Abstract
<jats:p>Key Concepts in the Discipline of Black Psychology is a rigorous disciplinary reference work that documents the foundational concepts, theories, frameworks, methodologies, historical developments, and intellectual traditions that define Black Psychology as a field of study. Designed to support scholarly inquiry, teaching, research, clinical practice, and curriculum development, this volume provides an essential conceptual foundation for understanding the psychological experiences, cultural realities, mental health outcomes, and resilience of people of African descent across the diaspora. As mental health disparities, cultural competence, racial trauma, identity development, community wellness, and health equity continue to shape contemporary research and professional practice, the need for culturally grounded psychological scholarship as part of the psychological academic canon is paramount. This volume addresses that need by providing a comprehensive reference framework rooted in African-centered and Black psychological traditions while engaging contemporary conversations in psychology, counseling, education, public health, and social work. Ideal for academic libraries, HBCUs, counseling programs, psychology departments, Africana Studies programs, and interdisciplinary research collections, Key Concepts in the Discipline of Black Psychology serves as both an introductory resource for undergraduate students and a scholarly reference for graduate students, faculty, clinicians, therapists, counselors, and researchers. The text supports coursework in Black Psychology, African American Psychology, Multicultural Counseling, Mental Health Studies, Human Development, Educational Psychology, Social Work, Counseling Psychology, Africana Studies, and Cultural Studies. Vol. 2 of THE BLACK LEXICON SERIES, this glossary of terms functions as an intellectual infrastructure resource—preserving the language, concepts, and knowledge systems necessary for the continued growth, rigor, and institutional advancement of Black Psychology within the academy and the broader mental health ecosystem.</jats:p>