Systematic investment in broad, critical education that empowers citizens to recognize corruption and resist manipulation.
Sor Juana's passionate advocacy for women's education reveals education as fundamentally political: it distributes power by distributing knowledge. Widespread ignorance benefits corrupt actors who rely on information asymmetries and public confusion. Conversely, populations with strong critical thinking skills, historical literacy, financial understanding, and civic knowledge become difficult to deceive or exploit. Education serves as anti-corruption infrastructure because it teaches people to recognize manipulation, verify claims, understand complex systems, and demand accountability. Sor Juana's own education—pursued against societal restriction—equipped her to articulate sophisticated critiques of injustice. Modern anti-corruption requires similar commitment: robust civics education, media literacy, financial transparency training, and support for public discourse. When education emphasizes questioning, evidence-evaluation, and ethical reasoning rather than mere obedience, citizens develop resistance to corruption's psychological tactics. Nations that treat education as essential infrastructure for honesty and accountability—not just economic productivity—build societies where corruption becomes riskier and less profitable.
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