“…In the study of emerging adulthood in particular, there is great potential for further public engagement among scholars to address important social issues, especially those that marginalize and disadvantage certain subsets of emerging adults. Articles in this journal and presentations at the Society for the Study of Emerging Adult conferences explore topics such as navigation of the transition to adulthood (e.g., Young et al, 2015), vulnerabilities in emerging adult mental health (e.g., G. M. Ferguson & Adams, 2016), how emerging adults negotiate social services (e.g., Greeson, 2013), discrimination experienced and expressed by emerging adults from different social groups (e.g., Radmacher & Azmitia, 2013), experiences of sexual violence in emerging adulthood (e.g., Longmore, Manning, Copp, & Giordano, 2016), and civic engagement among emerging adults themselves (e.g., Nario-Redmond & Oleson, 2016). Indeed, in their 2016 article, Abo-Zena and Pavalow specifically detail the value of using participatory action research to advance the study of emerging adulthood.…”