Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Collective Responsibility and Systemic Change

Understanding that ethical consumption is incomplete without advocacy for systemic change that holds corporations and governments accountable for justice.

Juana
Why It Matters

While Sor Juana's intellectual work was individual, her commitment was fundamentally connected to broader justice for her communities—women, the marginalized, and the intellectually oppressed. Similarly, ethical consumption cannot rest solely in individual purchasing choices; it requires collective action for systemic change. Individual consumers cannot force corporations to treat workers justly or protect environments; this requires regulation, transparency laws, labor protections, and corporate accountability. Ethical consumption becomes a foundation for advocacy: it is both an expression of values and a starting point for demanding more. It means supporting fair trade initiatives that change how commerce works, voting for policies that protect workers and environments, holding corporations accountable through shareholder action and public pressure, and building communities of practice around ethical consumption. Sor Juana's legacy teaches that individual intellectual integrity and collective justice work are inseparable. True ethical consumption transcends personal purity to become participation in movements that transform the systems making ethical choices necessary in the first place.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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