A project diary (also history, journal or log) is a record of a
project which is compiled while it is being done.[1][2]
This record might be used as
legal evidence if there is a dispute about the outcome of the project such as a
cost overrun. To facilitate this, entries should be indelible, time-stamped and signed so that they may not be easily altered in retrospect. The details kept would typically include a record of the time and content of communications such as orders and instructions; events, incidents and their remediation; and the names of the people and parties responsible.[3]
References
^Triant G. Flouris; Dennis Lock (2016), "Case History or Project Diary", Managing Aviation Projects from Concept to Completion, Routledge, p. 484,
ISBN9781317101956
^Nick Graham (2014), "Project Log Checklist", Project Management Checklists For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, p. 126,
ISBN9781118931431
^Randy R. Rapp (2011), "Recovery Project Diary", Disaster Recovery Project Management: Bringing Order from Chaos, Purdue University Press, pp. 144–5,
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