Ensuring children have meaningful participation and influence in decisions affecting their lives, education, safety, and futures.
Sor Juana's voice was repeatedly silenced—she was told to accept decisions made for her, to obey authorities who claimed to know what was best. Yet she claimed her right to speak, to argue, to advocate for her own understanding and needs. Children's agency is similarly constrained: adults make decisions about their education, environment, medical care, and futures with minimal child input. True protection of children's rights requires genuine voice and agency. This means: age-appropriate participation in family decisions, student representation in school governance, children's involvement in policies affecting their communities, creation of safe channels for children to report abuse and be heard, and systems that treat children's preferences and reasoning as valid contributions rather than obstacles to adult plans. Voice without genuine power to influence outcomes is tokenism; true agency means children's perspectives actually shape decisions. Sor Juana's example shows that when people—including children—lack voice in decisions affecting them, injustice persists. Conversely, when children are empowered as agents in their own lives, they develop competence, responsibility, and moral consciousness that benefits entire communities.
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