“…(p. 283) Culturally responsive evaluation is recognized as starting toward the end of the 1990s (though instances of evaluations using principles that are part of this approach occurred as early as the 1930s), and stemmed from work conducted in education, which focused on cultural responsiveness in assessment and pedagogy (Hood, Hopson, & Kirkhart, 2015). More recently, explicit attention has been given to the role of evaluation in promoting social justice in society (Mertens & Wilson, 2019;Neubauer et al, 2020;Symonette, Miller, & Barela, 2020). Several evaluation approaches, including Deliberative Democratic Evaluation (House & Howe, 2004), Transformative Participatory Evaluation (Mertens & Wilson, 2019), and Values-Engaged Educative Evaluation (Greene et al, 2011) explicitly seek to promote social justice and human rights through conducting evaluation in a manner that is attuned and responsive to power differentials and systemic inequities (Mertens & Wilson, 2019).…”