The practice of creating records, evidence, and testimony to preserve truth and prevent corrupt actors from rewriting history.
Sor Juana's writings—her letters, poetry, theological arguments, and autobiography—became her defense and her witness. When institutions tried to silence or discredit her, her documented words persisted. In anti-corruption work, documentation serves the same function: it creates accountability, preserves evidence, and prevents powerful actors from erasing inconvenient truths. Corrupt systems depend on the ability to deny, rewrite, and make disappear. Documentation—maintained through secure channels, distributed across trusted networks, and preserved for future accountability—undermines this power. This includes written records, audio/video evidence, formal testimonies, institutional archives, and protected whistleblower networks. By following Sor Juana's example of meticulous self-documentation and intellectual record-keeping, anti-corruption advocates create shields against denial and erasure, ensuring that truth outlasts the corruption it names.
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