Research on racial identity among Youth of Color has expanded considerably in recent years, but a parallel examination of racial identity among white youth has not occurred, reiterating whiteness as normative. We applied Janet Helms’s White Racial Identity Development (WRID) model among white U.S. youth (8–14 years old) to address this research gap. WRID centers racism and white supremacy, offering a framework to analyze white racial identity in the context of systemic inequity. Using longitudinal, qualitative analysis, we found age‐related change over time, with some evidence of increasing resistance to racism. There was high participant variability, however, indicating that socio‐cognitive abilities alone cannot predict anti‐racist white identity development. We discuss implications for racial identity research and social justice‐orientated developmental science.
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