Children's autonomy right to resist prescribed identities, expectations, and predetermined life paths based on their characteristics.
Society assigns children roles—the dutiful daughter, the athlete son, the quiet disabled child, the troublemaker poor kid. Sor Juana refused her assigned role as obedient woman-servant and insisted on her identity as intellectual. This concept asserts children's right to question and refuse the identities imposed upon them. A child should not be imprisoned in expectations based on gender, appearance, family history, or social position. Refusal is itself a form of freedom and justice. For children's rights, this means protecting space for self-discovery, resisting stereotyping, and allowing children to diverge from prescribed paths. It means a working-class child can pursue art, a quiet child can express boldness, a girl can resist femininity. Implementation requires listening to children's own sense of identity rather than projecting roles onto them, challenging institutional systems that enforce conformity, and creating flexibility in expectations. This right acknowledges that children are becoming selves and deserve freedom to shape that becoming rather than conform to predetermined molds society presses upon them.
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