeats much of what has already been observed about transplants. On the other hand, the originality and strength of this book lies in its analysis of the micro determinants. Previously, these received, at best, some scattered attention (e.g., Green and Yanarella, eds., THE POLITICS OF INDUSTRIAL RECRUITMENT, 1990). In this book, Perrucci systematically examines these by comparing informal and formal state and local policies and practices which led to the construction of Japanese auto transplants in several Midwest communities. Perrucci concludes that the important determinants at the micro level were the ability of an "activist" state and [Page 3] local governments, working in conjunction with local business elites, to provide incentives for, and construct a consensus around, the new plant, its people, and its economic benefits. He refers to this alliance between state, local governments and local elites for the purpose of attracting investments and stimulating the economy as "embedded corporatism" and argues that it is _not_ a transitory phenomenon, arising solely to meet the demands of luring the transplants. Instead, "embedded corporatism" represents "a significant and historic change in the way political and economic life is organized" (p. 35). The clearest indicator of the growth of "embedded corporatism" over the last 20 years is the growth of interest among states, as evidenced by a doubling in the number of conventional programs and the creation of new programs, in promoting economic development. This, in turn, is a response by states to declining Federal and local revenues due to deindustrialization and increased responsibility for the welfare of its citzenry. In a the largest sense, Perrucci sees "embedded corporatism," of which the transplant phenomenon is only one [Page 4] instance, as part of a new "social structure of accumulation" consisting of regional economies and "based on close cooperation between private corporations and state government" (p. 35). In my opinion, this book is well worth reading; it addresses relevant points about both transplants and the future of the American political economy. Some may be dismayed by the middle chapters because they read like a community study in the vein of Vidich and Bensman's SMALL TOWN IN MASS SOCIETY. But the strength of this book, and its relevance to world-system concerns, is that it links these community level developments with broader trends. This was, in fact, the espoused intention of the author: "our case study approach will show how broad formulations of global change are reflected in the day-to-day actions of politicians, business owners, labor officials, environmentalists and other community members...." (p. 37), and it has been achieved with an extremely high degree of success.