Culture, Spatial Diffusion of Ideas and their Long-Lasting Imprints – Evidence from Froebel’s Kindergarten Movement

Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

Stefan Bauernschuster, Oliver Falck

In: Journal of Economic Geography 15 (2015), 3, 601-630

Abstract

We document the spatial diffusion of Friedrich Froebel’s radical invention of kindergartens in 19th-century Germany. The first kindergarten was founded at Froebel’s birthplace. Early spatial diffusion can be explained by cultural proximity, measured by historical dialect similarity, to Froebel’s birthplace. This result is robust to the inclusion of higher order polynomials in geographic distance and similarity measures with respect to industry, geography or religion. Our findings suggest that a common cultural basis facilitates the spillover of ideas. We further show that the contemporaneous spatial pattern of child care coverage is still correlated with cultural similarity to Froebel’s place of birth.

Themen: Gesundheit



Keywords: Culture, spatial diffusion, public child care
Externer Link:
http://www.diw.de/documents/publikationen/73/diw_01.c.466458.de/diw_sp0659.pdf

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1093/jeg/lbu028

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