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Intersectional Corruption: Power at Multiple Levels

Understanding how corruption operates through overlapping systems of power—gender, class, religious authority, state power.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's oppression was not single-axis: she faced corruption rooted in patriarchy, Church authority, class barriers, and colonial Spanish control simultaneously. Modern anti-corruption work must recognize this complexity. Corruption isn't uniform; it differs for those at different intersections of power. Women, minorities, and the poor often experience corruption differently—through targeted bribery demands, discriminatory enforcement, barriers to complaint mechanisms. Effective anti-corruption strategies must account for these differences. A transparency law means little to someone with no access to educated assistance in interpreting records. An anti-bribery policy ignores gendered forms of coercion. Fighting corruption comprehensively requires addressing how different populations experience it and designing protections accordingly. This means diverse leadership in anti-corruption work, targeted support for vulnerable populations, and recognizing that traditional corruption fighters (government bodies, courts) may themselves be corrupted in ways affecting marginalized groups differently. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that freedom requires addressing multiple overlapping systems of unjust control.

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