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This editorial introduction to the second volume of Gradient Voices in Education returns to the concept of gradient voices as a way of understanding identities, experiences, and expressions shaped through movement, contradiction, relationality, and uneven recognition. Rather than treating marginalized voices as simply additive to existing conversations about diversity, this volume positions them as central to understanding how education organizes, naturalizes, and sustains inequality. Situated within a political moment marked by intensified attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion, antiracist teaching, queer and trans life, and historical truth-telling, the special issue examines how educational institutions continue to operate through racialized, gendered, colonial, and linguistic regimes of recognition. The stories in this volume refuse to separate educational critique from lived complexity. Across critical autoethnography, collaborative autoethnography, oral history, case study, testimonio, phenomenological reflection, poetry, playlist, and Indigenous storywork, contributors show how students, educators, and scholars navigate harm, build relation, reclaim voice, and imagine otherwise within and against institutional constraints. As editors, we argue that these manuscripts are not supplemental conversations about diversity, but indispensable analyses of education itself. Together, they expose the fault lines of schooling and affirm that gradient voices are central to understanding what education has been, what it continues to reproduce, and what it might yet become.