Treating ecological systems and community wisdom as shared inheritances to be protected collectively.
Sor Juana engaged knowledge as something to be cultivated, shared, and protected rather than enclosed. Climate justice requires similar orientation toward ecological commons—water, soil, atmosphere, forests—as living systems sustaining all beings, not private property for extraction. Indigenous communities have long defended commons through collective stewardship, maintaining biodiversity and resilience through practices refined across generations. Capitalist enclosure of commons—land grabs, water privatization, seed monopolies—drives climate crisis while impoverishing communities. Protecting commons means supporting Indigenous land rights and collective governance, resisting privatization schemes, and recognizing that ecological health depends on treating nature as living kin requiring respect rather than resources for profit. Sor Juana's intellectual generosity—her sharing of ideas despite institutional hoarding—models how climate justice requires commons-based thinking: knowledge shared freely, ecosystems protected collectively, resources managed for all beings' thriving rather than concentrated wealth.
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