“…These models include, among others, Community‐Based Participatory Research (Wallerstein, Duran, Oetzel, & Minkler, ), Tribal Participatory Research (Fisher & Ball, ), Two‐Eyed Seeing (Bartlett, Marshall, & Marshall, ), and Decolonizing Research (e.g., Smith, ). Articles in this special issue feature a variety of collaborative Indigenous community‐research arrangements, some spanning multiple decades (see Cwik et al., ; Kading & Walls, ; Rasmus, Charles, John, & Allen, ; Wendt et al., ), and they emphasize the centrality of relational context informing the strengths and weaknesses of these models for realizing the goals of each collaboration. Taken together, these works highlight exciting points of convergence between Community Psychology and many Indigenous peoples’ priorities while opening conversations within the field about the kinds of relationships that are needed to continue and improve upon in this work.…”