Communities' right to shape their own sustainable futures rather than having climate solutions imposed by distant powers.
Sor Juana's resistance to confinement within prescribed roles parallels communities resisting top-down climate policies that ignore local knowledge and autonomy. Climate justice requires that solutions emerge from communities' own visions of flourishing, not from wealthy nations or corporations dictating transitions. Indigenous peoples who steward land sustainably for millennia understand ecological resilience intimately; imposing industrial renewable solutions without their input repeats colonial patterns. Self-determination means Indigenous nations control their territories and carbon rights; local communities shape energy transitions affecting their lives; women's leadership in environmental decision-making is fundamental, not marginal. Sor Juana insisted on her intellectual autonomy despite immense pressure; climate-affected communities deserve equivalent respect for their environmental autonomy. This transforms climate action from a technical problem solved by experts into a justice issue where affected people direct their own futures.
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