Understanding how multiple forms of institutional marginalization compound, creating unique vulnerabilities and requiring integrated ethical approaches.
Sor Juana experienced marginalization through gender, illegitimacy, Indigenous heritage, and class simultaneously. Each dimension alone was significant; together they created a particularly constrained position within institutional hierarchies. Modern organizational ethics often addresses discrimination through isolated frameworks—gender in one department, race in another—missing how these systems interact to compound disadvantage. Employees facing multiple marginalized identities experience organizations differently than those with privilege in most dimensions. Intersectional analysis reveals that hiring a woman doesn't create equity if that woman is also disabled, or that promoting racial diversity doesn't create inclusion if leadership culture remains classist. Sor Juana's example demands organizations examine not only individual diversity metrics but patterns of whose voices are heard, whose concerns are addressed, and whose advancement is supported across multiple dimensions. Ethical institutions design policies and cultures that account for compound experiences—not through separate initiatives but through integrated approaches recognizing how different systems of advantage and disadvantage interact. Sor Juana navigated multiple simultaneous barriers; ethical organizations must understand and address them together.
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