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Concept
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The Scholar-Advocate Police Model

A policing approach where officers function as educated scholars of the communities they serve, continuously studying cultural contexts before enforcing laws.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana exemplified the scholar-advocate who used intellectual rigor to challenge injustice, combining knowledge acquisition with advocacy for the marginalized. A scholar-advocate police model requires officers to approach communities as ongoing subjects of study rather than subjects of control, developing deep cultural competency before enforcement actions. This means requiring officers to engage with community histories, philosophical traditions, linguistic nuances, and spiritual practices as serious knowledge domains worthy of rigorous study. Rather than one-time 'cultural sensitivity' training, this model institutionalizes continuous learning, creating systems where officers in a precinct become genuine scholars of neighborhood epistemologies, histories, and values. The scholar-advocate framework positions police as humble learners rather than authorities, fundamentally reframing the power dynamic. When officers understand themselves as advocates for justice defined by community intellectual frameworks rather than external metrics, enforcement becomes rooted in deeper understanding and communities experience police presence as informed rather than imperialist.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
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