Using ethical consumption as a domain where marginalized communities can exercise autonomy and self-determination in economic systems.
Sor Juana fought throughout her life against systems that denied women agency and intellectual autonomy. She recognized that power operates through controlling what people can know, do, and choose. Ethical consumption offers oppressed and marginalized communities one arena for reclaiming agency within capitalist systems. Supporting Black-owned businesses, Indigenous-led enterprises, and women-founded companies channels resources toward those historically excluded from economic power. Fair-trade cooperatives give producers in developing nations genuine voice and decision-making authority over their work. Consumer cooperatives operate on democratic principles, giving members collective control. These choices acknowledge that consumption can be a form of self-determination when structured around justice. While systemic change requires more than individual purchasing, ethical consumption practices can strengthen communities' economic independence and influence. Sor Juana understood that intellectual freedom requires material foundations; ethical consumption recognizes that community autonomy requires economic structures that respect dignity and enable self-direction.
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