Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Justice Through Knowledge Distribution

Corruption persists where knowledge is unequally distributed; democratizing expertise enables collective accountability.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life work involved making knowledge accessible beyond clerical and male elites—she wrote in Spanish rather than Latin, engaged popular audiences, and challenged the monopoly on interpretation. She understood that concentrated knowledge creates concentrated power. In anti-corruption, this translates to making information about how systems work available to ordinary people. When budget analysis, legal interpretation, or technical standards remain with experts only, citizens cannot hold systems accountable. Practical frameworks include: plain-language disclosure requirements, citizen budget programs, accessible legal information, open data initiatives, and community oversight training. This also means supporting independent research institutions, funding journalism, and creating platforms where affected communities can generate their own knowledge about corrupt practices. The goal is not token participation but genuine capacity distribution—equipping people with conceptual tools and information access to understand and judge their institutions. Juana's legacy suggests that justice requires knowledge to be shared property, not elite monopoly.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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