The practice of creating written records, archives, and documented evidence as protection against denial, forgetting, and corruption's rewriting of history.
Sor Juana's prolific writing—her letters, poems, essays, and defenses—created a permanent record of her thinking, her challenges, and her resistance. Documentation preserves evidence that corruption cannot deny and history cannot erase. Without records, corruption operates through denial and narrative control; with thorough documentation, wrongdoing becomes traceable and verifiable. Anti-corruption systems depend on archives, databases, recorded communications, and documented decisions that create accountability over time. This includes maintaining financial records, recording meetings, preserving communications, and establishing digital evidence that cannot be retroactively deleted. Sor Juana's insistence on being heard in writing reflects an understanding that what is documented survives challenges from power. Fighting corruption requires creating and protecting archives, supporting transparency infrastructure, ensuring that documents cannot be easily destroyed, and building systems of institutional memory. When institutions avoid documentation or allow records to disappear, corruption flourishes in the resulting informational vacuum.
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