Protecting children's capacity to say 'no,' resist unjust demands, and practice civil disobedience as essential to autonomy and justice.
Sor Juana's strategic non-compliance—her refusal to abandon intellectual work despite institutional pressure, her written rebuttals to authority, her ultimate silence as protest—demonstrates that the right to refuse is central to dignity and justice. Yet children are uniquely pressured toward compliance: obedience is culturally valorized, and resistance is punished as defiance. True children's rights must protect not just consent but also refusal—the right to say no to hugs, to question authority, to reject harmful rules, to practice civil disobedience against injustice. This challenges parenting and educational paradigms built on unquestioning obedience. For children in systems of abuse or exploitation, the right to refusal becomes survival-critical; for all children, it's essential to developing moral agency and justice consciousness. Applied frameworks include teaching children to recognize their own 'no,' supporting them when they refuse harm, explicitly protecting refusal from punishment, and modeling how adults can also refuse unjust systems. This transforms compliance from a virtue into a choice, and resistance from a defect into a right.
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