The right of Indigenous peoples to own, control, and determine the use of their own knowledge systems, intellectual traditions, and cultural wisdom.
Sor Juana's relentless pursuit of knowledge and her defense of women's intellectual authority illuminate how marginalized communities must claim sovereignty over their own epistemologies. Indigenous knowledge systems—from ecological management to spiritual practices—represent centuries of intellectual labor that colonizers systematically appropriated and erased. Drawing on Sor Juana's insistence that the mind has no colonial borders, intellectual sovereignty asserts that Indigenous peoples possess inherent rights to their traditional knowledge, sacred teachings, and innovations without external extraction or commercialization. This framework challenges the Western monopoly on what counts as legitimate knowledge and recognizes Indigenous intellectual traditions as sophisticated systems deserving protection, respect, and autonomous governance. Applied to land justice, this means Indigenous communities control research on their territories, benefit from bioprospecting, and determine how their knowledge informs environmental stewardship and policy.
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