“…While we mark, in this essay, Fanon's contributions and relentless presence, we also acknowledge and appreciate the prolific legacy of critical psychologies engaged with transnational struggles for land and sovereignty, material conditions and dignity, indigenous and immigrant justice, environmental justice, prison and military abolition, gender and sexuality justice, racial justice, socialist re‐distributions, reproductive justice and reparations (to name a few ‐ a painfully inadequate list – Adams, et al., 2015; Ayala, et al., 2020; Boudin, et al., 2022; Comas‐Diaz & Torres‐Riverea, 2020; Fernandez et al., 2021; Fine, 2017; Fine & Torre, 2021; Ghaffar‐Kucher, et al., 2022; Martin‐Baro, 1996; Neville, et al., 2021; Patel, 2021; Stevens & Sonn, 2021). We also urge embracing the challenges and extensions of Fanon that have been articulated in response to his work, including serious debates around the feminist and Marxist readings and critiques of Fanon—i.e., the conflation of the racial subject with class (Robinson, 1993), the theoretical/political resonances between Fanon and Marxist‐Feminism (Bohrer, 2015), the liberation of Black and subaltern women within his project of New Humanism, and growing commitments to an “anti‐racist feminist practice that employs Fanon” (Harris & Johnson, 1996).…”