Citation Guide
Canonical Documentation
Comprehensive citation guide for Atlas of Coordination materials. All documentation is version-locked for citation stability and academic precision.
The Problem
Academic citation of emerging field materials is complicated by evolving definitions, unstable terminology, and unclear attribution standards.
Without citation infrastructure, three problems emerge:
Citation instability undermines research
When cited materials change without version tracking, research citations become unreliable and field communication degrades.
Attribution ambiguity prevents field legitimacy
Without clear citation standards, researchers cannot properly attribute ideas, terminology, or methodological frameworks to field sources.
Format inconsistency creates friction
Researchers need multiple citation formats (APA, MLA, Chicago, BibTeX) for different publication contexts. Manual formatting creates errors and delays.
Citation infrastructure provides version-locked references enabling precise academic attribution across all Atlas materials.
What This Reference Is
This reference guide provides citation standards for all Atlas of Coordination materials suitable for academic use.
Comprehensive citation catalog
All citable materials organized by type: field documentation, pattern library, working papers, governance documentation, and methodological frameworks.
Multiple citation formats
Each material provides APA, MLA, Chicago, and BibTeX citations on its canonical page, accessible through links in this reference.
Version-locked references
All materials include version numbers for citation stability. Major version changes indicate structural revisions requiring new citations.
Institutional authorship
Atlas materials use institutional authorship ("Atlas of Coordination") rather than individual authors, consistent with field infrastructure rather than personal publications.
Citation Categories
Field Documentation
Core definitions, theoretical foundations, and field-establishing materials.
Constitutional Governance
Governance infrastructure, boundaries, and enforcement mechanisms.
v2.0
Constitutional Architecture
Governance infrastructure and enforcement mechanisms
v2.0
Boundaries & Use
Constitutional limits and responsible application
v2.0
Intelligence & the Role of AI
Intelligence boundaries and constitutional constraints
v2.0
Analytics & Observability
Observability constraints and transparency policy
Pattern Library
Pattern taxonomy, cluster documentation, and pattern-specific references.
v2.0
Pattern Clusters
Seven structural dimensions organizing coordination patterns
v2.0
Pattern Library
Complete 58-pattern taxonomy with individual pattern pages
Citing Individual Patterns
Each of the 58 coordination patterns has its own page with citation information. Access individual pattern citations through the Pattern Library.
Working Papers (Atlas Notes)
Field research publications analyzing coordination patterns.
v2.0
Atlas Notes: Working Papers
Index of all working papers with individual citation information
Citing Working Papers
Each Atlas Note has its own citation block with version information. Working papers may be revised based on field research and peer critique—always cite specific versions.
Implementation Reference
Citing the Atlas as first formalized CDI system.
Citation Standards
Institutional Authorship
All Atlas materials use institutional authorship: "Atlas of Coordination"
This reflects field infrastructure rather than personal publications, consistent with canonical documentation standards.
Version Policy
- Major versions (e.g., 2.0 → 3.0): Structural revisions to content, requiring new citations
- Minor versions (e.g., 2.0 → 2.1): Wording refinements without structural changes, same citation valid
- Version locking: All materials are version-locked for citation stability
Publication Date
All materials use publication year: 2026
This represents the year of canonical publication for the Atlas of Coordination field infrastructure.
URL Permanence
All URLs are designed for permanence: https://atlasofcoordination.com/[path]
URL structure will not change. Legacy paths redirect to canonical locations if reorganization occurs.
Citation Formats Available
Each canonical page provides four citation formats:
- APA (American Psychological Association)
- MLA (Modern Language Association)
- Chicago (Chicago Manual of Style)
- BibTeX (for LaTeX documents)
Citation
To cite this field definition:
APA
Atlas of Coordination. (2026). Coordination Diagnostics & Intelligence: Field definition and analytical boundaries (Version 2.0). https://atlasofcoordination.com/field
MLA
Atlas of Coordination. "Coordination Diagnostics & Intelligence: Field Definition and Analytical Boundaries." Version 2.0, 2026, atlasofcoordination.com/field.
Chicago
Atlas of Coordination. "Coordination Diagnostics & Intelligence: Field Definition and Analytical Boundaries." Version 2.0. Accessed February 13, 2026. https://atlasofcoordination.com/field.
BibTeX
@misc{atlas2026cdi_field,
title = {Coordination Diagnostics \& Intelligence:
Field Definition and Analytical Boundaries},
author = {{Atlas of Coordination}},
year = {2026},
note = {Version 2.0},
howpublished = {\url{https://atlasofcoordination.com/field}},
urldate = {2026-02-13}
}Version Policy: This definition is versioned for citation stability. Major version changes (2.0 → 3.0) indicate structural revisions to field definition. Minor version changes (2.0 → 2.1) indicate wording refinements.
For citing diagnostic methodologies, constitutional architecture, or theoretical foundations, see Foundations & Methodology. For citing the Atlas implementation, see About.
Citation infrastructure enables field legitimacy.
All Atlas materials are version-locked for citation stability, enabling precise academic attribution across research publications and field development work.
For questions about citation or attribution, see Contact.
Reference Guide: Version 2.0
Year: 2026
This guide provides citation standards for all Atlas materials. Each source includes version information for precise academic reference.