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Concept
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Intergenerational Justice and Institutional Memory

Preserving and learning from historical patterns of corruption to prevent repetition across generations.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's work survives across centuries because it was documented and preserved; institutional memory of her intellectual contributions survived attempts to erase her. This historical persistence itself resists corruption of history. Applied to anti-corruption work, this concept recognizes that corrupt practices repeat across time unless actively remembered and learned from. Institutions develop amnesia conveniently: each generation 'discovers' that corruption occurred under previous leadership, yet fails to build mechanisms preventing its recurrence. Creating institutional memory through documentation, historical education, and intergenerational accountability prevents this cycle. Whistleblowers, investigative journalists, and archivists serve crucial functions by maintaining records that corrupt actors would prefer destroyed. Anti-corruption strategies should include systematic documentation of corruption patterns, teaching history of institutional failures, and designing systems that survive leadership changes with integrity intact. Sor Juana's own insistence on written record—her published works—demonstrates how preservation becomes resistance. An institution that remembers its corruption is less likely to repeat it; amnesia enables recurrence.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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