Abstract
Black ecologies as a field remerged in the mid‐2000s to document the insurgent and otherwise practices of Black eco‐relations. Black ecologies historicize the ongoing reality that Black diasporic communities are most susceptible to the impacts of climate change, polluted air, soil, and waterways, and ecological calamities from hurricanes to landslides. Yet the field of Black ecologies is also capacious enough to examine how Black ecological knowledge(s) denote environmental futures and build otherwise worlds in the here and now.