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When organisations lose their memory, they lose more than files. They lose context, relationships, and the ability to adapt with integrity. This post outlines what institutional memory is, why it’s political (not neutral), and how to protect it; ethically and practically.


📚 What we mean by “institutional memory”

The accumulated knowledge, practices, relationships, and “unwritten rules” that shape how your organisation decides, delivers, and learns over time. It’s not just records; it’s meaning and context that ensure continuity when people or priorities change.


✊🏽 A feminist lens: memory isn’t neutral

Institutional memory is a political space where power decides what is remembered and what is erased. A feminist approach treats remembering as an act of resistance: restoring marginalised voices, valuing embodied knowledge, and challenging “official” narratives that exclude women, frontline workers, and communities.


🧩 Two kinds of memory to protect

  • Tangible (explicit): policies, decisions, reports, datasets, workflows.
  • Intangible (implicit): norms, relationships, practical know-how, and the emotional/relational labour that keeps teams functioning. You need systems that capture both.

⚠️ What’s at risk if you don’t

  • Stakeholder trust and historic partnerships
  • Organisational identity and credibility
  • Continuity across teams and projects
  • Strategic clarity (you repeat past mistakes)
  • Adaptability to political, social, technological, environmental, or financial shifts

🔍 Everyday places where memory hides

  • WhatsApp/Slack/Signal/Telegram threads that contain real problem-solving
  • “Invisible coordination” roles that hold teams together without a title
  • Call-centre or frontline insights that never make it into reports

🧭 Principles for ethical, inclusive memory

  • Consent & care: obtain clear consent; respect the right not to document trauma.
  • Intersectional accuracy: capture how gender, race, class, migration, and ability shape experiences.
  • Participatory archiving: co-create with staff and partners; don’t extract or centralise ownership.
  • Accountability: who decides what is kept, tagged, and surfaced, and who gets access?

🛠️ Simple moves that build memory into the work

  • Document the “why” behind decisions (one paragraph, every time)
  • Add learning notes to deliverables (what worked/what didn’t)
  • Run oral-history mini-interviews during handovers
  • Create a “shadow map” of informal roles (who actually unblocks things?)
  • Make findability a KPI (tagging/classification, shared locations)
  • Review & retire—archive with dates and owners; close loops on outdated docs

 ✅ Quick self-check

  • Do we know which decisions shaped our current approach, and why?
  • If two key people left tomorrow, could we continue without a halt?
  • Can new staff find what they need in less than 30 minutes?
  • Whose stories are missing from our archives?

🌱 Bottom line

Memory is not nostalgia; it’s operational continuity and staying power. Protect it and you protect identity, trust, and the capacity to adapt without losing your core.


🤝 Want support?

👉 Interested in building institutional memory? CTDC can help with facilitation, ethical frameworks, and practical processes tailored to your context.  
 

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