Recognizing enforced silence and suppressed speech as themselves forms of corruption that enable all other abuses.
Sor Juana's struggles against censorship—the suppression of her writings, the demands for her silence, the restriction of her intellectual pursuits—reveal how silencing is a form of corruption. It corrupts knowledge, justice, and human dignity. In institutional corruption, perpetrators depend on victims and witnesses remaining silent through fear, intimidation, or institutional mechanisms that punish speech. This concept identifies silencing strategies—legal intimidation, defamation threats, job loss, exile—as anti-corruption targets. Fighting corruption means creating cultures where speaking truth is safe and honored. It requires legal protections against SLAPP suits, safe reporting mechanisms, support for victims who come forward, and cultural shifts that celebrate whistleblowers rather than shame them. Sor Juana's own publication and circulation of her defense against the Archbishop broke the enforced silence—an act of anti-corruption in itself. Societies that address corruption must prioritize freedom and protection of speech as foundational.
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