Establishing positions and roles where individuals are explicitly empowered to question, critique, and hold institutions accountable to their stated values.
Sor Juana served as an intellectual conscience to her institution—questioning assumptions, pointing out inconsistencies between stated values and actual practices, resisting pressure to abandon truth for convenience. Modern institutions can formalize this role: establishing positions, boards, or offices explicitly tasked with asking difficult questions and holding institutions accountable. An ombudsperson, internal ethics officer, or independent audit function serves this purpose. These roles are most effective when they have actual power, protect their occupants from retaliation, and report findings widely. Sor Juana's example shows that institutions need internal voices willing to critique, to ask whether actions match values, to point out when convenience overrides principle. She also shows that these voices face pressure and retaliation, so protecting them is essential. Institutions serious about fighting corruption establish structures that institutionalize dissent—creating official roles for critics, protecting whistleblowers, funding independent investigation, and making space for inconvenient truths. The intellectual conscience is not an adversary but a safeguard. By building mechanisms for internal accountability and critique, institutions reduce corruption and increase alignment between mission and practice. Sor Juana's lifelong role as questioner models why organizations need people whose job includes saying uncomfortable truths.
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