The strategic and principled act of refusing colonial demands, unjust policies, or extractive practices as a foundational expression of Indigenous agency and sovereignty.
Sor Juana's written refusal of her bishop, her renunciation of worldly life, and her reclamation of intellectual authority through silence and withdrawal model how refusal operates as philosophical and political resistance. For Indigenous peoples facing land dispossession, resource extraction, and cultural erasure, refusal becomes a core practice of sovereignty. Refusing to sign land treaties that diminish rights, refusing consent for mining or pipeline projects, refusing participation in systems that legitimize colonial occupation—these acts assert that Indigenous peoples are not passive subjects requiring external permission but agents with the power to say no. Refusal rejects the false choice between assimilation and marginalization. It claims the right to self-determination by rejecting frameworks imposed from outside. In land justice contexts, refusal operates as both immediate protection (blocking destructive projects) and principled assertion of the right to decide futures autonomously. It shifts power dynamics by centering Indigenous voice and choice rather than compromise or negotiation within colonialist terms.
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