%0 Journal Article %T Private Governance of Public Schools: Representation, Priorities, and Compliance in New Orleans Charter School Boards %A Anna Bauman %A J. Celeste Lay %J Urban Affairs Review %@ 1552-8332 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1078087417748783 %X In many cities, charter schools make up an increasing proportion of public schools, substantially altering education governance. In New Orleans, nearly every public school student attends a charter school. Each charter school or network has its own private governing board responsible for obtaining and maintaining the schoolĄ¯s charter, school finances, and hiring school leadership. We know relatively little about the composition, priorities, or effectiveness of these boards. In this article, we find that New OrleansĄ¯s charter boards are unrepresentative, are focused on fiduciary responsibilities rather than academics, and routinely fail to comply with state transparency laws. As more schools and other public services in urban areas move to private governance, it is important to examine the people who compose the boards, their decision-making processes, and the extent of public involvement. New Orleans provides a cautionary tale of how this governance system could operate in other cities with growing charter sectors %K urban education %K charter schools %K New Orleans %K neoliberalism %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1078087417748783