Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Institutional Accountability Through Transparency

The practice of making institutional decision-making, finances, and processes visible to public scrutiny as a foundational corruption prevention mechanism.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life illustrates how institutions operating in secrecy become corrupted—the Church's institutional opacity enabled abuses that went unchecked. Transparency is not bureaucratic performance; it is structural medicine for corruption. When decisions are made behind closed doors, budgets are hidden, and processes are opaque, corruption becomes rational for those in power—the probability of consequence approaches zero. Mandatory transparency—public budgets, disclosed conflicts of interest, visible decision-making processes, accessible records—changes the incentive structure. Corrupt actors fear exposure; transparent systems make corruption risky and difficult. This concept applies across sectors: government agencies publishing spending data, corporations disclosing lobbying expenditures, nonprofits making financials public, and institutions documenting how decisions are made. Sor Juana's insistence on engaging publicly with ideas, despite institutional pressure for silence, models this radical transparency as both ethical and practically protective against entrenched corruption.

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