The fundamental right to access, understand, and contribute to knowledge about environmental harms affecting one's community, following Sor Juana's defense of intellectual pursuit.
Sor Juana fought fiercely for the right to think, study, and speak freely despite institutional barriers. Environmental justice demands this same intellectual access: communities bearing pollution burdens must have the right to understand toxicology, epidemiology, and policy without gatekeeping by experts or corporations. This concept recognizes that environmental injustice persists partly through knowledge suppression—when low-income neighborhoods lack data about air quality, soil contamination, or health impacts. Sor Juana's insistence on women's intellectual capacity mirrors marginalized communities' claims to environmental literacy and epistemic authority. Applied practice: establishing community science programs, accessible toxicology education, and genuine knowledge-sharing partnerships where affected residents become co-investigators rather than passive subjects of environmental study.
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