A conception of justice centered not on punishment but on the restoration of full human dignity, intellectual authority, and social recognition for those systematically denied them.
Sor Juana's work sought not revenge against her oppressors but recognition of women's intellectual capacity, legitimacy, and rights. Justice in her framework meant a world in which women could study, think, and contribute without apology. This concept reframes justice away from retributive models toward restorative ones focused on dignity and recognition. In intersectional practice, this means justice work asks: What would it look like for this person or community to be fully recognized as they are? What systems of respect, resource, and authority would affirm their humanity? Rather than centering perpetrators' punishment, the concept orients toward the transformation of systems so that all people—particularly those with intersecting marginalized identities—can develop intellectually, exercise agency, and contribute their gifts. Justice restores what oppression denied: a sense of inherent worth, access to tools for self-determination, and participation in shaping collective knowledge and futures.
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