The practice of meticulous record-keeping, evidence gathering, and scholarly witness as methods to establish moral and legal accountability in environmental crimes.
Sor Juana's scholarly method—rigorous argumentation grounded in precise observation and textual evidence—offers environmental activists a framework for documentation as justice-making. When corporations dump toxins, governments approve destructive projects, or authorities repress protesters, detailed records become instruments of accountability. Environmental movements practicing this concept employ citizen science, photographic evidence, testimony archives, and legal documentation to create irrefutable records of ecological harm. This approach differs from anecdotal outrage; it mirrors Sor Juana's intellectual rigor, demanding that claims about environmental destruction be supported by evidence that can survive institutional scrutiny. Documentation serves multiple purposes: it protects activists legally, provides material for litigation, enables scientific analysis, and creates historical witness. The concept recognizes that in struggles against denial and gaslighting, precision itself becomes a radical act.
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