Recognizing that institutional slowness, bureaucratic opacity, and procedural delays are themselves corruption tactics that undermine accountability.
Sor Juana fought against systems that delayed justice indefinitely through bureaucratic channels and institutional obstruction. Modern corruption often operates through deliberately slow processes: investigations that take decades, appeals that outlive prosecutors, procedures so complex that ordinary citizens cannot navigate them. This delays is not accidental but tactical—it allows corrupt actors to retire with impunity, witnesses to die, evidence to disappear, public attention to fade. A Sophian anti-corruption approach treats procedural delay itself as corruption. This means establishing time limits, streamlining investigations, ensuring rapid fact-finding, and creating accountability for officials who manufacture delay. Justice systems that operate at the speed of corruption's own timeline can never catch it. Efficiency becomes a justice issue when corruption weaponizes bureaucracy.
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