Establishing sustained, systematic oversight mechanisms rather than episodic investigations to prevent corruption from recurring.
Sor Juana's life was one of continuous intellectual work—not occasional bursts of effort but sustained commitment to truth-seeking and institution-building. Fighting corruption requires similar sustained vigilance. Single investigations, one-time reforms, and episodic oversight fail because corruption adapts and returns. Effective anti-corruption requires permanent institutions: independent auditors, ethics boards, investigation units, and oversight bodies with real resources and continuity. It requires institutional memory: documenting patterns, building precedent, learning from past cases, and preventing their recurrence. This means recruiting and retaining skilled anti-corruption professionals; protecting their tenure and independence; funding their work adequately; and creating systems where knowledge accumulates rather than dispersing. It also means public vigilance: citizens and communities maintaining attention, demanding accountability year after year, not disappearing once headlines fade. Sor Juana's decades of intellectual work despite institutional pressure models this persistence. Building corruption-resistant systems requires committing to permanent, resourced, institutionalized vigilance—not as temporary crisis response but as fundamental infrastructure for justice.
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