The psychological and social pressure to deny one's authentic self and talents to conform to institutional expectations—a subtle corruption of human integrity.
Sor Juana was pressured to renounce her intellect, her ambition, and her voice to fit the role assigned to her sex and position. This pressure to betray oneself for institutional acceptance is a form of corruption—of the person. Workplaces and institutions often demand conformity that requires self-denial: an accountant pressured to ignore fraud to fit the team; a scientist silencing doubts about a favored hypothesis; a manager hiding her values to advance. Anticorruption culture must legitimize authenticity and create space for individuals to maintain integrity without sacrificing belonging. This includes diverse representation (so not all must conform to one model), explicit protection for dissenters, and leadership that models vulnerability. Sor Juana's refusal to fully conform, her insistence on being fully herself, becomes a model for institutional cultures that protect authenticity as a form of corruption resistance.
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