The recognition that anti-corruption requires sustained institutional change across generations, not quick fixes or individual victories.
Sor Juana did not live to see women's full intellectual freedom or the transformation of institutional hierarchies she challenged. Yet her writings, preserved and studied centuries later, continue to shape thought and inspire resistance. Her legacy illuminates how anti-corruption requires long-term vision. Quick anti-corruption campaigns without structural change create illusions of progress while leaving corrupt systems intact. Genuine anti-corruption requires building institutions designed to prevent corruption: transparent budgeting, separated powers, independent oversight, merit-based hiring, and cultures that reward integrity. It requires educating generations in ethical reasoning and civic responsibility. It requires legal reforms that make corruption harder and less rewarding. These changes take decades. Sor Juana's life demonstrates the power of intellectual persistence: her commitment to questioning and truth-seeking, though frustrated in her lifetime, established foundations for future change. Anti-corruption movements should think in generational timeframes: what institutions are we building that will outlast current leaders? What values are we instilling in young people? What legal and structural changes reduce corruption's appeal? Sor Juana's example shows that individual integrity, combined with contributions to institutional change, creates legacies that serve justice long after.
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