The inseparable connection between access to knowledge and the pursuit of justice, where ignorance enables harm and understanding enables restoration.
Sor Juana's entire life's work demonstrated that knowledge and justice are inseparable. Those without access to education, critical thinking, and information cannot recognize injustice or advocate for themselves. In examining punitive versus restorative approaches, this nexus reveals a fundamental flaw in punishment-focused systems: they often keep people ignorant about why harm occurred, how to prevent it, or how to truly heal. Restorative justice in Sor Juana's tradition prioritizes educating all parties—victims, perpetrators, and communities—about the nature of harm, its roots, and pathways to restoration. Understanding why someone caused harm is essential for genuine accountability and transformation. Similarly, victims need knowledge and resources to articulate their needs and participate meaningfully in restorative processes. This concept insists that justice processes must be educational, building capacity for understanding, critical reflection, and informed participation. Without knowledge, restoration remains incomplete; with it, communities can address not just individual incidents but systemic conditions that enable harm.
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