A foundational principle that access to information and education is a fundamental right, essential for citizens to recognize and resist corruption.
Sor Juana's insistence on her right to learn—despite gender and institutional barriers—articulates a deeper principle: knowledge and information access are prerequisites for dignity and justice. In anti-corruption work, the 'right to know' becomes structural: transparent budgets, public records, accessible data, and educational access. When citizens lack information, corruption flourishes in shadows. Sor Juana fought for intellectual access as both personal liberation and collective good. Modern anti-corruption relies on freedom of information laws, investigative journalism, open-data initiatives, and civic education. This framework treats opacity as corruption's infrastructure and transparency as its antidote. Communities with stronger information access and media literacy show lower corruption rates. Institutionalizing the right to know—through law, culture, and practice—dismantles the informational monopolies that enable corrupt actors.
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