Feminism has had a sometimes strained relationship with individual freedom: although it has typically been animated by a willingness to liberate women from masculine domination, from the moment it has sought to extend this liberation across cultures or national borders, it has been accused of perpetuating another kind of domination, namely, an imperialist domination. What are we to think of this tension? Is it impossible for a feminist to be a cosmopolitan without being an imperialist? This paper argues that the main protagonists in this debate cannot but implicitly acknowledge the universal value of individual freedom. Drawing on the Kantian duty of “rightful honor”, it also argues that this value places limits on what women are morally authorised to consent to, and derivatively, on the socio-relational environment in which they may legitimately find themselves. Correlatively, it suggests that by insisting on the preservation of one’s juridical personality, this duty also allows us to envisage a feminism that is cosmopolitan without being imperialist.