To give a rough sense of the depth of the Chilcot Report, the executive summary runs 150 pages. The report appears in twelve (12) volumes, not including video testimony, witness transcripts, documentary evidence, contributions and the like.
Cory Doctorow reports a Guardian project to crowd source collecting facts from the 2.6 million word report. The Guardian observes the Chilcot report is “…almost four-and-a-half times as long as War and Peace.”
Manual reading of the Chilcot report is doable, but unlikely to yield all of the connections that exist between participants, witnesses, evidence, etc.
How would you go about making the Chilcot report and its supporting evidence more amenable to navigation and analysis?
Unfortunately, sections within volumes were not numbered according to their volume. In other words, volume 2 starts with section 3.3 and ends with 3.5, whereas volume 4 only contains sections beginning with “4.,” while volume 5 starts with section 5 but also contains sections 6.1 and 6.2. Nothing can be done for it but be aware that section numbers don’t correspond to volume numbers.