“…This includes education policy scholarship that has explored and illuminated the importance of spatial discourses and perceptions of place in school reforms, school closures, parental choices, and youths' experiences of school choice (André-Bechely, 2007;Bell, 2009;Gulson, 2006;Lipman, 2011;Reay, 2007;Yoon, 2015). Alongside this is work that has drawn on critical race theory to show how policy and race are inexorably connected (for overviews in education and geography, see Gulson, 2010;Price, 2010) and the work of disability scholars in education that has connected the physical organization of school spaces to the politics of disability (Armstrong, 2003;Waitoller & Super, 2017). Influenced by the geographic canons of Lefebvre, Massey, and Soja, a range of qualitative research, without any use of GIS, has shed light on how people perceive, experience, and co-construct places where education policies unfold.…”