Nations and communities must determine their own development paths free from colonial extraction, respecting both human rights and planetary boundaries.
Sor Juana fought for her intellectual autonomy within constrained circumstances, refusing to surrender her right to pursue knowledge on her own terms. This principle extends to climate justice through the concept of self-determined development: the right of Global South nations to chart sustainable futures without neo-colonial impositions. Rich countries cannot demand poor nations remain undeveloped while they maintain high-consumption lifestyles. Yet genuine development must honor ecological limits and indigenous land rights. Climate justice means wealthy nations reducing emissions dramatically, supporting technology transfer, and providing climate finance—allowing developing nations to leapfrog destructive industrialization patterns. Sor Juana's insistence on intellectual self-determination mirrors communities' rights to pursue development aligned with their values, cultures, and environmental realities, not external mandates.
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