Treating unequal access to knowledge, education, and intellectual resources as a systemic injustice that violates children's rights.
Sor Juana's access to books, mentors, and intellectual communities was severely constrained by her gender and colonial context, yet she persisted in acquiring knowledge through every available means. Access is fundamentally a justice issue: children born into poverty, marginalized communities, or discriminatory systems face systematic exclusion from intellectual resources that wealthier or privileged children take for granted. This concept frames educational inequality not as unfortunate but as rights violation. It demands examination of who has access to quality teachers, libraries, technology, mentorship, and spaces for intellectual growth. Access inequities compound over time—a child excluded from early literacy development falls further behind, limiting future opportunities. Rights-based approaches to children's access include funding equity, diverse representation in curricula, free library services, and ensuring no child is denied intellectual development based on geography, economics, disability, or identity. Sor Juana's desperate hunger for books and learning—and her eventual suppression—illuminates how access denial is a tool of social control.
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