Evidence

Learning records, method notes, cases, decisions, participant feedback, and observed changes can all contribute to evidence.

Publications

The foundation can publish methods, reports, case studies, white papers, and practical guides when the work is ready.

Readiness

Publication should distinguish tested practice from exploratory thinking and open questions.

Evidence before claims

CCE Labs should build credibility by showing its learning. Claims about collaboration, culture, AI, or ecological transformation need evidence: what was tried, where, with whom, under what conditions, and what changed.

Evidence does not need to be academic only. Practical programme evidence can include structured observations, participant reflection, facilitation notes, decision records, artefacts, case narratives, and method revisions.

Evidence records

Each Lab should aim to produce evidence records such as:

  • challenge briefs;
  • experiment plans;
  • method notes;
  • facilitation and governance records;
  • participant feedback summaries;
  • learning reviews;
  • case studies;
  • method version histories;
  • open questions and risks.

Publication formats

Cocreate Earth Foundation can publish:

  • short practical guides;
  • method library entries;
  • case studies from Labs or hubs;
  • annual learning reports;
  • white papers on collaboration capability;
  • SDG 17 partnership studies;
  • funder or partner briefs;
  • public programme updates.

Publication discipline

Every publication should be clear about maturity. Is it an idea, an early experiment, a pilot finding, a reusable method, or a validated programme standard? That distinction protects trust and helps partners use the work appropriately.