Understanding how power dynamics obscure or validate different groups' experiences and claims to legitimacy in policing.
Sor Juana wrote from a position of marginalization—as a woman, a Creole, an intellectual challenging authority—yet demanded recognition of her intellect and voice. In multicultural policing, recognition politics matter profoundly: marginalized communities often experience law enforcement as non-recognition of their humanity and rights. Sor Juana's strategy of arguing for her legitimacy while engaging with dominant institutions models how communities can assert their rights within policing systems. Police departments must actively recognize the epistemic validity of community knowledge about safety, harm, and justice. When officers understand policing not as imposing order but as recognizing diverse communities' right to self-determination, accountability becomes possible. This shifts policing from control to dialogue.
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