Examining how institutions perpetuate injustice while working within them, balancing reform and resistance as moral leadership strategies.
Sor Juana remained within the Church while simultaneously critiquing its limitations on women's intellectual participation and autonomy. She understood that institutions simultaneously enable and constrain, offer protection and impose control. This nuanced position informs moral leadership by resisting both naive institution-loyalty and cynical dismissal. Leaders embracing this concept develop the intellectual and moral capacity for simultaneous critique and participation: identifying how their organizations harm marginalized people while working for change from within, acknowledging complicity while pursuing justice. This practice requires courage and intellectual honesty—refusing comfortable moral clarity in favor of messy reality. Leaders must ask: Where does my institution perpetuate injustice? What leverage do I have to change it? When should I work for reform versus when should I step away? Institutional critique becomes a moral discipline: regular honest examination of institutional systems, explicit naming of harms, building coalitions for change, and maintaining integrity even when reform feels slow. This prevents both the corruption of complicit silence and the ineffectiveness of pure rejection.
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