“…Discrimination is a common experience for ethnic–racial minority youth in the United States (Umaña‐Taylor, ) and has been consistently linked to adverse mental and physical health outcomes (Pascoe & Smart Richman, ). Ethnic–racial identity (ERI) formation, a central aspect of positive youth development that is particularly salient during adolescence (Spencer, ; Swanson, Spencer, dell'Angelo, Harpalani, & Spencer, ; Umaña‐Taylor, O'Donnell, et al., ; Umaña‐Taylor, Quintana, et al., ; Williams, Tolan, Durkee, Francois, & Anderson, ), has been found to relate to adolescent well‐being and, in some instances, has been found to buffer the adverse effects of discrimination (see Marks, Ejesi, McCullough, & García Coll, for an overview). Few studies, however, have focused on the interrelation and bidirectional associations of ERI and discrimination, limiting our knowledge about how these two salient constructs may co‐occur and affect one another over time.…”