Education and access to information as liberation tools that reduce vulnerability to exploitation and corruption by corrupt elites and institutions.
Sor Juana understood that ignorance serves oppression—those without knowledge cannot recognize injustice or defend their rights. Corruption exploits knowledge gaps; corrupt systems deliberately keep populations uninformed about how power operates, who benefits from illegal schemes, or what alternatives exist. By democratizing knowledge and education, societies reduce the asymmetrical power that enables corruption. An educated populace understands financial systems, legal rights, governmental processes, and corporate structures well enough to recognize when they are being manipulated or defrauded. Sor Juana's commitment to learning across disciplines modeled this expansive knowledge-seeking as resistance. Applied to anti-corruption work, this means investing in public education, financial literacy programs, civic education that explains institutional mechanics, and accessible information about how corruption operates. Knowledge becomes a tool of emancipation when ordinary people understand enough to hold power accountable.
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