The practice of expressing grievances, articulating injustice through language, and using rhetoric as a tool for accountability and change.
Sor Juana used her pen to articulate the injustices she experienced and witnessed—the silencing of women, the hypocrisy of institutions, the denial of her rights. Her writings were acts of justice, naming what was wrong and demanding recognition. This concept applied to children means ensuring they have platforms, vocabulary, and safety to articulate their experiences of injustice. Children who cannot speak about abuse remain trapped; those without language for their experiences cannot seek help. Justice requires that children are heard, taken seriously, and supported in expressing what has happened to them. This includes teaching children the language of rights, emotions, and experiences. It means creating mechanisms—trusted adults, institutional channels, supportive communities—where children's articulation is received with respect. Sor Juana's rhetorical power came from her education and confidence. For children's rights, this means investing in communication skills, ensuring translation services for immigrant children, and designing child-responsive complaint mechanisms. Justice begins when the voiceless can finally speak and are genuinely heard.
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