Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intersectional Identity Awareness in Enforcement

Recognizing that individuals hold multiple, overlapping identities shaping their experience of policing and requiring nuanced, context-specific approaches.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's identity—woman, intellectual, nun, mestiza, colonial subject—created complex positioning requiring navigation of multiple systems simultaneously. In policing, this concept demands officers understand that people aren't one-dimensional: a person is simultaneously a parent, immigrant, religious practitioner, tenant, and community member. Policing approaches must account for these intersecting identities and how they shape vulnerability, values, and needs. A woman from a religious immigrant community experiences policing differently than a documented male citizen from the same neighborhood. Intersectional awareness means avoiding essentialist assumptions and recognizing that cultural practices, trust levels, and safety concerns vary across identity intersections. Officers should adjust approaches based on this awareness: considering language needs alongside gender dynamics, understanding how immigration status compounds other vulnerabilities, and recognizing that different community members within the same neighborhood have distinct relationships to police. This prevents one-size-fits-all policing and creates space for approaches honoring people's full, complex identities.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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