The accumulation and transmission of understanding about how systems work, enabling informed resistance to corrupt capture.
Sor Juana's mastery of theology, philosophy, science, and colonial politics made her dangerous to those who benefited from ignorance. She possessed institutional knowledge—deep understanding of how power operated, what justified what, and where the contradictions lay. This knowledge became a tool of resistance. In modern anti-corruption work, institutional knowledge serves the same function. When citizens, employees, and leaders understand how their institutions actually function—not the official narrative but the real patterns of decision-making, resource flows, and power dynamics—corruption becomes harder to hide. This requires invested time in understanding organizational history, cultivating expertise in relevant fields, documenting patterns of behavior, and teaching others what has been learned. Organizations that prioritize transparency, institutional memory, and the distribution of specialized knowledge become more resistant to corruption than those where understanding is hoarded and institutional memory is lost.
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