“…First, economics has colonized other disciplines, including sociology, anthropology, and international development studies (Chuah, 2006; Fine & Milonakis, 2009; Menashy & Read, 2016), narrowing the lens through which policymakers have designed education reforms, influencing the normative aims of education, and limiting the types of research methods that inform policies. Arguably, as a result, policies rooted in market logic, such as school choice, have become commonplace despite critiques of their impacts on equity, access, and quality (e.g., Frankenberg et al, 2011; Jennings, 2010; Lenhoff, 2020; Phillips et al, 2015; Stein, 2015). Although other factors, apart from economic imperialism, may contribute to market-based policies in education—for instance the power of corporate entities, philanthropists, and policy entrepreneurs (Reckhow, 2012; Scott, 2009; Tompkins-Stange, 2016; Verger, 2012)—the clear reference to economic rationales and models within school choice policies warrants an analysis through the lens of economic imperialism.…”