Social and cultural recognition of corruption as shameful creates accountability when legal systems fail.
Sor Juana worked within and against her society's collective values, trying to reshape what her community considered honorable and shameful. She understood that formal punishment matters less than whether a community collectively recognizes certain behavior as incompatible with integrity. In corruption fighting, legal mechanisms alone are insufficient—systems need cultural transformation where corruption is understood as dishonorable. This operates through multiple channels: public recognition of integrity, social cost to known corrupt actors, celebration of whistleblowers and reformers, and cultural narratives that make corruption seem shameful rather than inevitable or clever. Practical approaches include award programs honoring integrity, truth commissions that publicly name abuses, community forums where corruption harms are acknowledged, and media narratives celebrating reform. This cultural work is slow but deep—it changes what people are willing to do and accept. Juana's legacy suggests that corruption cannot be purely externally policed; communities must collectively decide it's incompatible with their values. When that shift happens, formal accountability mechanisms find fertile ground.
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