Using rigorous intellectual engagement and continuous learning to dismantle the stereotypes and assumptions that drive discriminatory policing.
Sor Juana's life work was intellectual cultivation—for herself and through her writing, for others. She believed education could expand consciousness and challenge received prejudices. Applied to policing, this means systemic investment in officer education that goes beyond a single training day. Officers need ongoing exposure to history (colonialism, slavery, segregation and their legacies in policing), psychology (implicit bias, trauma response), community-specific knowledge, and arts and humanities that build empathy. Diverse hiring matters, but education of existing forces matters equally. When police departments treat education as central to professional identity—like medicine or law—the intellectual resources to examine one's own biases develop. Communities too benefit from educational partnerships that explain policing from critical perspectives. This concept positions education not as fixing bad officers but as professional development that makes better judgment possible.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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