The right of communities, especially Indigenous and marginalized peoples, to determine their own relationship with land and resources without external domination.
Sor Juana's struggle for intellectual autonomy parallels Indigenous communities' fight for ecological self-determination against colonial resource extraction. Her assertion of the right to pursue knowledge independently mirrors communities defending traditional ecological knowledge and land stewardship practices. Climate justice requires recognizing that those least responsible for emissions—Indigenous peoples, Global South nations, poor communities—possess legitimate authority over their territories and futures. Sor Juana's refusal to surrender her intellectual agency models how communities must resist external imposition of development models or climate solutions that ignore local wisdom. True climate action respects the sovereignty of those most affected by environmental degradation, honoring their decision-making power over land use, resource management, and adaptation strategies. Self-determination becomes both a justice principle and practical pathway to sustainable solutions grounded in place-based knowledge.
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