How institutions control access to knowledge, authority, and rights through membership rules, creating systemic fairness problems only addressable through structural reform.
The convents, universities, and church that shaped Sor Juana's world maintained power through gatekeeping—controlling who could learn, speak, and be heard. Women were excluded from universities; indigenous people from authority positions; non-Spanish Europeans from decision-making. Sor Juana, despite brilliance, could not attend university or publish freely under her own name. She worked around these gates but could never fully bypass them. Civilizations advanced toward fairness when they dismantled arbitrary gatekeeping: opening universities to women, establishing civil rights protections, creating regulatory agencies, ensuring representation. Gatekeeping itself becomes the problem—individual exceptions don't equal fairness. A brilliant woman allowed to write in a convent while others are forbidden knowledge has not achieved fairness. Modern applications require examining institutional rules: who decides membership, what criteria are used, who benefits from exclusion, and how to redesign systems for genuine access rather than managed exceptions.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.