The practice of recognizing and valuing diverse voices and knowledge perspectives to prevent corrupted single narratives.
Sor Juana embodied epistemic justice—her work as a woman intellectual challenged who was deemed a valid knower in her time. Corruption often relies on monopolized narratives: one official story, one approved expert, one center of authority. By shutting out alternative voices, corrupt systems avoid scrutiny and contradiction. Anti-corruption frameworks strengthen when they include diverse epistemic communities—different professions, genders, regions, backgrounds, economic positions. Each brings distinct knowledge and blindspots. Women in oversight roles catch different corruption patterns; marginalized communities identify systemic abuse; technical experts spot financial schemes. Sor Juana's insistence on intellectual contribution from positions of social exclusion shows how expanding who we listen to strengthens truth-seeking. Institutions with diverse boards, advisory structures, and decision-making power show lower corruption. This framework treats intellectual inclusion not as charity but as structural necessity for integrity.
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