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The Flood of Small Things: Curating Corruption, Custody, and the Quiet Architecture of Accountability

The Flood of Small Things: Curating Corruption, Custody, and the Quiet Architecture of Accountability Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ April 9, 2026 --- Curatorial Frame This curatorial frame is written in a voice that is at once academic and humane, esoteric and humorous, poignant and erudite, ironic and critical, and occasionally anecdotal. It treats corruption not as a single monstrous event but as a landscape of small, repeatable gestures — the mismeasured culvert, the delayed permit, the invoice with a smudge that becomes a margin for profit. The frame proposes a way of seeing and staging those gestures so that they can be understood, contested, and, where necessary, legally contained. Corruption in flood‑control projects is a peculiar kind of aesthetic failure: it is the deliberate misalignment of public purpose and private appetite, a choreography of contracts and culverts that produces both visible ruin and invisible enrichment. To curate this phenomenon is to assemble evidence and affe...

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