(Bass et al., 2026), speaks directly to the Academic Training and Development element. The authors introduce the Racial-Equity Knowledge, Beliefs, and Mindsets (R-EKBM) Survey alongside a differentiated professional development model aligned to educators demonstrated levels of readiness. A central strength of the R-EKBM is that it is deeply rooted in cultivating critical consciousness. The authors' questions-such as From what sources have you developed your knowledge and understanding of racial equity? and Do teachers have a responsibility to discuss racism and racial discrimination with all students?-open what might be described as a vortex of soul and being, inviting educators to reflect and think epistemologically outside of one's ego. Rather than reducing equity to compliance, the authors' description of the instrument creates space for educators and leaders to interrogate the origins of their knowing. In doing so, the study offers scalable infrastructure for cultivating racially literate and socially just leadership while underscoring that equity-centered practice must be intentionally assessed, developed, and sustained.The second manuscript, Succession Planning for Community-Engaged Leaders: Culture, Context and Continuity in Equity-Oriented Leadership (White et al., 2025), challenges colonial technocratic models of succession planning that privilege individualistic and competitive leadership logics. Building on the Dynamic Leadership Succession (DLS) model (Peters, 2011;Peters-Hawkins et al, 2018), the authors argue that equity-oriented leadership is rooted in the collective, and is contextualized via communityengaged, advocacy-oriented, and culturally responsive leadership practices. They outline how community-engaged leaders deeply understand and uplift culture, context, justice, and distributed leadership practices. This article deepens our collective understanding of the importance of organizational context by emphasizing that districts must intentionally preserve and sustain leadership orientations grounded in community engagement. Succession planning, in this formulation, becomes an act of cultural stewardship-an effort to maintain collective commitments to justice across leadership transitions.If the first two manuscripts illuminate how equity can be cultivated and sustained, the third manuscript, The Costs of Diversifying the Principal Workforce: Black Jobs, Black Principal(ing), and Sustainability (Stanley, 2025) refuses abstraction and centers the racialized and deeply human costs borne by Black principals in the name of diversification. Through qualitative inquiry in predominantly white districts, Stanley documents anti-Black resistance, organizational unreadiness, unsustainable workloads, and persistent racialized scrutiny-conditions that render Black principals both hyper-visible and insufficiently supported. The study reframes diversification as incomplete-and extractive-when districts pursue representation without transforming the racialized structures in which leaders labor. From a critical lens, this work reveals how Black principals are often asked to carry institutions on their backs while absorbing the violence those institutions refuse to confront. Stanley ultimately calls for reconceptualizing the principalship itself toward humanity, insisting that equity-centered succession planning must move beyond recruitment to include protection, care, structural transformation, and longterm sustainability. (Lewis-Durham et al., 2025), situates leadership pipelines within contested and often hostile state policy terrains. Through critical discourse analysis of North Carolina's equity initiatives amid the unsettled legal landscape of Leandro v. North Carolina State Board of Education, the authors show that competing definitions of equity reflect struggles over power and legitimacy rather than neutral policy debate. Political hostility and legislative retrenchment create fragile conditions for equitycentered reform. Yet the study also highlights local democratic agency, particularly those with explicit equity policies, were more likely than the state to articulate clear commitments to equity. Even within restrictive environments, local actors assert moral clarity. Therefore, succession planning not only unfolds within racialized policy ecosystems, but is also shaped by districts that push back against state retrenchment, underscoring that organizational context is inseparable from political context.Collectively, the four contributions advance equity frameworks that support the ecosystem of principal workforce development. They demonstrate that equity should be embedded in preparation, operationalized through coaching and mentoring systems, supported by district infrastructures, and defended within contested political environments. Succession planning requires equity-centered coherence across levels that link certification programs, professional development systems, district hiring practices, supervisory supports, and state policy landscapes. Notably, each manuscript concludes on a hopeful note. Yet this hope in this is not just an abstract optimism. In the words of Mariame Kaba (2021) "hope is discipline." In this vein, hope is operationalized through validated tools, structured mentorship, intentional policy design, and sustained advocacy. In this sense, hope becomes a practice embedded in systems rather than a sentiment deferred to the future. The articles suggest that advancing diversity in the principalship demands not episodic reform, but durable institutional systemic commitment, community power, and systematic hope.For researchers, this body of work signals the need for longitudinal studies on the sustainability of principals of color, more robust analyses of how state policies shape diversification outcomes, and deeper inquiry into how integrated data systems can track and support advancement pathways for leaders from marginalized backgrounds. For practitioners and policymakers, it underscores the necessity of aligning preparation, support, and organizational culture with explicit equity goals.Succession planning is often framed as a response to turnover. This Research Topic reframes it as an opportunity for hope, education justice, and transformation. By centering diversity, sustainability, and equity-oriented leadership practices, the contributing authors illuminate pathways toward leadership systems that better reflect and serve the communities public schools are meant to support. In doing so, they remind us that continuity in leadership must be matched by continuity in justice.
Grooms et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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