“…Second and concurrent to what we saw in the legal field, CRT also ushered in a significant turn from implied race vis-à-vis colorblind multiculturalism towards an explicit naming of race, racism, and racialized citizenship in social studies scholarship (Howard, 2004; Marshall et al, 2016; Navarro & Howard, 2017; Tyson, 2003). Following the collective call to apply a CRT lens to social studies curriculum, professional spaces, policy, and research, social studies education scholars began to move away from the multicultural paradigm and instead foreground critical theories and frameworks explicitly centered on race (Busey, in press). In addition to CRT, scholars also draw from Black feminist thought, postcolonial thought, queer theory and sexuality studies, and critical whiteness studies (Hawkman & Shear, 2020; Mayo, 2013; Sabzalian, 2019; Crowley & Smith, 2015; Vickery, 2015, 2016, 2017; Woodson, 2017a).…”