The strategy of creating protected spaces for intellectual and personal freedom within and against larger systems of control, enabling limited autonomy under constraint.
Sor Juana's convent life was paradoxical: it was simultaneously a constraint imposed by limited options and a sanctuary that protected her intellectual freedom from even greater institutional demands. She negotiated within the system, using her position to carve out space for study, writing, and thought. She understood that perfect freedom might be impossible but that strategic positioning could expand autonomy significantly. This reflects a practical libertarian insight: real people rarely have access to ideal freedom; instead, they navigate systems seeking to maximize their liberty and property protection within constraints. Sanctuary-building—creating defended spaces for one's own projects and thinking—is a survival strategy that libertarian analysis must acknowledge. Applied to property and freedom, this concept recognizes that not all progress toward justice requires revolutionary transformation; sometimes protecting spaces within existing institutions is necessary and legitimate. However, it also warns against accepting permanent constraint: sanctuary is temporary negotiation, not permanent settlement. Libertarian justice must support both the creation of sanctuaries for persecuted people and the ongoing struggle to expand freedom beyond negotiated spaces, aiming ultimately toward systems where sanctuary is unnecessary.
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