Recognition that children's rights violations stem from systems, not primarily from individual cruelty, requiring institutional and policy transformation.
Sor Juana's struggles were not incidental to a few cruel people but embedded in patriarchal, colonial structures denying women and Indigenous people intellectual authority. While individual kindness helps, it cannot overcome systemic barriers. Similarly, children's suffering often results from institutional design: schools that prioritize compliance over learning, courts that exclude children's voices, economic systems that exploit child labor, healthcare structures that override children's developing autonomy. This concept rejects frameworks reducing children's rights violations to bad individuals requiring better character. Instead, it identifies structural injustice requiring institutional redesign. An abusive school is not primarily a problem of one cruel teacher but of authoritarian architecture that permits abuse. Child labor reflects economic systems that commodify the vulnerable. Children's healthcare exclusion reflects institutional power imbalances. For effective children's rights work, this framework directs energy toward changing institutions—reforming schools, rewriting laws, restructuring care systems—rather than only addressing individual cases. It recognizes that systemic change is harder but necessary, requiring policy advocacy, institutional accountability, and transformation of how society organizes itself around children.
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