What do you do with the JSON data? In all probability, you are feeding UI controls or subsequent calls to web services. So if you would protect (i.e., encrypt) the JSON, you would still need client-side decryption, and so your JSON would still be vulnerable -- as you can just do an alert(decryptedJSON)
too.
There is no real, safe way to protect JSON if you have to be able to decipher the data in the browser.
You can of course protect the data while it is underway over the network by encrypting it, either using HTTPS or by explicitly encrypting the data server-side and then decrypting it using client-side JavaScript. But that does not protect it from being viewed in the browser.
A better option could be to encrypt and decrypt only on the server, if that fits your scenario. So you can get encrypted JSON data from a particular web service call, then feed that data into your next web service call where it gets decrypted on the server. That way, your client-side JavaScript doesn't need to decrypt, making your data safer. But if the purpose is to populate the UI, obviously this won't fit your needs.