“…The WB has been promoting SBM across the developing world to create more autonomy in schools so that decisions can be more participatory by involving parents and local communities, supposedly leading to better learning outcomes (Barrera-Osorio et al, 2009). The term ''SBM'' itself, along with its goals and instruments, has remained remarkably similar when diffused to countries with vastly different institutional and cultural contexts, for instance, from Cambodia, Indonesia, and Thailand in Southeast Asia (Bandur, 2012;Shoraku, 2009) to Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico in South America (Ganimian, 2016;Reimers & Ca ´rdenas, 2007). Among the small World Bank Actions and Decentralization of Educational Systems in LMICs number of countries I mentioned here, cultural and institutional variations, even within each region, are nonnegligible.…”