“…Building from these foundational models, we now have a slew of innovative and rich theories that attend to Black youths’ family, cognitive, and emotional processes (Anderson & Stevenson, 2019 ; Dunbar, Leerkes, Coard, Supple, & Calkins, 2016 ; Jones, Anderson, & Stevenson, 2021 ; Lozada, Riley, Catherine, & Brown, 2021 ; Smith‐Bynum, Anderson, Davis, Franco, & English, 2016 ), and that have social‐political and clinical application (Berger & Sarnyai, 2015 ; Carter, 2007 ; Hope, Hoggard, & Thomas, 2015 ; Saleem, Anderson, & Williams, 2020 ); for example, the conceptualization of discrimination as a social determinant of health (Paradies et al., 2015 ). The active engagement of scholarship in movements like Black Lives Matter (BLM) and the social‐political applicability of research is important to the relevance of developmental science to impact public health policy that betters the lives of Black youth and their families.…”