Traven Gazette
Process Documentation

Verifying the Everyday Record.

Traven Gazette publishes observational field notes on everyday nutrition and wellbeing. This page documents the editorial principles, sourcing standards, and correction procedures that govern how those notes are prepared, reviewed, and updated.

Reviewed
2× editors
Per published entry
Sources
Cited
Where referenced
Corrections
Public
Always noted openly
Affiliation
None
Fully independent
01
Editorial Principles

Traven Gazette operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.

The Gazette does not publish content that makes specific nutritional claims, advises readers on managing physical conditions, or endorses any product, programme, or commercial practice. The publication's subject is observational: how people in Britain eat, the patterns those habits form, and the seasonal rhythms that shape what ends up on the plate.

Articles published on Traven Gazette are editorial in nature and reflect the writers' observations on everyday wellness practices. The content is not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.

Open editorial notebook with handwritten review annotations and sourcing notes in a quiet workspace under natural light
Editorial review process — Traven Gazette desk
02
The Review Sequence
Step One

Fieldwork and first draft

The writer conducts the observational work — keeping a kitchen notebook, recording meal patterns, or surveying seasonal produce. The first draft is written directly from these notes, without retrospective re-framing. The source material is retained on file.

Step Two

Second editor review

A second editor reads the draft independently. They check for accuracy against the source notes, flag any claims that extend beyond what the fieldwork can support, and note any language that crosses from observational into instructive register. Revisions are agreed before filing.

Step Three

Source referencing

Where an entry references findings from published research, the source is identified and noted. The Gazette draws on peer-reviewed journals and reputable institutional sources. Editorial selection prioritises long-running studies and replicated findings over single-study claims.

Step Four

Filing and archiving

The approved entry is filed with the date of publication. The original field notes, draft, and review correspondence are archived internally. The archive is the production record of the Gazette and is retained in perpetuity.

03
Sourcing Standards

How the Gazette selects and cites its sources

The Gazette's entries are primarily observational — they document what writers and their participants have noticed and recorded. Where entries draw on wider published research to contextualise an observation, the following sourcing criteria apply:

  • Peer-reviewed publications only
    Research references draw exclusively from peer-reviewed academic journals. Popular science summaries are not used as primary sources; they may be mentioned to identify the existence of a wider discussion.
  • Replicated findings preferred
    The Gazette does not build entries around single-study findings. Where a research observation is referenced, preference is given to areas where multiple independent studies have produced convergent results.
  • Observational language maintained
    Research findings are described in observational language consistent with the overall register of the Gazette. The publication does not claim that its own fieldwork confirms or refutes wider research bodies; it notes associations and contextualises them.
  • No commercial relationships in sourcing
    Sources are not selected on the basis of any commercial relationship. The Gazette does not accept research funding, sponsored content, or payment for editorial coverage from any organisation whose work might appear in our entries.
Stack of research journals and field notebooks in a considered arrangement on a pale wooden surface in diffused afternoon light
Source archive — editorial reference materials
Source Types Used
Peer-reviewed nutrition journals
Long-running dietary cohort studies
Institutional food environment reports
First-hand observational field notes
04
Corrections Policy

How corrections are handled

The Gazette takes factual accuracy seriously and publishes corrections promptly when errors are identified. The corrections procedure is as follows:

  1. 1.
    A reader or the editorial team identifies a factual error in a published entry.
  2. 2.
    The error is reported to the editorial team by email at [email protected], with the specific passage cited and the proposed correction explained.
  3. 3.
    The second editor reviews the original source material against the reported error within five working days.
  4. 4.
    If the error is confirmed, the entry is updated and a correction note is appended to the page, dated and clearly labelled, identifying what was changed and why.
  5. 5.
    The original error and the correction are noted in the internal archive. The Gazette does not silently amend published entries.

Transparency statement

Traven Gazette is an independent editorial publication. Articles reflect the considered observations of contributing writers and editors. The publication is not affiliated with any organisation engaged in food production, supplement manufacture, or commercial dietary advice.

Writers are required to disclose any commercial relationships — including any paid work, product gifts, or financial interests — that might relate to the subjects they cover. Disclosures are noted in the editorial file. To date, no disclosures have been required.

The Gazette does not carry advertising. It does not publish sponsored entries, affiliate product selections, or content produced under financial arrangement with any brand. Its independence is structural, not aspirational.

05
Common Questions