Protecting shared natural resources and collective knowledge from being reduced to commodities bought and sold by powerful interests.
Sor Juana resisted attempts to control her intellectual output and ideas as private property, asserting that knowledge serves the common good. Contemporary climate justice faces similar pressures as corporations attempt to commodify solutions—carbon markets trading emission rights, biopiracy patents on Indigenous plant knowledge, water privatization in drought-stricken regions. These market mechanisms treat Earth's regenerative capacity and accumulated wisdom as tradeable goods, allowing wealthy actors to profit while ecosystems collapse and communities suffer. Sor Juana's insistence on intellectual freedom and circulation of ideas models defense of commons—understanding that some things must remain outside market logic because they belong to humanity collectively. Climate justice requires resisting false solutions that treat nature as a financial asset to be managed through markets. It demands protecting water, air, biodiversity, and traditional ecological knowledge as commons rather than commodities. This means supporting Indigenous sovereignty over territories, opposing land grabs and resource extraction, and building economic models that recognize planetary limits and collective stewardship rather than infinite growth and private profit.
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