Building distributed knowledge networks that resist deliberate disinformation campaigns and illuminate systemic climate injustice invisible in mainstream discourse.
Sor Juana wrote in a context of systematic suppression of women's intellectual contributions and Indigenous knowledge; she responded by asserting that collective, collaborative reasoning—not isolated authority—produces truth. Today, fossil fuel industries actively manufacture climate ignorance through disinformation, while mainstream institutions ignore systemic injustice embedded in climate breakdown. Collective intelligence practices counter this: climate justice networks that pool knowledge from scientists, Indigenous elders, frontline workers, and activists produce understanding unavailable in siloed institutions. This includes documenting fossil fuel crimes that go unreported in dominant media, mapping corporate supply chains that hide destruction, and building communication networks linking struggles across regions. Digital platforms, community radio, oral histories, and academic research combine to create counter-narratives. Sor Juana's insistence on the liberating power of shared intellectual work models how communities can collectively name reality despite institutional silencing, building the consciousness necessary for transformative climate action.
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