“…Empirically, a positive perception of one's ethnic heritage, and a shared sense of belonging and membership in a group, is integral to minority youths’ development of a positive self‐concept, psychosocial adjustment, and well‐being (Jackson & Lassiter, ; Quintana, ; Schwartz, Côté, & Arnett, ; Smith & Silva, ). The aforementioned findings and evidence regarding the role of ethnic identity in Hispanic and African American health outcomes (Burnett‐Zeigler, Bohnert, & Ilgen, ; Castro, Stein, & Bentler, ; Forster, Grigsby, Soto, Sussman, & Unger, ; Schwartz, Zamboanga, Weisskirch, & Wang, ; Umaña‐Taylor & Updegraff, ; Walker, Wingate, Obasi, & Joiner, ) have established the centrality of sociocultural processes in health and resilience (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, ; Ungar, ). Although research suggests positive ethnic identity can mitigate the association between sociocultural stressors and SI and SA (Cheref, Talavera, & Walker, ; O'donnell, O'donnell, Wardlaw, & Stueve, ; Polanco‐Roman & Miranda, ), this construct has not been studied in conjunction with risk factors such as familial incarceration to determine whether these protective effects extend beyond sociocultural stressors (Haskins, Amorim, & Mingo, ).…”