Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Cultural Humility as Professional Practice

A continuous commitment to self-examination, power recognition, and community partnership that goes beyond cultural competency training.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana demonstrated intellectual humility—the recognition that one's own perspective is limited and requires engagement with others' viewpoints. In policing, cultural humility moves beyond one-time training to become an ongoing practice of officers examining their own biases, acknowledging power differentials, and viewing community members as teachers. This means admitting when you don't understand a cultural practice, asking genuine questions, and remaining open to correction. Officers practicing cultural humility don't position themselves as experts on communities; instead, they develop relationships enabling learning. This requires police departments to build long-term community partnerships, create feedback mechanisms, and evaluate officers on relational competence—not just performance metrics. Cultural humility recognizes that cross-cultural policing demands perpetual growth, not mastery, and creates space for both officers and communities to co-develop safer approaches that honor dignity across difference.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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