The principle that those with power to act must be visible and answerable, while those challenging power must be protected from exposure to retaliation.
Sor Juana's situation embodied this paradox: she, an intellectual without formal power, faced intense scrutiny and pressure, while her critics—institutional authorities—remained protected by hierarchical authority. Corruption exploits inverted accountability: the powerful hide while the vulnerable are exposed. Effective anti-corruption flips this. Public officials' finances, decisions, and communications should be transparent; whistleblowers reporting abuse need protection and anonymity. Investigative journalism focuses on powerful institutions; investigative subjects fight back against journalists. Policies that achieve this balance—robust public disclosure requirements for officials, strong whistleblower legal protections, confidentiality for sources—create asymmetric visibility that favors accountability. Sor Juana's enforced vulnerability despite intellectual legitimacy shows the injustice of unbalanced exposure. Modern anti-corruption work requires protecting the integrity of those speaking truth while illuminating the actions of those wielding authority.
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