A framework asserting that consumers have a fundamental right to transparent information about how and where products are made, rooted in justice and dignity.
Sor Juana fought throughout her life for the right to education and intellectual access—fundamental rights she saw as essential to human dignity. This principle extends naturally to ethical consumption: we cannot make truly just choices without knowing the reality behind what we buy. The right to know your supply chain means demanding transparency from corporations about labor practices, environmental impact, and material sourcing. This is not mere consumer preference but a matter of justice. When companies obscure their supply chains, they deny consumers the knowledge needed for moral agency and deny workers the visibility their labor deserves. Sor Juana's insistence on truth-seeking as a basic human entitlement justifies our demand that corporations provide the information we need to consume ethically and to honor the humanity of those who create what we use.
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