Using education and information access to empower communities and officers to resist unjust systems and demand equitable policing.
Sor Juana's belief that knowledge liberates individuals resonates powerfully in policing across cultures. When communities understand their legal rights, police tactics, and cultural histories, they cannot be arbitrarily dominated. When officers understand the epistemologies of communities they serve—their knowledge systems, values, and justice traditions—they police more effectively and humanely. Ignorance enables abuse; knowledge enables resistance and justice. This concept challenges training models that keep officers ignorant of cultural contexts. It demands that communities have access to information about police practices, statistics, and accountability mechanisms. Sor Juana's intellectual work itself was an act of resistance against oppressive systems. Similarly, literacy programs, legal education, and cultural competency training are not luxury additions to policing—they are essential infrastructure for justice. When knowledge is democratized across cultures, power becomes less arbitrary and more responsive to human dignity.
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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