Periagoge
Concept
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The Doctrine of Necessary Disobedience

Strategic non-compliance with unjust legal systems as an intellectual and moral obligation, questioning whether international law deserves universal obedience.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life exemplified intelligent resistance to oppressive institutional authority, never fully submitting despite pressure and consequences. This concept establishes that obedience to international law cannot be presumed as ethically mandatory when that law perpetuates injustice or serves hegemonic interests. The doctrine of necessary disobedience recognizes that blind compliance with international legal frameworks—especially those inherited from colonial systems—may constitute complicity in structural violence. International law's limits become visible when we acknowledge that legitimacy requires moral alignment with justice, not merely formal authority. Sor Juana's intellectual courage suggests that those who understand how laws perpetuate injustice bear responsibility to resist and reimagine legal systems. This concept inverts the traditional presumption: rather than assuming all law deserves obedience and requiring justification for dissent, it presumes that unjust law requires justification for compliance. Nations and intellectuals following this tradition critique international law from within, refusing false choices between lawlessness and submission.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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The Examined Path Through International law and its limits
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