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Concept
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Intersectional Identity and Police Encounters

Understanding how individuals hold multiple, overlapping identities that shape their vulnerability to policing and require nuanced, culturally-aware enforcement approaches.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana embodied multiple marginalized identities—female, intellectual, partially indigenous—and understood how these intersected to constrain her rights and opportunities. Applied to policing, this concept recognizes that individuals are not mono-dimensional; a person may simultaneously be an immigrant, a woman, LGBTQ+, disabled, or religious minority, each identity affecting how they experience and are perceived by police. Cultural competence in policing must account for these intersections rather than reducing people to single categories. An immigrant woman of color fleeing domestic violence has different police encounter needs than a male immigrant with prior arrests. Training must help officers recognize that their own unconscious biases interact across dimensions of identity, and that institutional policies may have compounded discriminatory effects. This framework demands individualized, culturally-sensitive decision-making that acknowledges people's full humanity rather than treating community members as stereotypical representatives of single identities.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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