Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Justice as Intellectual and Moral Practice

Reframing policing as an intellectual and ethical practice requiring ongoing learning, cultural humility, and commitment to justice beyond mere law enforcement.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana understood justice as demanding continuous intellectual engagement with difficult questions about rights, identity, and power—not simple rule-following. This concept elevates policing beyond mechanical law enforcement to recognize it as fundamentally about creating conditions where all people can live with dignity and safety. Officers become practitioners of justice requiring ongoing intellectual development: studying the histories and cultures of communities they serve, examining their own biases and assumptions, learning from communities about what safety means, and committing to justice principles sometimes in tension with narrow legal interpretability. This shifts police training from technique-focused instruction to moral and intellectual formation. Police departments serve diverse societies, which demands that officers develop wisdom—culturally-grounded understanding of how their actions affect different communities, humility about the limits of their perspective, and genuine commitment to the wellbeing of those they encounter. Justice practiced across cultures requires treating policing as a reflective intellectual endeavor where officers continuously learn and grow, rather than a fixed profession delivering neutral services.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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