Protecting and exercising the legal and moral right to disagree with authority as an essential mechanism for exposing and preventing institutional corruption.
Sor Juana's entire intellectual project was an act of dissent—challenging ecclesiastical authority, male intellectual monopolies, and colonial power structures through her writing. Corruption thrives in silence where dissent is punished or suppressed. When the right to disagree is protected and exercised, corruption is exposed, questioned, and eventually dismantled. This concept moves beyond passive tolerance of dissent to recognizing it as essential infrastructure for accountability. Legal frameworks that criminalize whistleblowing, punish journalists, or silence critics create conditions where corruption metastasizes unchecked. Sor Juana's model shows that institutional reform requires people willing to speak truth despite personal risk. In fighting corruption, protecting dissent means establishing robust legal protections for whistleblowers, independent media, and civil society organizations that challenge official narratives and demand accountability.
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