Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Institutional Transparency as Accountability

The demand for visible, documented, and publicly explicable processes as a structural requirement for preventing hidden corruption.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's insistence on articulating her reasoning, defending her positions in writing, and creating a record of her intellectual work models the anti-corruption power of transparency. She refused silent compliance and demanded the right to be heard and documented. Transparency in institutions—open budgets, visible decision-making processes, documented communications, and public records—creates friction against corrupt activity. Corruption requires darkness: backroom deals, hidden communications, unrecorded transactions, and deniability. When institutions must explain their decisions, show their work, and justify their actions publicly, corrupt actors face exposure. Building anti-corruption systems means establishing legal requirements for transparency, protecting public access to records, and creating mechanisms where decisions must be explained and scrutinized. Sor Juana's example suggests that institutional accountability is not a burden but a clarification—the act of making reasoning visible strengthens institutions and protects both integrity and the people served by those institutions.

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Identity & Justice
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