The practice of democratizing knowledge and education as a structural anticorruption measure that reduces asymmetries of power.
Sor Juana understood that those who controlled knowledge controlled power: who could read, who could study theology, who could participate in intellectual discourse. By fighting for her own education and advocating implicitly for broader intellectual access, she recognized that corruption thrives where knowledge is hoarded and power is concentrated. When information, expertise, and understanding are monopolized by elites, ordinary citizens cannot effectively challenge decisions or hold power accountable. Educational and informational equity is therefore an anticorruption strategy. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that expanding access to knowledge—literacy programs, transparency reports, technical training, access to archives—weakens corruption's ability to operate in darkness. Organizations and societies that invest in broad education and information access create constituencies capable of recognizing and resisting corruption. Knowledge democratization is not merely an ideal; it is a practical anticorruption mechanism that distributes power more widely.
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