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Concept
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The Silencing of Women as Structural Injustice

Recognition that systems which silence women's voices—whether through exclusion, discrediting, or forced obedience—constitute fundamental violations of fairness.

Juana
Why It Matters

The Church eventually forced Sor Juana to renounce her intellectual pursuits, claiming her scholarship violated vows of humility and obedience. This was not a personal dispute but a structural mechanism: institutions systematically discourage women from public thought and leadership. When women are systematically less likely to be published, believed, promoted, or heard, fairness is broken at its foundation. Every civilization that progressed toward justice had to dismantle the structures silencing half its population. Sor Juana's defiance—her insistence on continuing to write and think—was an act of justice-seeking. She understood that fairness requires not just treating individual women better, but transforming institutions that systematize women's exclusion from intellectual life. Modern fairness demands examining whose voices are amplified, whose are dismissed, whose are never given platform. The systematic silencing of women, whether through law, custom, or institutional pressure, is injustice embedded in structures. Addressing it requires recognizing how deeply oppression penetrates and deliberately reconstructing institutions to amplify what has been suppressed.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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