The strategic practice of maintaining integrity and advancing reform within corrupt institutions without complete withdrawal or capitulation.
Sor Juana remained a nun while pushing institutional boundaries, using her position strategically rather than abandoning the system entirely. This demonstrates how anti-corruption work sometimes requires staying engaged with compromised institutions. Complete withdrawal may feel pure but abandons reform to those without conscience. By remaining inside, documenting problems, building alliances, and refusing key compromises on core principles, reformers can shift institutional culture. Sor Juana negotiated with ecclesiastical authority without surrendering her intellectual rights. Effective anti-corruption strategies often involve this delicate balance: working within systems while maintaining boundaries, accepting some constraints while resisting others, and building internal networks of integrity. This concept acknowledges that perfect institutions don't exist, but that committed individuals can gradually weaken corruption's grip from within through strategic engagement and principled resistance.
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