Children's entitlement to be recognized as thinking beings worthy of respect, engagement, and inclusion in conversations about matters affecting them.
Sor Juana fought not only for access to books but for recognition as an intellectual peer—for the right to be taken seriously as a thinker despite societal attempts to disqualify her based on gender. Children face similar disqualification: treated as non-thinking, non-knowing beings whose perspectives are dismissed, whose questions are met with condescension, whose intellectual contributions are undervalued. The right to intellectual belonging means children deserve spaces where they are heard, engaged with respect, and recognized as active participants in meaning-making. This is essential for children's rights because when children's voices are excluded from decisions affecting them—in families, schools, justice systems, policy-making—their rights remain abstract rather than lived. Sor Juana's models of intellectual courage show what becomes possible when a person claims their belonging despite social exclusion. For children, intellectual belonging means education environments where diverse perspectives are welcomed, family conversations where children's ideas shape household decisions, and participatory rights where children's input on policies affecting them is genuinely solicited and valued. When children experience intellectual belonging, they develop the confidence and agency necessary to advocate for themselves and others.
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