The practice of examining entire systems and dominant frameworks rather than isolated incidents to reveal how corruption becomes normalized and structural.
Sor Juana's critiques extended beyond individual wrongs to question the systems that justified them—patriarchal intellectual hierarchies, ecclesiastical control of thought, gendered constraints on knowledge access. This systemic approach reveals how corruption becomes embedded in structures and normalized through ideology. Isolated scandals fade while systemic corruption persists if we only address individual corrupt actors. Anti-corruption work that examines systems asks: Which structures benefit from current arrangements? Whose interests do dominant narratives serve? What institutions would need to change for justice to emerge? Sor Juana reframed intellectual restriction not as personal disappointment but as systemic injustice. This perspective transforms anti-corruption from case-by-case prosecution into structural reform. It recognizes that corruption often flows from how systems are designed—incentive structures, accountability gaps, concentrated power, and information control. By examining and reframing these systems, anti-corruption efforts address root causes rather than symptoms.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.