The principle that fairness must address how multiple identity dimensions create compounded, interlocking forms of injustice.
Sor Juana faced overlapping barriers: she was a woman in a male-dominated intellectual sphere, of mixed racial ancestry in a colonial caste system, economically dependent in a patriarchal society, and eventually silenced by religious authority. No single framework captured her full situation. This concept recognizes that fairness cannot be achieved by addressing gender alone, or race alone, or class alone—the intersections matter profoundly. People at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities face distinct injustices that single-axis approaches miss. Civilizations advancing toward fairness learned to see how oppressions interlock and compound. Applied today, intersectional fairness means designing policies that account for how gender, race, class, sexuality, disability, and other dimensions combine; listening especially to those with multiple marginalized identities; and avoiding solutions that help some while harming others.
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