
Data, Power, and Integrity: Building a Thinking Republic to Defeat Corruption in the Philippines argues that the Philippines cannot defeat systemic corruption with outrage, slogans, or scattered investigations alone-and that lasting reform requires a Thinking Republic: a state that can see patterns, remember outcomes, connect data across agencies, and act early before money is lost and communities are harmed.
Written from the vantage point of public service, the book brings readers into the real "battlefields" where corruption quietly survives-failed flood-control projects, ghost payrolls, fixer-driven permitting, smuggling and enforcement gaps, and oversight systems that too often react after the damage is done. It then pivots to a practical, Philippine-grounded blueprint for treating data as public infrastructure-building a "data spine" that links people, projects, places, and pesos-and using AI as an assistant to honest judgment, not a replacement for it.
Just as important, it draws a firm ethical line: any data- and AI-enabled reform must be protected by a moral firewall-privacy, due process, human rights, and accountability-so that anti-corruption tools never become tools of oppression. With phased roadmaps, playbooks for leaders and citizens, and portraits of "integrity warriors," this book is both a strategic framework and a call to action for anyone determined to make corruption harder, riskier, and less normal in Philippine life.