Annotated Bibliography

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HarvardReferencingHandbook.docx

Full Harvard (Author-Date) Referencing Handbook

Contents

Part 1: The Basics of Referencing

University of Birmingham

1.1.

88

1.2. What is referencing? Page 3.

1.3. Copyrighted sources 3

1.4. Why should I reference? 3

1.5. What should I reference? 4

1.6. How should I reference? 5

1.7. Setting out citations 6

1.8. Setting out quotations 9

1.9. Making changes to quotations 10

1.10. Paraphrasing 10

1.11. Summarising 10

1.12. Secondary referencing 11

1.13. Points to look out for 11-12

2. List of References 13

2.1.

2.2. Books 13

2.2.1. Printed books 13

2.2.2. E-Books 16

2.2.3. Multi-volume works 16

2.2.4. Sacred texts 18

2.2.5. More books 19

2.3. Journals 27

2.3.1. Journal articles 27

2.3.2. Pre-publication journal articles 28

2.3.3. Magazine articles 30

2.4. Digital and internet 30

2.4.1. The internet 30

2.4.2. CD-ROMs or DVD-ROMs 38

2.4.3. Computer games and programs 39

2.4.4. Personal and virtual learning environments 40

2.5. Media and art 42

2.5.1. Newspaper articles 42

2.5.2. Live performances 42

2.5.3. Visual sources 43

2.5.4. Audio-visual material 54

2.5.5. Reviews 58

2.5.6. Interviews 60

2.6. Research 61

2.6.1. Unpublished or confidential information 61

2.6.2. Unpublished academic work 62

2.6.3. Reports 64

2.6.4. Genealogical sources 67

2.6.5. Scientific and technical information 69

2.7. Legal material 73

2.7.1. House of Commons and House of Lords Papers 73

2.7.2. Hansard 74

2.7.3. Legislation from UK devolved Assemblies 74

2.7.4. More legal material 75

2.8. Government and EU 77

2.8.1. European Union publications 77

2.8.2. Government publications 77

2.8.3. Departmental publications 78

2.9. Communications 78

2.9.1. Conferences 78

2.9.2. Public communications 80

2.9.3. Advertisements and PR 81

3. Further referencing help 84-89

3.1.

3.2. Sample reference list 84

3.3. Sample bibliography 85

3.4. Hints and tips 86

3.5. FAQs 87-88

3.6. Further information and useful websites 89

3.7. Any questions? 89

4. Glossary 90-91

5. Index 92-93

Note:

Some of the examples used within this guide have been invented by Library Services staff members. Don’t be too alarmed if you click on a URL and it does not take you to the correct website!

What is referencing?

The University has adopted the ‘Cite Them Right’ (www.citethemrightonline.com) style of referencing and according to the co-authors, Graham Shields and Richard Pears, referencing is;

“…the process of acknowledging the sources you have used in writing your essay, assignment or piece of work. It allows the reader to access your source documents as quickly and easily as possible in order to verify, if necessary, the validity of your arguments and the evidence on which they are based. You identify these sources by citing them in the text of your assignment (called citations or in-text citations) and referencing them at the end of your assignment (called the reference list or end-text citations). The reference list only includes the sources cited in your text. It is not the same thing as a bibliography, which uses the same referencing style, but also includes all material, for example background readings, used in the preparation of your work.” (http://www.citethemrightonline.com/Basics/what-is-referencing)

Copyrighted sources

At present copyright law allows only small extracts of items to be copied legally provided that they are referenced (and following the guidance herein fulfills that perfectly!). Only copy what is completely necessary, and when the use falls into one or more of the following categories:     personal private study;     non-commercial research;     criticism and review;     illustration for instruction;     parody pastiche or caricature;     or quotation. Students’ use will fall under personal private study, criticism and review, illustration, and/or quotation. For further information, go to; https://intranet.birmingham.ac.uk/copyright

Why should I reference?

Referencing correctly is an important academic skill as it shows the reader of your work the sources you have used to research your topic and gives support and weight to your arguments and conclusions. In summary, there are four good reasons for referencing;

(i) To allow a reader of your work to find and check the sources you have used.

(ii) So that you can come back to your own work and know where you found a particular quotation or piece of information.

(iii) To avoid accusations of plagiarism.

(iv) To make you think twice about using outdated and inaccurate books, articles, or websites.

As a general rule you should not put your trust in any resource which does not give references.

What should I reference?

The level of referencing will depend on the nature of the piece of work you are writing: a coursework essay for a first-year survey module will probably require less than a third-year dissertation. There is no maximum level of referencing, but do not let referencing become a fetish. If you have worries about the amount of referencing which would be appropriate, seek advice from your module tutor.

As a general minimum, you should include a reference when:

(i) You quote or paraphrase from a primary source or secondary work;

(ii) You make use of a statistic;

(iii) You paraphrase or otherwise refer to the ideas or writings of a named or identifiable author.

For most modules you will not be required to give references for facts that are generally well known (common knowledge) – only at dissertation level is it the guiding rule that ‘every substantive statement requires a reference’. Where facts are contested, and you are taking sides in an argument, you must then indicate the source of your own ideas, and if appropriate acknowledge the opposing camp(s) with references as well.

How should I reference?

There are many different ways to reference, but the most common style of referencing used at the University of Birmingham is currently the Harvard (author-date) style. As of the creation of this handbook, the courses at the University that use this method include;

· Civil Engineering

·

· Computer Science

· Electrical Engineering

· Mechanical Engineering

· Metallurgy/Materials

· Physics and Astronomy

· Biosciences

· GEES

· SportExR (this subject area does use Vancouver for certain modules, so make sure to check with your subject advisor)

· Dental Hygiene and Therapy

· Nursing

· Physiotherapy

· Modern Languages

· English Literature

· CELS

· Drama

· CWAS

· Philosophy

· Theology

· Business

· Social Policy

· Government and Society

If you are still not completely sure which referencing style to use, consult your tutor or subject advisor.

This handbook will focus entirely on the Harvard (author-date) style of referencing, as found on the ‘Cite Them Right’ website. For more information on other referencing styles, such as; APA, Vancouver and MHRA, they have their own separate handbooks which are to be found on the i-cite page on the University intranet.

Setting out citations;

Using this method of referencing, the citations in your work must be included in the final word count. In-text citations give brief details of the source that you are quoting from or referring to. These citations will then link to the full reference that will be found in your reference list at the end of your work. The reference list is always arranged in alphabetical order by author. If you have cited a work in an appendix, but not in the main body of your text, this should still be included in the reference list.

Footnotes and endnotes are NOT used in this style.

There are many ways in which citations can be used in your work, but your tutor or supervisor should advise you on which format they prefer.

Your citations should include the following elements;

(i) Author(s) or editor (s) surname/family name

(ii) Year of publication

(iii) Page number(s) if required

If you have used a direct quote or an idea from a specific page, or set of pages, you should include the page numbers in your citations. The abbreviation for page is p. or pp. for multiple pages. See the examples below to see how they are used correctly.

· According to Guy (2001, p. 37), the Zulus faced many grave dangers when confronting the British…

· It is maintained that medicine has greatly improved (Jones, 1985, p. 74)…

Citing one author/editor

· In his novel (Stevens, 2013)…

Citing a corporate author

· … as shown by the decrease in ratings (ITV, 2014).

Citing two authors/editors

· Banerjee and Watson (2011, p. 87) suggested…

· It is clear (Banerjee and Watson, 2011, p. 87) that…

Citing three authors/editors

· It was evident (Smith, Jones and Thomas, 2015)…

Citing four or more authors/editors

Cite the first name listed in the source followed by et al.

· This was proved by Dym et al. (2009)…

Citing a source with no author/editor

Use the title in italics; do NOT use ‘anonymous’ or anything similar.

· It is maintained that medicine has greatly improved (Medicine in old age, 1985, p. 74)…

Citing multiple sources

These can be listed separated by semicolons. The publications should be cited in chronological order. If more than one work is published in the same year, then they should be listed alphabetically by author/editor.

· A number of different studies (Jamieson, 2011; Hollingworth, 2012; Hatfield, 2013; Rogers, 2015) suggested that…

Citing sources published in the same year by the same author

· In his study of the work of Dawkins, Harris (2007a) emphasised the use of rationality in the former’s argument. However, it is clear that this was not the only strength of the original author (2007b).

The reference list would look like this;

Harris, S. (2007a) Dawkins: a history. London: Evolutionary Press.

Harris, S. (2007b) Evolutionary thought. London: Evolutionary Press.

Citing different editions of the same work by the same author

Separate the dates of publication with a semicolon with the earliest date first.

· In both editions (Hitchens, 2010; 2012)…

Citing a source with no date

Use the phrase ‘no date’.

· The evidence (Stevens and Jubb, no date) was clear.

Citing a source with no author or date

Use the title and ‘no date’.

· Thunderstorms have become increasingly common (Trends in atmospheric pressure, no date)…

Citing a web page

When citing a web page, it should follow these guidelines;

· By Author and date (where possible)

· By title and date if there is no identifiable author

· Or by URL if neither author nor title can be identified

The latest survey by health professionals (http://www.onlinehealthsurvey.org, 2012) reveals that…

Note:

For sources in the reference list, you list all of the authors (no matter how many there are) and the final two authors are always separated with ‘and’. Therefore, there is a difference in the way multiple authors are treated in the citation and reference – always watch out for this. If in doubt, consult the Cite Them Right Online website (www.citethemrightonline.com).

Setting out quotations;

Quotations should always be relevant to your arguments and used wisely within your text. Overuse of quotations can disrupt the flow of your writing and prevent you from demonstrating your understanding and analysis of the sources you have read. Direct quotations are also counted in the word count.

Short, direct quotations should be enclosed in quotation marks. These can either be single or double quotation marks, but make sure to always be consistent. These are included in the body of the text. Make sure to give the author, date and page number(s)/URL that the quotation was taken from.

Example: short, direct quotation

· 'If you need to illustrate the idea of nineteenth-century America as a land of opportunity, you could hardly improve on the life of Albert Michelson' (Bryson, 2004, p. 156).

Longer quotations should be entered as a separate paragraph and indented from the main text. Quotation marks are not required.

Example: longer quotation

King (1997) describes the intertwining of fate and memory in many evocative passages, such as:

So the three of them rode towards their end of the Great Road, while summer lay all about them, breathless as a gasp. Roland looked up and saw something that made him forget all about the Wizard's Rainbow. It was his mother, leaning out of her apartment's bedroom window: the oval of her face surrounded by the timeless grey stone of the castle's west wing. (King, 1997, pp. 553–554)

Making changes to quotations

· Omitting part of a quotation

· Show this by using ellipsis (…).

· ‘Thunderstorms… have become increasingly common’ (Jones, 2009, p. 87).

· Inserting your own, or different, words into a quotation

· Put them in square brackets [].

· ‘Nothing [football boots] comes close…’ (Beckham, 2007, p. 7).

· Pointing out an error in a quotation

· Do not correct the error, instead write [sic].

· Crowley (1784) noted that ‘capentars [sic] worked with wood’

· Retaining/modernising historical spellings

· Decide whether to retain the original spelling, or modernise the spelling and note this in your text.

· ‘Hast thou cleaned the water closet?’ (Larryman, 1783, p. 7).

· ‘Have you cleaned the toilet?’ (Larryman, 1783, p.7, spelling modernised).

· Emphasising part of a quotation

· Put the words you want to emphasise in italics and state that you have added the emphasis.

· ‘Minimal numbers of men take up netball’ (Neville, 2013, p. 98, my italics).

· If the original text uses italics, state that the italics are in the original source.

· ‘Minimal numbers of women take up rugby league’ (Carney, 2015, p. 13, italics in original).

Paraphrasing

Paraphrasing is expressing someone else’s writing in your own words, usually to achieve greater clarity. The whole point of paraphrasing is to show that you have read and understood another person’s ideas, and can summarise them in your own writing style, rather than borrowing their phrases. You must ensure that you do not change the original meaning and you must still cite and reference your source of information.

· Harrison (2007, p. 48) clearly distinguishes between the historical growth of the larger European nation states and the roots of their languages and linguistic development, particularly during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. At this time, imperial goals and outward expansion were paramount for many of the countries, and the effects of spending on these activities often led to internal conflict.

Summarising

Summarising is providing a brief statement of the main points of a source. This differs from paraphrasing as it only lists the main topics or headings, with most of the detailed information being left out.

· Nevertheless, one important study (Harrison, 2007) looks closely at the historical and linguistic links between European races and cultures over the past five hundred years.

Secondary referencing

It is possible that you will want to reference a work mentioned in another author’s work (secondary referencing). If possible, you should try to locate and verify the details of the source referred to. If you can successfully locate it, then you can reference it as normal.

In the text of your work, you should cite both sources and use the phrase ‘quoted in’ or ‘cited in’, depending on whether the other author is directly quoting or summarising from the original. Take a look at the examples below;

· Ashworth (2013, quoted in Chambers, 2014, p. 98) provides an excellent starting point…

· Nadal’s views on the state of the Spanish economy (2013, cited in Federer, 2014) support the idea that…

Points to look out for;

Capitals

You should only capitalise the first letter of the first word of the source. The exception is the names of organisations.

Dates

The year of publication should be given in round brackets after the author or editor’s name – Jones, P. (2013). If there is no date identified, use (no date). The date is always day, month and then year (16 June 2013). There are no commas.

Abbreviations

Chapter – ch. or chap.

Edition – edn

Editors – Ed. or Eds

And others – et al.

No date – n.d.

(issue) number – no.

Page – p.

Pages (page range) pp.

Series – ser.

Supplement – sup.

Table – tab.

Volume – vol.

Page references

Page references are always p. 7 for a single page, or pp. 7-9 for multiple pages.

Place of publication and publisher

This is only required for printed books, reports, and similar sources. The place of publication should be capitalised and, unless it is a well-known city (like London, New York, Oxford etc) then state the county or state (if published in the US). For example:

London: Jones Publishing. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press. The state name is always abbreviated.

Series/volumes

Only include these if they are relevant. Insert them after the publisher – Oxford: Clio Press (World Bibliographical Series, 78).

ISBNs

They are not commonly used in references, so only use in order to eliminate confusion about editions and reprints.

Issue information

When provided, it is necessary to use the following information in the order;

Volume number

Issue/part number

Date or season

URLS

It is possible to shorten the URL, providing the route still remains clear. Always include the date that you accessed the website or you downloaded the source.

DOIs

These tag individual digital sources. A ‘doi’ often replaces the URL as it is the permanent identifier for the source, and so therefore it is not necessary to include an accessed date.

Edition

Only include the edition number if it is not the first edition. Edition is abbreviated to edn.

List of references

BOOKS

Printed books

Printed book with one author

In-text citation:

According to Guy (2001) the Zulus faced many grave dangers when confronting the British…

Reference list:

Guy, J. (2001) The view across the river: Harriette Colenso and the Zulu struggle against imperialism. Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Printed book with two or three authors

In-text-citation:

The carious process can be described as “the carious process is the metabolic activity in the plaque biofilm resident on the tooth surface” (Banerjee and Watson, 2011, p. 2).

Reference list:

Banerjee, A. and Watson, T.F. (2011) Pickard’s manual of operative dentistry. 9th edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Printed book with more than three authors

In-text citation:

This was proved by Dym et al. (2009)…

Reference list:

Dym, C.L., Little, P., Orwin, E.J., and Spjut, R.E. (2009) Engineering design: a project-based introduction. 3rd edn. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Printed book with an editor

In-text citation:

This was clearly shown in Al-Sabbagh (2015).

Reference list:

Al-Sabbagh, M. (ed.) (2015) Complications in implant dentistry. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Elsevier. Series: Dental clinics of North America; v. 59, no. 1.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Printed book with authors and editors

In-text citation:

Lucas (2004) remarks that…

Reference list:

Lucas, G. (2004) The wonders of the Universe. 2nd edn. Edited by Frederick Jones, James Smith and Tony Bradley. London: Smiths.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Printed book with no author

In-text citation:

It is maintained that medicine has greatly improved (Medicine in old age, 1985, p. 74)…

Reference list:

Medicine in old age (1985) 2nd edn. London: British Medical Association.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Chapter in an edited book

In-text citation:

The view proposed by Franklin (2012, p. 88)…

Reference list:

Franklin, A.W. (2012) ‘Management of the problem’, in Smith, S.M. (ed.) The maltreatment of children. Lancaster: MTP, pp. 83-95.

Author of the chapter/section Year of publication (in round brackets) Title of chapter/section ‘in’ plus author/editor of book Place of publication: publisher Page reference

Electronic books (ebooks)

E-book

In-text citation:

In his analysis, McClellan (2008)…

Reference list:

McClellan, M.B. (2008) Evidence-based medicine and the changing nature of health care. Washington D.C.: The National Academies Press.

OR

Beneath the city’s façade of glamour and success, tension was building (Hislop, 2014, loc 324).

Hislop, V. (2014) The sunrise. Available at http://www.amazon.co.uk/kindlestore (Downloaded: 17 June 2015).

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: Publisher

Multi-volume works

Multi-volume works

In-text citation:

Jones (1999, p. 7) suggests that…

Reference list:

Jones, D. (ed.) (1999) Definitions of life. (6 vols). London: Pirate Publishers.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Volumes (in round brackets)

Place of publication: publisher

Collected works

In-text citation:

His collected works (Lee, 1976-1990) explain…

Reference list:

Lee, G. (ed.) (1976-1990) Rush: The Early Years (30 vols). Toronto: Toronto Press.

Author/editor

Year(s) of publication of collection (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Volumes (in round brackets)

Place of publication: publisher

Sacred texts

Bible

In-text citation:

The Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-12)…

Reference list:

Matthew 5:3-12, Holy Bible: King James Version.

Book of the Bible

Chapter: verse

Holy Bible (not in italics)

Version of the Holy Bible

Torah

In-text citation:

It is said that ‘a righteous man falls down seven times and gets up’ (Proverbs 24:16)…

Reference list:

Torah. Proverbs 24:16.

Torah (not in italics)

Book

Chapter: verse

Qur’an

In-text citation:

‘Nothing is hidden from Allah, whether on Earth or in Heaven’ (Qur’an 14:38).

Reference list:

Qur’an 14:38 (2013) translated by Abdullah Yusuf Ali. Ware, Hertfordshire: Wordsworth Editions Limited.

Qur'an (not in italics)

Surah (or chapter): verse

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Translated by ...

Place of publication: publisher

More books

Ancient texts

In-text citation:

The epic tale by Homer (1997) …

Reference list:

Homer (1997) The Iliad. Translated by J. Davies. Introduction and notes by D. Wright. London: Dover Publications.

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Translated by (if relevant)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

If citing an ancient text that existed before the invention of printing, reference it as a manuscript or reference the published (and translated) edition you have read.

Anthologies

In-text citation:

In their collection of poems, Mead and Tranter (1991)…

Reference list:

Mead, C. and Tranter, J. (eds) (1991) The Penguin Book of Modern Australian Poetry. London: Bloodaxe Books.

Editor/compiler of anthology (surname followed by initials)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Atlases

In-text citation:

As illustrated in the text (Oxford School Atlas, 2012, p. 37)…

Reference list:

Oxford School Atlas (2012) 3rd edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Audiobooks

In-text citation:

Fry (2004) was emphatic in his description of the beast.

Reference list:

Fry, S. (2004) The Hippopotamus. Available at: http://www.audiobookstore.com/uk/ (Downloaded: 19 March 2013).

Author/editor

Year of publication/release (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Narrated by (if required)

Available at: URL

(Downloaded: date)

Book illustrations, figures, diagrams, logos and tables

In-text citation:

Jones’ painting illustrated his immense skill (Bevin, 1997, pp. 77-78).

Reference list:

Bevin, A. (1997) Lost Welsh Treasures. London: Davies Publishers, pp. 77-78, illus.

Author of book

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Page reference of illustration and so on

illus./fig./diagram/logo/table

Bibliographies

In-text citation:

Lifeson (1981) noted the key research…

Reference list:

Lifeson, A. (1981) Select bibliography of Canadian autobiographies. Toronto: University of Toronto, School of Librarianship.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Books in languages other than English

In-text citation:

Napoleon was a natural leader (Dell’Isola, 1934).

Reference list:

Dell’Isola, M. (1934) Napoléon. Paris. R. Helleu.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Historical books in online collections

In-text citation:

James’ measured plans (1654)…

Reference list:

James, P. (1654) Ruins of the palace at Thermopylae. London: Printed for the author.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of publication (in italics)

Place of publication and printing statement

If you are reading a scanned version of the printed book, complete with publication information and page numbers, reference in the same manner as the print book. Some early printed books do not have a publisher as they were privately printed. Record the information given in the book in your reference.

Lines within plays

In-text citation:

‘I prithee do not mock me fellow student’ (Shakespeare, 1998, 1.2:177).

Reference list:

Shakespeare, W. (1998) Hamlet. Edited by Kevin Bryant. London: Penguin. 1.2:177.

Author (surname followed by initials)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition information

Place of publication: publisher

Act. Scene: line

Manuscripts

In-text citation:

The evidence (Simpson, 1865, 6/57/896) points to…

Reference list:

Simpson, J. (1865) Letter to Jayne Beech, 15 December. James Simpson Collection, Birmingham University Library.

Author

Year (in round brackets)

Title of manuscript (in italics)

Date (if available)

Name of collection containing manuscript and reference number

Location of manuscript in archive or repository

Magazine articles

In-text citation:

Stevens discusses this (2011, p. 11)…

Reference list:

Stevens, N. (2011) ‘Circular Motion’, Physics Monthly (November), pp. 8-15.

Author (surname followed by initials)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Issue information, that is, volume (unbracketed) and, where applicable, part number, month or season (all in round brackets)

Page reference

doi (if available)

Pamphlets

In-text citation:

The pamphlet (Royal College of Physicians, 2008)…

Reference list:

Royal College of Physicians, British Geriatrics Society, British Pain Society. (2008) The assessment of pain in younger people: local guidelines. London: RCP.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Edition (only include the edition number if it is not the first edition)

Place of publication: publisher

Series and volume number (where relevant)

Reprint editions

In-text citation:

One of the very first historians (Seaman, 1945)…

Reference list:

Seaman, D. (1945) The king of the truth. Reprint, London: B.Y. Jove, 1998.

Author/editor

Year of original publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Reprint

Place of reprint publication: reprint publisher

Year of reprint

Translated books

In-text citation:

Ludwig (2005) feared the worst for Napoleon.

Reference list:

Ludwig, E. (2005) Napoleon. Translated by E. Paul and C. Paul. London: Book Jungle.

Author/editor

Year of translated publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Translated by ...

Place of publication: reprint publisher

JOURNALS

Journal articles

In-text citation:

In their review of the literature (Knapik et al., 2015)…

Reference list:

Knapik, J. J., Cosio-Lima, L. M., and Reynolds, K. L. (2015) ‘Efficacy of functional movement screening for predicting injuries in coast guard cadets’, The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 29 (5), pp. 1157-1162.

Author (surname followed by initials)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Issue information, that is, volume (unbracketed) and, where applicable, part number, month or season (all in round brackets)

Page reference

doi (if available)

Over recent years it has become clear that the referencing of journal articles, whether print or electronic, should be simplified. Students and tutors can access academic journal articles through password-protected institutional databases, but other readers may not have access to these. Therefore, as long as the journal reference provides enough bibliographic information for the article to be located, other elements no longer need to be included, for example [Online], database title and URL. The reader would locate the article using the resources they can access and search.

If you are specifically referencing the abstract of a journal article, your citation would make this clear, for example: The abstract highlights ... (Rodgers and Baker, 2013, p. 34). Note that the reference would follow the same format as for a journal article, as the page reference above would take the reader to the abstract.

Journal articles accessed via VLE

In-text citation:

In their review of the literature (Knapik et al., 2015, p. 87)…

Reference list:

Knapik, J. J., Cosio-Lima, L. M., and Reynolds, K. L. (2015) ‘Efficacy of functional movement screening for predicting injuries in coast guard cadets’, The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 29 (5), pp. 1157-1162. EDUC 1028: E-learning. Available at: http://intranet.bir.ac.uk (Accessed: 25 June 2015).

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics)

Volume, issue, page numbers

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

Prepublication journal articles

In-text citation:

Several scientists have encountered a problem in this area (Jones, Kree and Rigby, 2014).

Reference list:

Jones, J., Kree, J. and Rigby, P. (2014) ‘Aerobic capacity’. To be published in Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research [Preprint]. Available at: http://journals.lww.com/jscr/Abstract/2015 (Accessed: 23 June 2015).

Author

Year (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

To be published in (if this is stated)

Title of journal (in italics and capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Volume and issue numbers (if stated)

[Preprint]

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Cochrane Library Review

In-text citation:

McDonald et al. (2014) or (McDonald et al., 2014)

Reference list:

McDonald, S., Page, M. J., Beringer, K., Wasiak, J. and Sprowson, A. (2014) Preoperative education for hip or knee replacement. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Issue 5. CD003526.

Author(s), editor(s) or corporate author. Use family name, followed by author's initial(s).

The Year of publication (in brackets).

The title and any subtitle.

Database name, which must be in italics.

Issue number (not including the long DOI number).

Report Number (CD....)

NICE/NHS guidance entry and summary

In-text citation: (NICE/NHS summary)

It is clear that (Hill, 2010)…

Reference List: (NICE/NHS summary)

Hill, J. (2010) Reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism (deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism) in patients admitted to hospital: summary of the NICE guideline. Heart;96:879-882. doi:10.1136/hrt.2010.198275

In-text citation: (NICE/NHS guidance entry)

It is clear that (NICE [CG50], 2007)…

Reference list: (NICE/NHS guidance entry)

NICE. (2007) Acutely ill patients in hospital: recognition of and response to acute illness in adults in hospital. NICE guidelines [CG50]. Available at: http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg50 (Accessed: 5 May 2015)

Author/editor Year of publication (in round brackets) Title of guideline Title of Journal (if relevant) Volume Page reference doi (if available)

Magazine articles

In-text citation:

Stevens discusses this (2011, p. 11)…

Reference list:

Stevens, N. (2011) ‘Circular Motion’, Physics Monthly (November), pp. 8-15.

Author (surname followed by initials)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Issue information, that is, volume (unbracketed) and, where applicable, part number, month or season (all in round brackets)

Page reference

doi (if available)

DIGITAL AND INTERNET

The internet

Blogs

In-text citation:

No evidence was suggested (Davidson, 2013) in the wake of the bombings.

Reference list:

Davidson, A. (2013) ‘The Saudi Marathon Man’, The New Yorker, 16 April. Available at: http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/the-saudi-marathon-man (Accessed: 22 June 2015).

Author of message

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of message (in single quotation marks)

Title of internet site (in italics)

Day/month of posted message

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Blogs (weblogs) are produced by individuals and organisations to provide updates on issues of interest or concern. Beware that, as blogs are someone's opinions, they may not provide objective, reasoned discussion of an issue. Use blogs in conjunction with reputable sources. Note that due to the informality of the internet, many authors give first names or aliases. Use the name they have used in your reference.

Facebook

In-text citation:

The University of Birmingham is soon to have a new library (University of Birmingham, 2015).

Reference list:

University of Birmingham (2015) 9 June. Available at http://www.facebook.com (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Author

Year that the page was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of page (in italics) (unless it is the same as the Author)

Day/month of posted message

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Note that as social networking sites require registration and then acceptance by other members, it is suggested that the main web address be used. You may wish to include a copy of the member-to-member discussion you are referring to as an appendix to your work, so that readers without access to the original can read it.

Also note that if the author of the page is the same as the title of the page, then you only need to include the author at the beginning of the reference – there is no need to repeat it further on in the same reference.

Twitter

In-text citation:

The University of Birmingham (University of Birmingham, 2015) are well accomplished in using social media…

Reference list:

University of Birmingham. (2015) 13 June. Available at https://twitter.com/unibirmingham/status/609691694762627072 (Accessed: 17 June 2015).

Author

Year that the page was last updated (in round brackets)

Day/month of posted message

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Wikis

In-text citation:

Rush originated from the Willowdale neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario (‘Rush (band)’, 2015).

Reference list:

‘Rush (band)’ (2015) Wikipedia. Available at https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Rush_(band) (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of wiki site (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Web pages

Web page - Individual authors

In-text citation:

Snow (2015) stated that ‘millions of soldiers died on the Western Front’ (Snow, 2015).

Reference list:

Snow, D. (2015) How did so many soldiers survive the trenches? Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/z3kgjxs (Accessed: 18 July 2015).

Author

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of web page (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Web page - Organisations as authors

In-text citation:

During WW1 (BBC News, 2014)…

Reference list:

BBC News (2014) ‘Lights out’ ends day of WW1 centenary commemorations. Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28632223 (Accessed: 17 October 2012).

Organisation

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of web page (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Web page - No authors or titles

In-text citation:

Thunderstorms have become increasingly common (http://www.blitzortung.org/Webpages/index.php?lang=en&page=1, 2015).

Reference list:

(2015) Available at: http://www.blitzortung.org/Webpages/index.php?lang=en&page=1 (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Web page - No dates

In-text citation:

He was seen by many to be a great man (BBC History, http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/wellington_duke_of.shtml, no date).

Reference list:

BBC History (no date) Duke of Wellington (1769-1852). Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/wellington_duke_of.shtml (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Author

(no date)

Title of web page (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Radio and internet radio

In-text citation:

According to the latest research (The Sun, 2015)…

Reference list:

The Sun (2015) BBC Radio 4, 1 January.

The Sun (2015) BBC Radio 4, 1 January. Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b048nlfb#auto (Accessed: 23 January 2015).

Title of programme (in italics)

Year of transmission (in round brackets)

Name of channel

Date of transmission (day/month)

The internet has radically altered access to audio and visual sources and created the means for anyone to produce and distribute material. You may also view or hear programmes through catch-up services such as BBC iPlayerITV Player4 on Demand(4oD), Demand 5 and Sky Go on a variety of devices. You do not need to specify the catch-up service nor the device. The nature of the material and the facts necessary to identify or retrieve it should dictate the substance of your in-text citations and reference list.

Title of programme (in italics)

Year of original transmission (in round brackets)

Name of channel

Day and month of original transmission

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Photographs from the internet

In-text citation:

The great photograph (Jarvis, 2015)…

Reference list:

Jarvis, C. (2015) Blue. Available at: http://www.chasejarvis.com/#s=10&mi=2&pt=1&pi=10000&p=8&a=0&at=0 (Accessed 18 June 2015).

Photographer

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of photograph (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed/downloaded: date)

For images that you download onto e-devices, and to which you still have access, you should replace accessed date with downloaded date.

Papers from conference proceedings published on the internet

In-text citation:

Jones (1999) explained…

Reference list:

Jones, D. (1999) ‘Developing big business’, Large firms policy and research conference. University of Birmingham, 18-19 December. Leeds: Institute for Large Businesses. Available at: http://www.bigbusinesses.co.uk/jonesd (Accessed: 19 January 2014).

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of paper (in single quotation marks)

Title of conference: subtitle (in italics)

Location and date of conference

Publisher

Available at: URL (or doi if available)

(Accessed: date) (not required when doi used)

Television programmes viewed on the internet

In-text citation

Napoleon was incredibly important, as seen in the Napoleon series shown on BBC Two (‘Episode 2’, 2015)…

Reference list:

‘Episode 2’ (2015) Napoleon, BBC Two, 17 June. Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b05zq7xf/napoleon-episode-2 (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Title of episode (in single quotation marks) if known; if not, use title of programme

Year of broadcast (in round brackets)

Title of programme/series (in italics)

Series and episode numbers (if known)

Name of channel

Broadcast date (day/month)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Video or films on YouTube

In-text citation:

The video (University of Birmingham, 2010)…

Reference list:

The University of Birmingham (2010) The University of Birmingham experience. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLxV5L6IaFA (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Name of person posting video

Year video posted (in round brackets)

Title of film or programme (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Digital repositories

Books in digital repositories

In-text citation:

Several PhD candidates gave useful advice (Davids and Wright, 1999).

Reference list:

Davids, E. and Wright, I. (1999) Doing referencing. Birmingham: Reference-works.

Reference books and journal articles in repositories should be referenced as you would for the corresponding print versions.

Conference papers in digital repositories

In-text citation:

Jones (2003) revoked the theory…

Reference list:

Jones, S. (2003) ‘Is there a correct way to reference?’ Workshop on referencing in universities, Main Library, University of Birmingham, UK, 30 March to 2 April 2003.

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of paper (in single quotation marks)

Title of conference: subtitle (in italics)

Organisation or company (if stated)

Location and date of conference

Prepublication journal articles in online or digital repositories

In-text citation:

Several scientists have encountered a problem in this area (Jones, Kree and Rigby, 2014).

Reference list:

Jones, J., Kree, J. and Rigby, P. (2014) ‘Aerobic capacity’. To be published in Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research [Preprint]. Available at: http://journals.lww.com/jscr/Abstract/2015 (Accessed: 23 June 2015).

Author

Year (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

To be published in (if this is stated)

Title of journal (in italics and capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Volume and issue numbers (if stated)

[Preprint]

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

CD-ROMs or DVD-ROMs

CD-ROM

In-text citation:

The music industry has expanded greatly, and the ‘Now That’s What I Call Music’ series has proved this (Now That’s What I Call Music, 2015)…

Reference list:

Now that’s what I call music 91 (2015) [CD-ROM]. Now. Available: EMI Group Limited.

Title of publication (in italics)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

[CD-ROM]

Producer (where identifiable)

Available: publisher/distributor

DVD-ROM

In-text citation:

Spielberg (Saving Private Ryan, 1998) clearly suggests…

Reference list:

Saving Private Ryan (1998) (DVD). Steven Spielberg (director). Available: Paramount Pictures.

Title of film (in italics)

Year of distribution (in round brackets)

Directed by

[DVD] or [Blu-ray]

Place of distribution: distribution company

Computer games and programs

Computer games

In-text citation:

Games such as Rome: Total War (The Creative Assembly, 2004)…

Reference list:

The Creative Assembly (2004) Rome: Total War [Computer game]. Available at http://rome-total-war.en.softonic.com/ (Downloaded: 18 June 2015).

Author (if given)

Date (if given)

Title of program (in italics and capitalise initial letters)

[Computer game]

Availability, that is, distributor, address, order number (if given)

OR if downloaded from the internet:

URL

(Downloaded: date)

Computer programs

In-text citation:

Games such as Rome: Total War (The Creative Assembly, 2004)…

Reference list:

The Creative Assembly (2004) Rome: Total War [Computer game]. Available at: http://rome-total-war.en.softonic.com/ (Downloaded: 18 June 2015).

Author (if given)

Date (if given)

Title of program (in italics and capitalise initial letters)

[Computer game]

Availability, that is, distributor, address, order number (if given)

OR if downloaded from the internet:

URL

(Downloaded: date)

Personal and virtual learning environments

Learning support materials

Journal articles accessed via VLE

In-text citation:

In their review of the literature (Knapik et al., 2015, p. 87)…

Reference list:

Knapik, J. J., Cosio-Lima, L. M., and Reynolds, K. L. (2015) ‘Efficacy of functional movement screening for predicting injuries in coast guard cadets’, The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 29 (5), pp. 1157-1162. EDUC 1028: E-learning. Available at: http://intranet.bir.ac.uk (Accessed: 25 June 2015).

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics)

Volume, issue, page numbers

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

PowerPoint presentations

In-text citation:

The great presentation (Whittingham, 2014)…

Reference list:

Whittingham, D. (2014) ‘History of warfare’ [PowerPoint presentation]. L252: War studies. Available at: https://intranet.bham.ac.uk (Accessed: 7 June 2014).

Author or tutor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of presentation (in single quotation marks)

[PowerPoint presentation]

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

Tutors’ lecture notes in VLEs

In-text citation:

The tutor’s work (Whittingham, 2015)…

Reference list:

Whittingham, D. (2015) ‘Zulu warriors’. L252: War Studies. Available at: http://intranet.bham.ac.uk (Accessed: 21 June 2015).

Author or tutor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of item (in single quotation marks)

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

MEDIA AND ART

Newspaper articles

In-text citation:

“Businesses and organisations around York are showing their support” (Lewis, 2015, p. 6).

Reference list:

Lewis, S. (2015) ‘Rainbow support for York pride’, The Press, York, 18 June.

Author/byline

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of newspaper (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Edition if required (in round brackets)

Day and month

Page reference

Just like journal articles, over recent years it has become clear that the referencing of newspaper articles, whether print or electronic, could be simplified. Students and tutors can access newspaper articles through password-protected institutional databases, but other readers may not have access to these. Therefore, as long as the newspaper reference provides enough bibliographic information for the article to be located, other elements no longer need to be included, for example [Online] and database title. The reader would locate the newspaper article using the format/resource they can access and search themselves.

Live performances

Concerts

In-text citation:

Rush (2015) wowed the audience…

Reference list:

Rush (2015) [Bishopthorpe Social Club. 29 March].

Composer

Year of performance (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Performed by ... conducted by ...

Location. Date seen (in square brackets)

Plays

In-text citation:

It was a spectacular feat of engineering (Romeo and Juliet, 2013).

Reference list:

Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare (2013). Directed by David Smith [Theatre Royal, York. 18 January].

Title (in italics)

by author

Year of performance (in round brackets)

Directed by

Location. Date seen (in square brackets)

Visual sources

Book illustrations, figures, diagrams, logos and tables

In-text citation:

Jones’ painting illustrated his immense skill (Bevin, 1997, pp. 77-78).

Reference list:

Bevin, A. (1997) Lost Welsh Treasures. London: Davies Publishers, pp. 77-78, illus.

Author of book

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Page reference of illustration and so on

illus./fig./diagram/logo/table

Cartoons

In-text citation:

Joe Bloggs (2013) highlighted the issue…

Reference list:

Bloggs, J. (2013) ‘The key issue’ [Cartoon]. The Times, 20 January. Available at: http://www.times.co.uk/world/cartoon/2013/jan/20/bloggs (Accessed: 25 July 2015).

Artist

Date (if available)

Title of cartoon (in single quotation marks)

[Cartoon]

Title of publication (in italics)

Day and month

OR if seen online add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Comics

In-text citation:

Dennis the Menace is still going strong (‘The wrath of Gnasher’, 2015).

Reference list:

‘The wrath of Gnasher’ (2015) The Beano, 25 July, pp. 40-42.

Author (where available)

Title of comic strip (in single quotation marks)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of comic (in italics)

Day and month, page

OR if seen online add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Displays

In-text citation:

It is obvious (Paintings of John Doe, 2012) that…

Reference list:

Paintings of John Doe (2012) Display board at Alex Davids Art Gallery exhibition, Pontefract, 28 April 2015.

Title (in italics)

Year of production (if available)

Display board at

Name of venue, city

Date observed

Exhibitions

In-text citation:

The acclaimed exhibition in London is one to behold (Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde, 2012)

Reference list:

Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde (2012) [Exhibition]. Tate Modern, London. 12 September 2012-13 January 2013.

Title of exhibition (in italics)

Year (in round brackets)

[Exhibition]

Location

Date(s) of exhibition

Installations

In-text citation:

My house by Jordan Thompson (2009)…

Reference list:

Thompson, J. (2009) My house [Installation]. Tate Modern, London, 4 January 2009.

Artist

Year (in round brackets)

Title of installation or exhibit (in italics)

[Installation] or [Exhibit]

Gallery or location

Date viewed

Graffiti

In-text citation:

The graffiti (Jimmy no!, 2015) demonstrated…

Reference list:

Jimmy no! (2015) [Graffiti] 15 West Street, York. 23 June 2015.

Title or description (with graffitist's tag, if present) (in italics)

Year (in round brackets)

[Graffiti]

Location

Date viewed

Inscriptions

On monuments

In-text citation:

The gravestone of the man (‘James Smith’, 2014) showed him to be the man he truly was.

Reference list:

‘James Smith’ (2014) [Monument inscription] St Andrews Churchyard, Bishopthorpe, York (Viewed: 22 June 2015).

Name of deceased (in single quotation marks)

Year of death/event (in round brackets)

[Monument inscription]

Location

Date viewed (in round brackets)

Inscriptions on gravestones and memorials are, in many instances, the only detailed record of a person's existence, circumstances and relationships, apart from basic information given in birth, marriage and death certificates and the census. Referencing this information can be difficult, but (as with printed information) you should aim to provide as much information as possible for another person to locate the gravestone or memorial. In some instances, the plot number of a grave will be obtainable and can be referenced; if not, try to give an indication of the location from a landmark.

On buildings

In-text citation:

The exterior inscription by Stevens (2005)…

Reference list:

Stevens, G. (2005) Inscription on English Development Centre, Jubbergate, York. (Viewed: 17 March 2008).

Author (if known); if not, use first three words of inscription

Year of inscription (in round brackets)

Inscription on ... (in italics)

Location

Date viewed (in round brackets)

Maps

Ordnance Survey maps

In-text citation:

Archaeological sites are clearly shown (Ordnance Survey, 2002)…

Reference list:

Ordnance Survey (2002) York, sheet 56, 1:50 000. Southampton: Ordnance Survey (Landranger series).

Ordnance Survey

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Sheet number, scale

Place of publication: publisher

Series (in round brackets)

Geological Survey maps

In-text citation:

The landscape has changed quite considerably (Ordnance Survey, 1988).

Reference list:

Ordnance Survey (1988) Castleford (solid), sheet 16, 1:50 000. Southampton: Ordnance Survey. (Geological Survey of Great Britain [England and Wales]).

Corporate author and publisher

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Sheet number, scale

Place of publication: publisher

Series (in round brackets)

Online maps

In-text citation:

The social club is close to the playing fields (Ordnance Survey, 2010).

Reference list:

Ordnance Survey (2010) ‘Ferry Lane’, Tile sp15nw, 1:10 000. Available at: http://edina.ac.iuk/digimap/ (Accessed: 8 June 2014).

Map publisher

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of map section (in single quotation marks)

Sheet number or tile, scale

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Medical images

In-text citation:

The X-ray (2014) evidently showed…

Reference list:

The femur (2014) [X-ray]. Available at: http://www.anatomy.tv/femur (Accessed: 25 June 2015).

Image title (in italics)

Year (in round brackets)

Medium (in square brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed/Downloaded: date)

Many kinds of medical/anatomical images can be viewed and downloaded from the internet (for example, MRI, PET, CT and ultrasound scans and X-rays) for use in supporting your arguments or demonstrating particular aspects of anatomical or medical information. These would simply be referenced as photographs/images from the internet.

Other images may be found in online databases such as Anatomy TV. For these, use the following format.

Mood boards

In-text citation:

The mood board (Smith, 2012)…

Reference list:

Smith, D. (2012) Hello. Available at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/hello/57647 (Accessed: 19 June 2015).

Artist (if known, or use title)

Year (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

[Mood board]

Exhibited at

Location and date(s) of exhibition

Dimensions (if relevant and available)

If it's an online mood board:

Artist (if known, or use title)

Year (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Available at:

(Accessed: date).

Packaging

In-text citation:

The packaging (Mars Incorporated, 2013) made it clear.

Reference list:

Mars Incorporated (2013) Mars Bar [Wrapper].

Manufacturer

Year seen

Product name (in italics)

Medium (in square brackets)

OR if seen online, add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Paintings/drawings

In-text citation:

Works by Dali (1958) are fascinating.

Reference list:

Dali, S. (1958) Madonna [Oil on canvas]. Tate Gallery, London.

Artist

Year (if available)

Title of the work (in italics)

Medium (in square brackets)

Institution or collection that houses the work, followed by the city

OR if seen online:

Available at:

(Accessed: date)

Photographs/images

Photographic prints or slides

In-text citation:

It is ever so clear (Tebow, 2009) that…

Reference list:

Tebow, T. (2009) York at night [Photograph]. York: Here and There Publishing.

Photographer

Year (in round brackets)

Title of photograph (in italics)

[Photograph]

Place of publication: publisher (if available)

Students often become confused when referencing works of art they have photographed. They are often unsure whether to reference themselves as the image maker or to reference the work itself. The answer is clear: you reference what it is you are referring to (ie your photograph or the work of art). Thus, if you wish to discuss the way you photographed a sculpture by Rodin, you would reference yourself, following the examples below (omitting, if necessary, place of publication and publisher). If, however, you photographed Rodin's sculpture in a gallery and you are discussing the sculpture itself, you would follow the guidelines for Sculpture.

For images that you download onto edevices, and to which you still have access, you should replace accessed date with downloaded date.

Photographs from the internet

In-text citation:

The great photograph (Jarvis, 2015)…

Reference list:

Jarvis, C. (2015) Blue. Available at: http://www.chasejarvis.com/#s=10&mi=2&pt=1&pi=10000&p=8&a=0&at=0 (Accessed 18 June 2015).

Photographer

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of photograph (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed/downloaded: date)

For images that you download onto edevices, and to which you still have access, you should replace accessed date with downloaded date.

Clip art

In-text citation:

The image of the dinosaur (Dinosaur, no date)…

Reference list:

Dinosaur (no date). Available at: http://www.clipart.co.uk/cgibin/dinosaur (Accessed: 17 June 2015).

Producer

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of clip art (in italics)

Available at: URL

(Accessed/Downloaded: date)

If using clip art images from online collections, use the details you are given to take the reader to the relevant piece of artwork. On occasions, you may need to reference clipart that you have found through social media sites like Pinterest or Tumblr, or that you have viewed directly on Flickr. Do not be confused: you simply take the reader to where you viewed the image.

For images that you download onto edevices, and to which you still have access, you should replace accessed date with downloaded date.

Postcards

In-text citation:

The shore was beautiful (Terrence, no date)…

Reference list:

Terrence, T. (no date) Tintagel [Postcard]. England: Cornwall Gallery.

Artist (if available)

Year (in round brackets if available)

Title (in italics)

[Postcard]

Place of publication: publisher

Posters

In-text citation:

The image (Severn, no date)…

Reference list:

Severn, J. (no date) Le Joue [Poster]. 84cm x48cm/33” x 19”.

Artist (if known, or use title)

Year (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

[Poster]

Exhibited at

Location and date(s) of exhibition

Dimensions (if relevant and available)

PowerPoint presentations

In-text citation:

The great presentation (Whittingham, 2014)…

Reference list:

Whittingham, D. (2014) ‘History of warfare’ [PowerPoint presentation]. L252: War studies. Available at: https://intranet.bham.ac.uk (Accessed: 7 June 2014).

Author or tutor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of presentation (in single quotation marks)

[PowerPoint presentation]

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

War memorials

In-text citation:

The memorial (Derek Boorman, 1995)…

Reference list:

Derek Boorman (1995) For Your Tomorrow, York Minster, Deangate, York, UK. (Viewed: 22 June 2014).

Name of architect (if known); if not, use name of memorial

Date of construction (in round brackets)

Name of memorial (in italics)

Location (and/or GPS coordinates, if available)

Date viewed (in round brackets)

Audiovisual material

CD-ROMs

In-text citation:

The music industry has expanded greatly, and the ‘Now That’s What I Call Music’ series has proved this (Now That’s What I Call Music, 2015)…

Reference list:

Now that’s what I call music 91 (2015) [CD-ROM]. Now. Available: EMI Group Limited.

Title of publication (in italics)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

[CD-ROM]

Producer (where identifiable)

Available: publisher/distributor

DVD-ROM

In-text citation:

Spielberg (Saving Private Ryan, 1998) clearly suggests…

Reference list:

Saving Private Ryan (1998). Steven Spielberg (director) [DVD]. Available: Paramount Pictures.

Title of film (in italics)

Year of distribution (in round brackets)

Directed by

[DVD] or [Blu-ray]

Place of distribution: distribution company

Microform

In-text citation:

Data from Jones (1997)…

Reference list:

Jones, P. (1997) The Jones collection [Microform]. Yorkshire: Jones Physiological Association.

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of microform (in italics)

Medium (in square brackets)

Place of publication: publisher

Phonecasts

In-text citation:

Zuckerberg created his website in 2004 (A conversation with Mark Zuckerberg, 2007).

Reference list:

A conversation with Mark Zuckerberg (2007) [Phonecast]. Available at: http://www.phonecasting.com/Channel/View/Channel.aspx (Accessed: 27 June 2014).

Title of phonecast (in italics)

Year of production (in round brackets)

[Phonecast]

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Phonecasts are audio or video programmes transmitted to a user's mobile phone. The user dials a number to access the programme. Alternatively, phonecasters can broadcast by using their telephones in place of microphones. Although phone calls are personal communications, it is possible to reference phonecasts if the access details are available in a publication or web page.

Podcasts

In-text citation:

It was clear that George Osborne was well out of his depth (Yesterday in Parliament, 2015)…

Reference list:

Yesterday in Parliament (2015) 18th June 15 [Podcast]. 18 June. Available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02tys33 (Accessed: 19 June 2015).

Author/presenter

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of podcast (in italics)

[Podcast]

Day/month of posted message

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Although podcasts can be downloaded onto portable devices, you should reference where it was published or displayed for download rather than trying to give 'my iPod' as a source.

Screencasts

In-text citation:

An online video showed this (Learning Rails the zombie way, no date).

Reference list:

Learning Rails the zombie way (no date) [Screencast]. Available at: http://www.rubyonrails.org (Accessed: 12 January 2014).

Title of screencast (in italics)

Year of production (in round brackets)

[Screencast]

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Vodcasts or vidcasts

In-text citation:

The vodcast (Butler and O’Rourke, 2014) explained how Bob Saget was a hero to them.

Reference list:

Butler, B. and O’Rourke, A. (2014) Bob Saget: Norm Macdonald Live: Video Podcast Network. [Vodcast]. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=peDLWyHegfI (Accessed: 22 June 2015).

Author

Year that the site was published/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of vodcast (in italics)

[Vodcast]

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Video podcasts can be viewed on the internet or downloaded for later viewing. So that readers can locate the original, cite and reference where you obtained the vodcast.

Interviews with film directors

In-text citation:

The directors were incredibly pleased with the outcome (Wachowski, 2003).

Reference list:

Wachowski, L. (2003) ‘Interview with L. Wachowski’. Interviewed by L. Smith. The Matrix Reloaded [DVD]. Los Angeles: Warner Brothers Inc.

Name of person interviewed

Year of interview (in round brackets)

Title of the interview (if any) (in single quotation marks)

Interview with/interviewed by

Interviewer's name

Title of film (in italics)

[DVD] or [Blu-ray]

Place of distribution: distribution company

Reviews

Book reviews

In-text citation:

Stevens (2010) thought the book…

Reference list:

Stevens, H. (2010) ‘Biology of birds’. Review of The birds and the bees, by David Bills. Journal of the History of Biology, 50(2), pp. 190-92.

Name of the reviewer (if indicated)

Year of publication of the review (in round brackets)

Title of the review (in single quotation marks)

Review of ... (title of work reviewed – in italics)

Author of work being reviewed

Publication details (title in italics)

Drama reviews

In-text citation:

One reviewer (Smith, 2007, p. 6) wrote…

Reference list:

Smith, U. (2007) ‘The big finale’. Review of Heaven help me, by T. Jones. Theatre Royal, York. The Times (Review section), 8 July.

Name of the reviewer (if indicated)

Year of publication of the review (in round brackets)

Title of the review (in single quotation marks)

Review of ... (title of work reviewed – in italics)

Director of work being reviewed

Publication details (title in italics)

Film reviews

In-text citation:

One reviewer (Smith, 2007, p. 6) wrote…

Reference list:

Smith, U. (2007) ‘The big finale’. Review of Heaven help me, by T. Jones. Theatre Royal, York. The Times (Review section), 8 July.

Name of the reviewer (if indicated)

Year of publication of the review (in round brackets)

Title of the review (in single quotation marks)

Review of ... (title of work reviewed – in italics)

Director of work being reviewed

Publication details (title in italics)

Reviews of musical performances

In-text citation:

Jubb (2015) thought the performance was incredible.

Reference list:

Jubb, A. (2015) ‘Absolute magic’. Review of Clockwork Angels Tour, by Rush, York, UK. The Press (Review section), 29 March, p. 91.

Name of the reviewer (if indicated)

Year of publication of the review (in round brackets)

Title of the review (in single quotation marks)

Review of ... (title of work reviewed – in italics)

Composer of work being reviewed

Publication details (title in italics)

Interviews

Newspaper interview

In-text citation:

Jones (2009) believed…

Reference list:

Jones, K. (2009). Interview with Kevin Jones. Interview by Steven Poulter for The Times, 7 July, p. 88.

Name of person interviewed

Year of interview (in round brackets)

Title of the interview (if any) (in single quotation marks)

Interview with/interviewed by

Interviewer's name

Title of publication or broadcast (in italics)

Day and month of interview, page numbers (if relevant)

If published on the internet add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Television interview

In-text citation:

Jones was clearly out of his depth (Jones, 2009).

Reference list:

Jones, K. (2009) Interviewed by Steven Poulter for Newsnight, BBC Two Television, 5 February.

Name of person interviewed

Year of interview (in round brackets)

Title of the interview (if any) (in single quotation marks)

Interview with/interviewed by

Interviewer's name

Title of publication or broadcast (in italics)

Day and month of interview, page numbers (if relevant)

If published on the internet add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Internet interview

In-text citation:

Jones was clearly out of his depth (Jones, 2009).

Reference list:

Jones, K. (2009) Interviewed by Steven Poulter for Newsnight, 7 March. Available at: http://iplayer.co.uk/Newsnight/march7 (Accessed: 17 June 2015).

Name of person interviewed

Year of interview (in round brackets)

Title of the interview (if any) (in single quotation marks)

Interview with/interviewed by

Interviewer's name

Title of publication or broadcast (in italics)

Day and month of interview, page numbers (if relevant)

If published on the internet add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

RESEARCH

Unpublished or confidential information

Confidential information

In-text citation:

The records they produced (Placement hospital, 2014)…

Reference list:

[Placement hospital] (2014) [Placement hospital] examination criteria for patients with dementia. London: [Placement hospital].

Anonymised institution/agency (in square brackets)

Year produced (in round brackets)

Anonymised title (in italics) (use square brackets for the anonymised part)

Location

Anonymised producer (in square brackets)

In many cases you will need to anonymise the person or institution involved. In medical situations, for example, you may use terms such as 'Subject 1', 'Patient X' or 'Baby J' instead of real names; or 'Placement school', 'Placement hospital' or 'Placement agency' instead of actual institutions.

Internal reports

In-text citation:

Recommendations in the report (Hegenbarth, 2014)…

Reference list:

Hegenbarth, L. (2014) Focus group recommendations. Internal LGU report. Unpublished.

Author or organisation

Year produced (in round brackets)

Title of report (in italics)

Internal report (including name of institution)

Unpublished

Unpublished academic work

Students’ own work

In-text citation:

The topic of the essay (Jubb, 2014)…

Reference list:

Jubb, A. (2014) ‘Did the Allies win the battle of the Atlantic because of superior air power?’, L252: War Studies. University of Birmingham. Unpublished essay.

Student name

Year of submission (in round brackets)

Title of essay/assignment (in single quotation marks)

Module code: module title (in italics)

Institution

Unpublished essay/assignment

Theses and dissertations

In-text citation:

Research by Gregory (1970) suggests that…

Reference list:

Gregory, S. (1970) English military intervention in the Dutch revolt. B.A. Thesis. University of Birmingham. Available at: http://findit.bham.ac.uk/ (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Author

Year of submission (in round brackets)

Title of thesis (in italics)

Degree statement

Degree-awarding body

If viewed online:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Tutors’ handouts

In-text citation:

The tutor’s handout (Whittingham, 2015)…

Reference list:

Whittingham, D. (2015) ‘Zulu warriors’, L252: War Studies. University of Birmingham. Unpublished.

Tutor

Year of distribution (in round brackets)

Title of handout (in single quotation marks)

Module code: module title (in italics)

Institution

Unpublished

Tutors’ lecture notes in VLEs

In-text citation:

The tutor’s work (Whittingham, 2015)…

Reference list:

Whittingham, D. (2015) ‘Zulu warriors’. L252: War Studies. Available at: http://intranet.bham.ac.uk (Accessed: 21 June 2015).

Author or tutor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of item (in single quotation marks)

Module code: module title (in italics)

Available at: URL of VLE

(Accessed: date)

Reports

Financial

Company annual reports

In-text citation:

The company expanded massively during the first half of the year (BSkyB Ltd, 2012).

Reference list:

BSkyB Ltd. (2012) Annual Report 2012. Available at: http://annualreview2012.sky.com (Accessed: 9 January 2013).

Author or organisation

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of report (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if accessed on the internet:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Financial reports from online databases

In-text citation:

BSkyB’s profit margin rose by over 7 per cent in the financial year 2011-2012 (Bureau van Dijk, 2013).

Reference list:

Bureau van Dijk (2013) ‘BSkyB plc company report’. Available at: http://fame.bvdep.com/bskyb (Accessed: 8 January 2013).

Publishing organisation

Year of publication/last updated (in round brackets)

Title of extract (in single quotation marks)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Research

Internal reports

In-text citation:

Recommendations in the report (Hegenbarth, 2014)…

Reference list:

Hegenbarth, L. (2014) Focus group recommendations. Internal LGU report. Unpublished.

Author or organisation

Year produced (in round brackets)

Title of report (in italics)

Internal report (including name of institution)

Unpublished

Market research reports from online databases

In-text citation:

Mintel Oxygen (2014) noticed problems in the market…

Reference list:

Mintel Oxygen (2014) ‘Van insurance Wales’. Available at: http://academic.minteloxygen.com (Accessed: 18 July 2014).

Author or organisation

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of report (in single quotation marks)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if accessed on the internet:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Research reports

In-text citation:

The minimum cost of living in Yorkshire is £15,000 (Friedland, 2009, p. 65)

Reference list:

Friedland, B. (2009) A minimum income standard for Yorkshire: what people think. Available at: http://www.jrf.org.uk/yorkshireresearch (Accessed: 19 June 2015).

Author or organisation

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of report (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if accessed on the internet:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Genealogical sources

Birth, marriage and death certificates

In-text citation:

Jayne was born in Pontefract (‘Jayne Seaman’, 1966)…

Reference list:

‘Jayne Seaman’ (1966) Certified copy of birth certificate for Jayne Seaman, 20 December 1966. Application number 5001977/D. Pontefract Register Office.

Name of person (in single quotation marks)

Year of event (in round brackets)

Certified copy of ... certificate for ... (in italics)

Full name of person (forenames, surname) (in italics)

Day/month/year of event (in italics)

Application number from certificate

Location of Register Office

OR if you retrieved the certificate online, after application number from certificate, add:

Year of last update (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Censuses

In-text citation:

Mark Jones moved to York in the 1950s (‘Mark Jones’, 1956).

Reference list:

‘Mark Jones’ (1956) Census return for Leeds Road, Bishopthorpe, York subdistrict, North Yorkshire. Public Record Office: PRO YO9/3765, folio 89, p. 8 (1956). Available at: http://www.ancestry.co.uk (Accessed: 23 June 2015).

Name of person (in single quotation marks)

Year of census (in round brackets)

Census return for ... (in italics)

Street, place, county (in italics)

Registration subdistrict (in italics)

Public Record Office:

Piece number, folio number, page number

OR if you retrieved the certificate online, add:

Year of last update (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Military records

In-text citation:

Private Hunsley fought valiantly (‘Richard Hunsley VC’, 2014).

Reference list:

‘Richard Hunsley VC’ (1956) Commonwealth War Graves Commission casualty details. Available at: http://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty/hunsleyvc (Accessed: 21 June 2015).

Name of person (in single quotation marks)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of publication (in italics)

Publication details

OR if you retrieved the document online, add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Parish registers

In-text citation:

Alex and Alice’s wedding (‘Alex Jones and Alice Roberts’, 1934)…

Reference list:

‘Alex Jones and Alice Roberts’ (1934) Marriage of Alex Jones and Alice Roberts, 5 May 1934. St Andrew’s Church Bishopthorpe, York marriage register 1900-1950 (2009). Available at: http://www.genuki.org.uk/bishopthorpe (Accessed: 29 March 2015).

Name of person (in single quotation marks)

Year of event (in round brackets)

Baptism, marriage or burial of ...

Full name of person (forenames, surname)

Day/month/year of event

Title of register (in italics)

OR if you retrieved the certificate online, add:

Year of last update (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Wills

In-text citation:

They inherited a great wealth (Will of Jamie Blackburn of York Abbey, North Yorkshire, 1800).

Reference list:

Will of Jamie Blackburn of York Abbey, North Yorkshire (1800). The National Archives: Public Record Office. Catalogue reference: PROB/15/1980.

Title of document (in italics)

Year of will (in round brackets)

Name of archive or repository

Reference number

Manuscripts

In-text citation:

The evidence (Simpson, 1865, 6/57/896) points to…

Reference list:

Simpson, J. (1865) Letter to Jayne Beech, 15 December. James Simpson Collection, Birmingham University Library.

Author

Year (in round brackets)

Title of manuscript (in italics)

Date (if available)

Name of collection containing manuscript and reference number

Location of manuscript in archive or repository

Scientific and technical information

Data

Graphs

In-text citation:

The effects of the atoms (Gray, 2009, p. 87)…

Reference list:

Gray, A. (2009) How to reference scientific papers. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 87, graph.

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of book (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Page number or figure number for graph

Graph

Scientific datasets

In-text citation:

The data (Shevchenko, 2014)…

Reference list:

Shevchenko, A. (2014) ‘Na levels holdings’. Available at: http://physics.nist.gov/ajh5 (Accessed: 9 January 2015).

Author

Date (in round brackets)

Title of data (in single quotation marks)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

British Standards

In-text citation:

Attic conversions are subject to strict controls (British Standards Institution, 1998).

Reference list:

British Standards Institution (1998) BS5678-9.8: Structural use of timber: ceiling binders. Available at: http://www.standardsuk.com/ (Accessed: 5 June 2014).

Name of authorising organisation

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Number and title of standard (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if viewed online:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Mathematical equations

In-text citation:

James (2006, p. 1889) noted that z>0.

Reference list:

James, J. (2006) ‘Some functional equations’, Advances in Algebra, 315(8), pp. 1880-1899. Available at: http://www.mathematicjournals.co.uk/James (Accessed: 19 January 2015).

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of article (in single quotation marks)

Title of journal (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)

Volume, issue, page numbers

Available at: URL (or doi if available)

(Accessed: date) (not required when doi used)

Patents

In-text citation:

Fredericks (2012) proposed a solution.

Reference list:

Fredericks, F. (2012) Vinyl cleaning tool. UK Intellectual Property Office Patent no. GB2468906. Available at: http://www.ipo.gov.uk/p/find-publication (Accessed: 5 June 2013).

Inventor(s)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Authorising organisation

Patent number

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Requests for Comments (RFCs)

In-text citation:

A number of comments were made relating to the document (Hoff, 1995).

Reference list:

Hoff, D. (1995) The Baywatch years. Nos: FYA 19 and RFC 5879. Available at: http://tools.ietf.org/hoff (Accessed: 20 October 2009).

Author/editor

Year (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Document number

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Scientific or technical reports

In-text citation:

Jones has found (1997, p. 76)…

Reference list:

Jones, B., (1997) Methods in tumour research. National Agency for Tumour Research, volume. 7.

Author(s)

Title of report

Publishing organisation. Place of publication

Date of publication

Report series and number

LEGAL MATERIAL

House of Commons and House of Lords Papers

In-text citation:

Parliamentary reports for the year included renewable energy (Parliament. House of Lords, 2004).

Reference list:

Parliament. House of Lords (2004) Electricity from renewables: the first report. (HL 2003-2004 (19)). London: The Stationary Office.

Parliament. House of ...

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Paper number (in round brackets). For House of Lords papers, the paper number is also in round brackets to distinguish it from identical House of Commons paper numbers (see example below)

Place of publication: publisher

Hansard

In-text citation:

Dr Sugar expressed his views quite clearly (HC Deb 20 January 2009).

Reference list:

HC Deb 20 January 2009, vol 500, col 1990. Available at: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/hcdeb1990 (Accessed: 19 August 2010).

Abbreviation of House and Deb (for Debates)

Date of debate

Volume number

Column number

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Hansard is the official record of debates and speeches given in Parliament, as well as written answers to questions and written statements by ministers. A fully searchable version of Hansard from 1988 for the Commons and from 1995 for the Lords is available online athttp://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/hansard/(Accessed: 18 April 2013). For more information on the use of Hansard, see Factsheet G17: The Official Report (2010) produced by the House of Commons Information Office. Available at:http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-information-office/g17.pdf (Accessed: 18 April 2013). We suggest adding the URL for the debate you are citing so that your reader can locate the precise section.

Legislation from UK devolved Assemblies

In-text citation:

In the legislation (Budget (Wales) Act 2008)

Reference list:

Budget (Wales) Act 2008 (asp 2). Available at: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2008/2/contents (Accessed: 19 March 2009).

Title of Act including year (in italics)

asp number (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

More legal material

Bills from the House of Commons of House of Lords

In-text citation:

It is clear that the Green Belt Bill (Parliament, House of Commons, 1999) is inadequate.

Reference list:

Parliament, House of Commons (1999) Green Belt Bill (Bills 1999-2000 9). London: The Stationary Office.

Parliament. House of ...

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Bill number (in brackets)

Place of publication: publisher

Command papers including Green and White Papers

In-text citation:

Useful advice (Lord Chancellor’s Department, 2000) includes…

Reference list:

Lord Chancellor’s Department (2000) Government policy on referencing. London: The Stationery Office (Cm 4517).

Name of committee or Royal Commission

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Paper number (in brackets)

OR if viewed online:

Paper number (in round brackets after title)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Law commission reports and consultation papers

In-text citation:

The report (Crime Commission, 2012)…

Reference list:

Crime Commission (2012) Prosecution Appeals. (Law Com No 567, Cm 8906). London: The Stationery Office.

Law Commission

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of report or consultation paper (in italics)

Number of report or consultation paper, Command Paper number (if given) (in round brackets)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if viewed online:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Statutory Instruments (SIs)

In-text citation:

The Terrorism Order 2004

Reference list:

Terrorism Order 2004 (SI 2004/3354). Available at: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2004/3354/contents/made (Accessed: 19 January 2013).

Name/title including year (in italics)

SI year and number (in round brackets)

Available at: URL

(Accessed date)

GOVERNMENT & EU

European Union publications

In-text citation:

The predicted migration of labour (European Commission, 2007)…

Reference list:

European Commission (2007) Making globalisation profitable. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.

Name of EU institution (for example, Council of the European Union, European Commission)

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Government publications

Command Papers including Green and White Papers

In-text citation:

Useful advice (Lord Chancellor’s Department, 2000) includes…

Reference list:

Lord Chancellor’s Department (2000) Government policy on referencing. London: The Stationery Office (Cm 4517).

Name of committee or Royal Commission

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

Paper number (in brackets)

OR if viewed online:

Paper number (in round brackets after title)

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Departmental publications

Publications of international organisations

In-text citation:

Reports by the International Chamber of Commerce, Commission for Air Transport (2010)…

Reference list:

International Chamber of Commerce, Commission for Air Transport (2010) The need for greater liberalization. Available at: http://www.iccwbo.org/liberalization (Accessed: 8 February, 2014).

Name of organisation or institution

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title (in italics)

Place of publication: publisher

OR if viewed online:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

COMMUNICATIONS

Conferences

Full conference proceedings

In-text citation:

The conference (Institute for Large Businesses, 1999)…

Reference list:

Institute for Large Businesses (1999) Large firms policy and research conference. University of Birmingham, 18-19 December. Leeds: Institute for Large Businesses.

Author/editor

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of conference: subtitle (in italics)

Location and date of conference

Place of publication: publisher

Individual conference papers

In-text citation:

Jones (1999) explained…

Reference list:

Jones, D. (1999) ‘Developing big business’, Large firms policy and research conference. University of Birmingham, 18-19 December. Leeds: Institute for Large Businesses.

Author of paper

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of paper (in single quotation marks)

Title of conference: subtitle (in italics)

Location and date of conference

Place of publication: publisher

Page references for the paper

Papers from conference proceedings published on the internet

In-text citation:

Jones (1999) explained…

Reference list:

Jones, D. (1999) ‘Developing big business’, Large firms policy and research conference. University of Birmingham, 18-19 December. Leeds: Institute for Large Businesses. Available at: http://www.bigbusinesses.co.uk/jonesd (Accessed: 19 January 2014).

Author

Year of publication (in round brackets)

Title of paper (in single quotation marks)

Title of conference: subtitle (in italics)

Location and date of conference

Publisher

Available at: URL (or doi if available)

(Accessed: date) (not required when doi used)

Public communications

Electronic

Electronic discussion groups and bulletin boards

In-text citation:

This was discussed by Jameson (2014)…

Reference list:

Jameson, A. (2014) ‘International queries’, British Business Schools Librarians Group discussion list, 13 March. Available email: [email protected].

Author of message

Year of message (in round brackets)

Subject of the message (in single quotation marks)

Discussion group or bulletin board (in italics)

Date posted: day/month

Available email: email address

Entire discussion groups or bulletin boards

RSS feeds

In-text citation:

The library extension will be completed in 2016 (University of Birmingham Library, 2015).

Reference list:

University of Birmingham Library (2015) Library opening [RSS] 26 January. Available at: https://www.bham.ac.uk/feeds/news/178 (Accessed: 18 February 2015).

Author/organisation

Year issued (in round brackets)

Title of communication (in italics)

[RSS]

Day/month

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Advertisements & PR

Advertisements

In-text citation:

The advertisement by British Telecom (2012)…

Reference list:

British Telecom (2012) Office relocation gremlins [Advertisement on ITV3 Television]. 19 November.

Author/Organisation

Year (in round brackets)

Title of advert/brief description of advert (in italics)

[Advertisement on (insert channel name)]

Date viewed.

Press releases and announcements

In-text citation:

This development (Google Inc., 2015)…

Reference list:

Google Inc. (2015) Google Maps changes forever [Press release]. 29 December. Available at: http://www.google.com/intl/en/news (Accessed: 30 December 2015).

Author/organisation

Year issued (in round brackets)

Title of communication (in italics)

[Press release]

Day/month

OR if available online, add:

Available at: URL

(Accessed: date)

Display boards (for example in museums)

In-text citation:

It is obvious (Paintings of John Doe, 2012) that…

Reference list:

Paintings of John Doe (2012) Display board at Alex Davids Art Gallery exhibition, Pontefract, 28 April 2015.

Title (in italics)

Year of production (if available)

Display board at

Name of venue, city

Date observed

Leaflets

In-text citation:

Barclays Bank plc (no date) provides insurance for many families.

Reference list:

Barclays Bank plc (no date) Mortgages. [Leaflet obtained in York branch], 8 June 2015.

Author (individual or corporate)

Date (if available)

Title (in italics)

[Leaflet obtained ... ]

Date obtained

Minutes of meetings

In-text citation:

The library staff committee (2014) suggested…

Reference list:

Library staff committee (2014) ‘Item 4.2: Developing technology’. Minutes of library staff committee meeting 24 January 2014, Main Library, University of Birmingham.

Author (individual or group if identified)

Year of meeting (in round brackets)

Item being referenced (in single quotation marks)

Title and date of meeting (in italics)

Organisation

Location of meeting

Personal communications

In-text citation:

This was disputed by Smith (2012).

Reference list:

Smith, D. (2012) Conversation with Steven Jones, 13 August.

Smith, D. (2012) Letter to Steven Jones, 23 January.

Smith, D. (2012) Email to Steven Jones, 14 August.

Smith, D. (2012) Telephone conversation with Steven Jones, 25 December.

Smith, D. (2012) Skype conversation with Steven Jones, 21 June.

Smith, D. (2012) Text message to Steven Jones, 14 June.

Smith, D. (2012) Fax to Steven Jones, 17 December.

Sender/speaker/author

Year of communication (in round brackets)

Medium of communication

Receiver of communication

Day/month of communication

A reference list is the detailed list of references that are cited in your work. Therefore, it includes the full bibliographical information on sources, so that the reader can identify and then locate the source. A bibliography is a detailed list of references but also includes background readings or other material that you may have read but not actually cited. Different courses may require just a reference list, just a bibliography, or even both. It is better to check with your tutor first. Both the reference list and the bibliography are located at the end of the work. When using the Harvard style of referencing, both the bibliography and the reference list are arranged in alphabetical order by the author’s surname, or title (for when there is no author). Usually, the reference list is included in the wordcount, but the bibliography is not. However, always check with your lecturer or supervisor beforehand as this rule can vary between departments.

Sample Reference List

Banerjee, A. and Watson, T.F. (2011) Pickard’s manual of operative dentistry. 9th edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Davidson, A. (2013) ‘The Saudi Marathon Man’, The New Yorker, 16 April. Available at: http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/the-saudi-marathon-man (Accessed: 22 June 2015).

Guy, J. (2001) The view across the river: Harriette Colenso and the Zulu struggle against imperialism. Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia.

Hislop, V. (2014) The sunrise. Available at http://www.amazon.co.uk/kindlestore (Downloaded: 17 June 2015).

Homer (1997) The Iliad. Translated by J. Davies. Introduction and notes by D. Wright. London: Dover Publications.

Knapik, J. J., Cosio-Lima, L. M., and Reynolds, K. L. (2015) ‘Efficacy of functional movement screening for predicting injuries in coast guard cadets’, The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 29 (5), pp. 1157-1162. EDUC 1028: E-learning. Available at: http://intranet.bir.ac.uk (Accessed: 25 June 2015).

Lucas, G. (2004) The wonders of the Universe. 2nd edn. Edited by Frederick Jones, James Smith and Tony Bradley. London: Smiths.

Medicine in old age (1985) 2nd edn. London: British Medical Association.

‘Rush (band)’ (2015) Wikipedia. Available at https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Rush_(band) (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Sample Bibliography

Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (1994) Epi Info (Version 6) [Computer program]. Available at http://www.cdcp.com/download.html (Accessed: 23 June 2015).

Gregory, S. (1970) English military intervention in the Dutch revolt. B.A. Thesis. University of Birmingham. Available at: http://findit.bham.ac.uk/ (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Jones, B., (1997) Methods in tumour research. National Agency for Tumour Research, volume. 7.

Peart, N. (1976) Something for Nothing. Toronto: Toronto Sound Studios.

Rush (2015) [Bishopthorpe Social Club. 29 March].

The University of Birmingham (2010) The University of Birmingham experience. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLxV5L6IaFA (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Note:

Use (Accessed:…) when you have simply viewed the source on the internet, whereas use (Downloaded:…) when you have specifically downloaded something, for example a book onto your Kindle.

Hints and tips

Be aware: if you don't already know, check with your tutor which referencing style you are expected to use

Be positive: used properly, references strengthen your writing, demonstrating that you have spent time researching and digesting material and produced your own opinions and arguments

Be decisive about the best way to cite your sources and how you balance your use of direct quotations, paraphrasing and summarising (read about these in the introductory Basics sections of Cite them right online)

Be willing to ask for help: library/learning resource staff offer support with referencing and academic skills. Subject Advisors can help with finding and using resources and reference software, http://libguides.bham.ac.uk/subjectsupport/index; the Academic Skills Centre staff can help with essay writing and the use of citations and references http://intranet.birmingham.ac.uk/asc.

Be organised: prepare well and keep a record of all potentially useful sources as you find them

Be prepared: read the Basics sections of ‘Cite them right online’ before you begin your first assignment

Be consistent: once you have established the referencing style required, use it consistently throughout your piece of work

Be patient: make time and take your time to ensure that your referencing is accurate

Be clear: clarify the type of source you are referencing and check Cite them right online for examples

Be thorough: check through your work and your references before you submit your assignment, ensuring that your citations all match with a full reference and vice versa.

(What is referencing and why is it important? (2015) Available at: http://www.citethemrightonline.com/Basics/top-ten-tips)

FAQs

What is the difference between a reference list and a bibliography?

· A reference list is the detailed list of references that are cited in your work. Therefore, it includes the full bibliographical information on sources, so that the reader can identify and then locate the source. A bibliography is a detailed list of references but also includes background readings or other material that you may have read but not actually cited. Different courses may require just a reference list, just a bibliography, or even both. It is better to check with your tutor first. Both the reference list and the bibliography are located at the end of the work. When using the Harvard style of referencing, both the bibliography and the reference list are arranged in alphabetical order by the author’s surname, or title (for when there is no author).

What do I do if the publication has no date?

· You simply write ‘no date’ in brackets. For example, (Smith and Jones, no date).

· Example of in-text citation with no date:

· He was seen by many to be a great man (BBC History, http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/wellington_duke_of.shtml, no date).

· Example of reference list entry with no date:

· BBC History (no date) Duke of Wellington (1769-1852). Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/wellington_duke_of.shtml (Accessed: 18 June 2015).

Can I mix referencing styles?

· No, you should never mix referencing styles. Always be consistent.

When should I use italics?

For a printed or electronic book, the book title is in italics, but for journal articles the name of the journal is in italics, and for newspaper articles the title of the newspaper is in italics. Check the i-cite guide or cite them right online for more detailed examples if you are ever stuck on a reference – never guess!

When should I omit page numbers and when should I include page numbers?

Page numbers in a citation are required for

· Lengthy or direct quotes

· If you are using ideas from a specific page or pages of a work

Page numbers in a citation are NOT required

· If you refer to a complete work

· Or you refer to ideas that run through an entire work

So you might be summarising ideas that run through a work or summarising an argument in a journal article or book, then no page numbers are required, but if you refer to an idea or fact from a page or several pages then you would provide page numbers.

Does the full stop go before or after in-text citations?

· Even when quoting, do not use a full stop until after your in-text citation in brackets because the in-text citation is part of your sentence.

Can I cite lots of sources in the same sentence?

· Yes, but only cite more than one author in the same sentence if they make similar points or use similar methods or evidence. If this cannot be avoided, put the sources in alphabetical order and separate each one with a comma. See the example below:

· A number of different studies (Jamieson, 2011; Hollingworth, 2012; Hatfield, 2013; Rogers, 2015) suggested that…

What should I do if I list more than one source by the same author?

· If you list different sources by the same author which are produced in the same year, label the first source a, the second b, etc. Do this in reverse chronological order with the most recent first. See the example below:

· In his study of the work of Dawkins, Harris (2007a) emphasised the use of rationality in the former’s argument. However, it is clear that this was not the only strength of the original author (2007b).

The reference list would look like this;

· Harris, S. (2007a) Dawkins: a history. London: Evolutionary Press.

· Harris, S. (2007b) Evolutionary thought. London: Evolutionary Press.

Are in-text citations included in my word count?

· Yes, they are counted in your word count. However, your bibliography or list of references is not counted in your word count.

What are DOIs?

· DOIs are digital object identifiers – a character string used to uniquely identify a digital object.

What is the difference between using (Accessed:...) and (Downloaded:…)?

· Use (Accessed:…) when you have simply viewed the source on the internet, whereas use (Downloaded:…) when you have specifically downloaded something, for example a book onto your Kindle.

Further information and useful websites

Cite them right online homepage – the most useful website for the Harvard (author-date) referencing style. If you have any further questions or queries, this is probably the best website to go to;

http://www.citethemrightonline.com/Home

A useful guide with many different source type examples;

http://www2.le.ac.uk/library/help/referencing/author-date/author-date

A succinct example of a reference list, along with many citation examples;

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/resources/authors/pdf/hup-author-guidelines-author-date-citations-and-reference-lists.pdf

A useful guide with many different source type examples. Also comes with an excellent quiz at the end to test your new-found referencing knowledge;

http://www.bristol.ac.uk/arts/exercises/referencing/referencing%20skills/page_24.htm

A more in-depth referencing guide, set out in a table-style format;

http://lib.tsinghua.edu.cn/service/harvard-referencing.pdf

A useful guide with many different source type examples;

https://www.brookes.ac.uk/library/resources/harvard.pdf

Any questions?

If you have a query that is not answered within this Guide, and the answer is still not found on any of the other useful websites that are linked further up, please speak to your tutor or subject advisor. Always refer back to the Cite them right online website if you are still unsure.

Glossary (from Cite them right online)

Bibliography: A list of all the sources you consulted for your work arranged in alphabetical order by author's surname or, when there is no author, by title. For web pages where no author or title is apparent, the URL of the web page would be used.

Citation: The in-text reference that gives brief details (for example author, date, page number) of the source you are quoting from or referring to. This citation corresponds with the full details of the work (title, publisher and so on) given in your reference list or bibliography, so that the reader can identify and/or locate the work. End-text citations are more commonly known as references.

Common knowledge: Facts that are generally known.

Digital Object Identifier (doi): A numbered tag used to identify individual digital (online) sources, such as journal articles and conference papers.

Direct quotation: The actual words used by an author, in exactly the same order as in their original work, and with the original spelling.

Ellipsis: The omission of words from speech or writing. A set of three dots (...) shows where the original words have been omitted.

End-text citation: An entry in the reference list at the end of your work, which contains the full (bibliographical) details of information for the in-text citation.

et al. : (From the Latin et alia meaning 'and others'.) A term most commonly used (for example Harvard author-date system) for works having more than three authors. The citation gives the first surname listed in the publication, followed by et al. One example is; (Smith et al., 2014).

Ibid: Ibid is the term used to provide an endnote or footnote citation or reference for a source that was cited in the previous endnote or footnote. The previous reference should be immediately visible. For example, within the same paragraph or page.

In-text citation: Often known as simply the citation, this gives brief details (for example author, date, page number) of your source of information within your text.

Paraphrase: A restating of someone else's thoughts or ideas in your own words. You must always cite your source when paraphrasing.

Peer-review: A process used in academic publishing to check the accuracy and quality of a work intended for publication. The author's draft of a book or article is sent by an editor (usually anonymously) to experts in the subject, who suggest amendments or corrections. This process is seen as a guarantee of academic quality and is a major distinction between traditional forms of publishing, such as books and journals, and information in web pages, which can be written by anyone, even if they have no expertise in a subject.

Plagiarism: Taking and using another person's thoughts, writings or inventions as your own without acknowledging or citing the source of the ideas and expressions. In the case of copyrighted material, plagiarism is illegal.

Proper noun: The name of an individual person, place or organisation, having an initial capital letter.

Quotation: The words or sentences from another information source used within your text.

Reference: The full publication details of the work cited.

Reference list: A list of references at the end of your assignment that includes the full information for your citations so that the reader can easily identify and retrieve each work (journal articles, books, web pages and so on).

Secondary referencing: Citing/referencing a work that has been mentioned or quoted in the work you are reading. You may wish to refer to an author's idea, model or dataset but have not been able to read the actual chapter containing the information, but only another author's discussion or report of it.  Similarly you may refer to a primary source, e.g. an author's letters or diary, or a government report, that you have only 'read' as cited or reproduced within another author's text.  This is known as secondary referencing because you have not actually read the source, but only someone else's account of it.

sic : (From the Latin meaning 'so, thus'.) A term used after a quoted or copied word to show that the original word has been written exactly as it appears in the original text, and usually highlights an error or misspelling of the word.

Summarise: Similar to paraphrasing, summarising provides a brief account of someone else's ideas or work, covering only the main points and leaving out the details.

URL: The abbreviation for Uniform (or Universal) Resource Locator, the address of documents and other information sources on the internet (for example http://...).

Virtual learning environment (VLE): An online teaching environment (also known as online learning environment – OLE) that allows interaction between tutors and students, and the storage of course documents and teaching materials.

Index

Advertisements 81

Ancient texts 19

Anthologies 20

Atlases 20

Audiobooks 21

Bible 18

Bibliographies 22

Bills from the House of Commons of House of Lords 75

Birth, marriage and death certificates 67

Blogs 30

Book illustrations, figures, diagrams, logos and tables 43

Book reviews 58

Books in digital repositories 37

Books in languages other than English 22

British Standards 71

Cartoons 44

CD-ROM 38

Censuses 68

Chapter in an edited book 16

Clip art 52

Cochrane Library Review 29

Collected works 18

Comics 44

Command papers including Green and White Papers 75

Company annual reports 64

Computer games 39

Computer programs 40

Concerts 42

Conference papers in digital repositories 37

Confidential information 61

Display boards 82

Drama reviews 58

DVD-ROM 39

E-book 17

Electronic discussion groups and bulletin boards 80

European Union publications 77

Exhibitions 46

Facebook 31

Film reviews 59

Financial reports from online databases 65

Full conference proceedings 78

Geological Survey maps 48

Graffiti 46

Graphs 69

Hansard 74

Historical books in online collections 23

House of Commons and House of Lords Papers 73

Individual conference papers 79

Installations 45

Internal reports 62

Internet interview 61

Interviews with film directors 57

Journal articles 27

Journal articles accessed via VLE 28

Law commission reports and consultation papers 76

Leaflets 82

Legislation from UK devolved Assemblies 74

Lines within plays 23

Magazine articles 24

Manuscripts 69

Market research reports from online databases 66

Mathematical equations 71

Medical images 49

Microform 55

Military records 68

Minutes of meetings 82

Mood boards 49

Multi-volume works 17

Newspaper articles 42

Newspaper interview 60

NICE/NHS Guidelines 29

Online maps 48

Ordnance Survey maps 47

Packaging 50

Paintings/drawings 50

Pamphlets 25

Papers from conference proceedings published on the internet 36

Parish registers 69

Patents 72

Personal communications 83

Phonecasts 55

Photographic prints or slides 51

Photographs from the internet 51

Plays 43

Podcasts 56

Postcards 53

Posters 54

PowerPoint presentations 53

Prepublication journal articles 29

Prepublication journal articles in online or digital repositories 38

Press releases and announcements 81

Printed book with an editor 14

Printed book with authors and editors 15

Printed book with more than three authors 14

Printed book with no author 15

Printed book with one author 13

Printed book with two or three authors 13

Publications of international organisations 78

Qur’an 19

Radio and internet radio 34

Reprint editions 25

Requests for Comments (RFCs) 72

Research reports 66

Reviews of musical performances 59

RSS feeds 80

Scientific datasets 70

Scientific or technical reports 73

Screencasts 56

Statutory Instruments (SIs) 76

Students’ own work 62

Television interview 60

Television programmes viewed on the internet 36

Theses and dissertations 63

Torah 18

Translated books 26

Tutors’ handouts 63

Tutors’ lecture notes in VLEs 64

Twitter 31

Video or films on YouTube 36

Vodcasts or vidcasts 57

War memorials 54

Web page - Individual authors 32

Web page - No authors or titles 33

Web page - No dates 34

Web page - Organisations as authors 33

Wikis 32

Wills 69