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Concept
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Cultural Translation and Mutual Intelligibility

The capacity to translate between different cultural frameworks so that all parties understand each other's reasoning and values.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana operated at the intersection of indigenous, Spanish, Catholic, and intellectual traditions, developing sophisticated abilities to move between worldviews while maintaining her integrity. She exemplified cultural translation—not abandonment of identity, but strategic communication across difference. Effective cross-cultural policing requires this same skill: officers must understand that a gesture, a silence, a form of address, or a style of resistance may mean something different across cultures. What appears defiant in one cultural context may be respectful in another; what seems threatening may be a survival strategy learned in a different institutional context. Police agencies can develop this capacity through genuine cultural education (not stereotype-based training), by hiring officers from communities they serve, and by creating feedback mechanisms where community members correct officers' misinterpretations in real-time. Sor Juana's intellectual humility—her willingness to study and learn—models the attitude necessary for true cultural translation rather than mere cultural performance.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
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