Secrecy and information control create conditions where corruption hides; transparency disrupts its ecology.
Sor Juana advocated for knowledge to be accessible and public rather than hoarded by elites—a radical stance in her context. She understood that when information is controlled by those in power, accountability becomes impossible. Corruption thrives in darkness: hidden budgets, closed-door decisions, classified justifications, restricted access to records. Modern anti-corruption frameworks recognize this through transparency mechanisms—freedom of information laws, open government initiatives, public budget disclosure, and accessible decision-making records. The logic is Juana's: if power cannot withstand public scrutiny, it is likely corrupt. Practical applications include mandatory financial disclosures, public procurement processes, open-source legislation, accessible complaint mechanisms, and independent auditing. Institutions that resist transparency—that classify routine decisions, restrict budget information, or punish those who reveal wrongdoing—signal corruption. Juana's intellectual legacy supports radical transparency as both anti-corruption tool and democratic necessity.
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