Source Methodology
Last Updated: November 2025
1. How We Source Our Reporting
Latamchronicle is committed to transparent, evidence-based journalism. This page explains how our reporters gather information, evaluate sources, and verify claims before publication.
2. Primary Sources
Wherever possible, our journalists seek out primary sources, including:
- Government documents, official statements, and public records
- Court filings, legislation, and regulatory documents
- Company filings, press releases, and financial reports
- Academic research and peer-reviewed studies
- Direct interviews with individuals involved in the story
3. Secondary Sources
Where primary sources are not available, we use credible secondary sources — such as established news organisations, government agencies, and recognised research institutions — and clearly attribute them in our reporting.
4. Named vs. Anonymous Sources
We prefer named sources. Anonymous sources are only used when:
- The source faces a genuine risk of harm if identified
- The information is of significant public interest
- The information cannot be obtained through named sources
- At least one editor has approved the use of the anonymous source
When anonymous sources are used, we describe their role in general terms to help readers assess their credibility (e.g., "a senior official within the ministry").
5. Verification Process
All key claims in our reporting are verified against at least two independent sources before publication. Quotes are confirmed with the speaker or their representative wherever possible. Data and statistics are cross-checked against original datasets.
6. AI-Assisted Reporting
Latamchronicle may use AI tools to assist in research, translation, or drafting. However, all AI-assisted content is reviewed, verified, and edited by a human journalist before publication. We do not publish AI-generated content without editorial oversight.
7. Conflicts of Interest
Reporters declare potential conflicts of interest to their editor before beginning a story. Where a conflict cannot be resolved, the reporter is removed from the story.
8. Questions About Our Methodology
If you have questions about how a specific story was reported or sourced, please contact our editorial team at editorial@latamchronicle.com.