Education plays a key role in knowledge society, since, from a meritocratic perspective, it opens up fair opportunities for well-paid jobs, thereby increasing social mobility and well-being more generally. In order to foster their economic competitiveness, cities are therefore encouraged to engage in knowledge-based urban development by trying to provide good schools and world-class universities to attract the “creative class.” However, meritocracy is a “myth,” as access to educational opportunities is itself socially biased. With the example of Heidelberg, a so-called “knowledge pearl,” we show how knowledge-institutions, such as the university, may shape socioenvironmental contexts in ways conducive to spatially selective access to—and use of—educational opportunities. Instead of reducing social polarization, knowledge-institutions may instead (re-)produce inequalities.
CITATION STYLE
Gerhard, U., Hoelscher, M., & Marquardt, E. (2022). Knowledge Society, Educational Attainment, and the Unequal City: A Sociospatial Perspective. In Knowledge and Space (Vol. 16, pp. 7–31). Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78597-0_2
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