BU Guide To Citation in The Harvard Style: Available in Alternative Formats. Please Ask
BU Guide To Citation in The Harvard Style: Available in Alternative Formats. Please Ask
BU Guide To Citation in The Harvard Style: Available in Alternative Formats. Please Ask
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dominant role, e.g. videos or films, the title may be used instead of an originator or author. Where neither of these options are apparent and there is clearly no identifiable person/body responsible, use Anon.. Dates: if an exact year or date is not known, an approximate date preceded by ca. may be supplied and given in square brackets. If no such approximation is possible, that should be stated, e.g. [ca.1750] or [no date]. Note that for web pages, it may be preferable to cite the year in which the page was accessed, e g [ca 2009], than use [no date].
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Matthews and Jones (1997) have proposed that vi) If there are more than two authors the surname of the first author only should be given, followed by et al.:Office costs amount to 20% of total costs in most business (Wilson et al. 1997) (A full listing of names should appear in list of references.) vi) If the work is anonymous then Anon. should be used:e.g. In one history (Anon. 1908) it was stated that e.g.
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Examples
i) If the authors name occurs naturally in the sentence, the year is given in parentheses:e.g. e.g. In a popular study Harvey (1992) argued that we have to teach good practices As Harvey (1992, p.21) said, good practices must be taught and so we
vii) If it is a reference to a newspaper article with no author the name of the paper can be used in place of Anon.:More people than ever seem to be using retail home delivery (The Times 1996) (You should use the same style in list of references.) viii) If you refer to a source directly quoted in another source you cite both in the text:A study by Smith (1960 cited Jones 1994) showed that (You should list only the work you have read, i.e. Jones, in list of references.) ix) If you refer to a contributor in a source you cite just the contributor:Software development has been given as the cornerstone in this industry (Bantz 1995). See Section References at the end of a piece of work below for an explanation of how to list contributions (chapters in books, articles in journals, papers in conference proceedings) in list of references. x) If you refer to a person who has not produced a work, or contributed to one, but who is quoted in someone elses work it is suggested that you should mention the persons name and you must cite the source author:e.g. Richard Hammond stressed the part psychology plays in advertising in an interview with Marshall (1999). e.g. e.g. e.g.
ii) If the name does not occur naturally in the sentence, both name and year are given in parentheses:e.g. A more recent study (Stevens 1998) has shown the way theory and practical work interact. Theory rises out of practice, and once validated, returns to direct or explain the practice (Stevens 1998).
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iii) When an author has published more than one cited document in the same year, these are distinguished by adding lower case letters (a,b,c, etc.) after the year and within the parentheses:e.g. Johnson (1994a) discussed the subject
NB The addition of letters is determined by the order of appearance within the main text, not by the alphabetical sequence of the items themselves. Thus, a citation Johnson (1994a) will always precede Johnson (1994b) iv) When more than one source is cited, the sequence of citations may be either chronological, e.g. (Smith 1999; Jones 2001; Turner 2006) or in order of academic relevance. v) If there are two authors the surnames of both should be given:-
Advertising will always play on peoples desires, Richard Hammond said in a recent article (Marshall 1999, p.67). (You should list the work that has been published, i.e. Marshall, in list of references.)
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Person-to-person communications (letters, emails, interviews, etc): Taken from: APA, 2009. Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. 6th ed. Washington: APA.
name of the university, do not include the place of publication. Where authorship is attributed to an organisation or corporation instead of an individual author, e.g. BBC, ascribe authorship to the smallest identifiable organisational unit. Give the author as it is written e.g. BBC, Training and Development or UNESCO. Each reference should use the elements and punctuation given in the following examples for the different types of published work you may have cited. Underlining is an acceptable alternative to italics when bibliographies are hand written. Reference to a book Authors Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title. Edition (if not the first). Place of publication: Publisher. e.g. Mercer, P.A. and Smith, G., 1993. Private viewdata in the UK. 2nd ed. London: Longman. Reference to a contribution in an edited book Contributing authors Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of contribution. Followed by In: Surname, INITIALS., of author or editor of publication followed by ed. or eds. if relevant. Title of book. Place of publication: Publisher, Page number(s) of contribution. e.g. Bantz, C.R., 1995. Social dimensions of software development. In: Anderson, J.A., ed. Annual review of software management and development. Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 502-510.
They do not provide recoverable data and so are not included in the reference list. Cite personal communications in the text only. Give initials as well as the surname of the communicator and provide as exact a date as possible. When citing research data which you have collected, it is advisable to also include copies or summaries of source data in Appendices. e.g. Many designers do not understand the needs of disabled people according to J. O. Reiss (personal communication, April 18, 1997).
Reference to an article in a journal Authors Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of article. Title of journal, Volume number and (part number), Page numbers of article. e.g. Evans, W.A., 1994. Approaches to intelligent information retrieval.
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Reference to a map Originators Surname, first name or initials, (may be cartographer, surveyor, compiler, editor, copier, maker, engraver, etc.) year of publication. Title, Scale. (should be given normally as a ratio) Place of publication: Publisher. e.g. Mason, James, 1832. Map of the countries lying between Spain and India, 1:8,000,000. London: Ordnance Survey.
Reference to a translation Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title. Translated from given language by Translator. Place of publication: Publisher (Originally published in given year). e.g. Kotler, P. 2003. Les cls du marketing. Translated from English by Marie-France Pavillet. Paris: Village Mondial (Originally published in 2003).
Reference to a conference paper Contributing authors Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of contribution. Followed by In: Surname, INITIALS., of editor of proceedings (if applicable) followed by ed or eds if relevant. Title of conference including date and place of conference. Place of publication: Publisher, Page numbers of contribution. e.g. Silver, K., 1991. Electronic mail: the new way to communicate. In: Raitt, D.I., ed.
Reference to a video, film or broadcast Title, Year. (For films the preferred date is the year of release in the country of production.) Material designation. Subsidiary originator. (Optional but director is preferred) Production details place: organisation. e.g. e.g.
Macbeth, 1948. Film. Directed by Orson Welles. USA: Republic Pictures. Birds in the garden, 1998. Video. London: Harper Videos.
Programmes and series: the number and title of the episode should normally be given, as well as the series title, the transmitting organisation and channel, the full date and time of transmission. e.g.
Yes, Prime Minister, Episode 1, The Ministerial broadcast, 1986. TV, BBC2. 1986 Jan 16. News at ten, 2001. Jan 27. 2200 hrs.
e.g.
Contributions: individual items within a programme should be cited as contributors. e.g. Blair, Tony, 1997. Interview. In: Six oclock news. TV, BBC1. 1997 Feb 29. 1823 hrs.
Reference to a thesis Authors Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of thesis. Designation, (and type). Name of institution to which submitted. e.g. Agutter, A.J., 1995. The linguistic
Reference to CD-ROMs and DVDs This example refers to CD-ROMs and DVDs which are works in their own right and not a video, film, or bibliographic database. Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title [type of medium, e.g. CD-ROM]. (Edition). Place of publication: Publisher (if ascertainable). Available from: Supplier/Database identifier or number (optional) [Accessed Date] (optional). e.g. Hawking, S.W., 1994. A brief history of time: an interactive adventure. [CD-ROM]. London: Crunch Media. e.g. Herigstad, G. 2005. Houdini 101: interface and workflow [DVD] Hollywood : Gnomon Workshop
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Referencing Online Materials The recommendations here follow best practice in referencing online resources. NB Scanned chapters, journal articles, etc, located on Unit pages in myBU have been provided from print sources located within the BU Library and thus should be referenced the same as their print original. Equally, lecture notes, whether downloaded from myBU or not, are not regarded as published materials and are intended as pointers toward such sources rather than as source materials in themselves. Reference to a book located in a database Author's /Editor's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title. (Edition). Place of publication: Publisher (if ascertainable). Available from: URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Moloney, K., 2000. Rethinking public
Consciousness. Psycoloquy, 6 (15). Available from: http://psycprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/archive/ 00000462/ [Accessed 20 May 2004]. NB See page 1-2 for advice about pagination. Reference to web pages and e-books Author's /Editor's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title. (Edition). Place of publication: Publisher (if ascertainable). Available from: URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. National Centre for Social Research, 2006.
relations: the spin and the substance. London: Routledge. Available from: http://site.ebrary.com/lib/bournemouth [Accessed 22 May 2006].
Reference to an online journal article If you are certain that the copy you find on a database is identical to the printed version you may omit the URL and reference as a printed journal. If you are in any doubt you should use one of the options below. If the article has been located on a bibliographic database, e.g. Business Source Complete, or a publisher's archive, e.g. Emerald, then also give core URL, e.g. www.sciencedirect.com, so: Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title. Journal Title, volume (issue), page numbers (if available). Available from: core URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Mcfall, R., 2005. Electronic textbooks that transform how textbooks are used. Electronic Library, 23 (1), 72-81 Available from: http://www.emeraldinsight.com [Accessed 20 May 2006].
international conference on World Wide Web, WWW 2006, May 23-26, 2006,
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. Available from: http://dret.net/netdret/docs/wildewww2006-fsx.pdf [Accessed 29 June 2007]. Reference to a digital map Originators Surname, first name or initials, (may be cartographer, surveyor, mapping agency, editor, copier, maker, engraver, etc.), year of publication. Title (if not supplied, provide an appropriate title). Scale (should normally be given as a ratio). Place of publication: Publisher. Available from: core URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Ordnance Survey, 2008. Bournemouth, Poole and surrounding area, 1:50000. Southampton: Ordnance Survey. Available from http://digimap.edina.ac.uk [Accessed 16 January 2009].
In all other cases, give full URL, so: Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year. Title. Journal Title, volume (issue), page numbers (if available). Available from: URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Korb, K.B., 1995. Persons and things: book review of Bringsjord on Robot-
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Reference to a Blog Author's Surname, INITIALS., Day Month Year. Subject of message. Blog Title. Available from: list e-mail address [Accessed Date]. e.g. Schofield, J., 20 May 2006. Yahoo is winning in the portal wars. GU technologyblog. Available from: http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/technology/ [Accessed 22 May 2006].
Reference to photographs/images accessed online Photographer/Artists Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of image [type of medium photograph/image]. Place of publication: Publisher (of online image) if ascertainable. Available from: URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Sweetman, E. A., 1935. The Square and Compass Inn, Worth Matravers [photograph]. Bournemouth, Dorset Coast Digital Archive. Available from: http://www.dcda.org.uk/images/jpg600/d cm_pht_11442d3.jpg [Accessed 22 May 2006] Reference to a computer program Authors Surname, INITIALS., (if given, see also advice on using corporate authors). Date (if given). Title of program. Version (in brackets) [type of medium e.g. computer program]. Place of Publication: Publisher. e.g. Thomson ResearchSoft, EndNote. (9.0.1) [computer program]. Stamford, Conn.: Thomson ResearchSoft.
Reference to JISCmail/listserv e-mail lists Author's Surname, INITIALS., Day Month Year. Subject of message. Discussion List. Available from: list e-mail address [Accessed Date]. e.g. Brack, E.V., 2 May 2004. Re: Computing short courses. Lis-link. Available from: jiscmail@jiscmail.ac.uk [Accessed 17 Jun 2004]. Jensen, L.R., 12 Dec 1999. Recommendation of student radio/tv in English. IASTAR. Available from: listserv@ftp.nrg.dtu.dk [Accessed 29 Apr 2004].
e.g.
It should be noted that items may only be kept on discussion group servers for a short time and hence may not be suitable for referencing. A local copy could be kept by the author who is giving the citation, with a note to this effect. Reference to moving images accessed online Use originator/author if ascertainable otherwise use title. Originator. Year. Title. Place of publication or production (if ascertainable): Publisher or Producer (if ascertainable). Available from: URL [Accessed Date]. e.g. Walkers Crisps. 2009. Builders wheel a wheelbarrow full of crisps while announcing the flavour. Available from: www.creativeclub.co.uk [Accessed 19 June 2009]
Citing unpublished material See BS 6371:1983. Citation of unpublished documents. B.S.I. (available online via British Standards Online).
Plagiarism
Remember that you must acknowledge your source every time you refer to someone else's work. Failure to do so amounts to plagiarism, which is against the University rules and is a serious offence. Further information about plagiarism can be found on the plagiarism web pages at www.bournemouth.ac.uk/library/citing_references/p lagiarism.html or via the Using Information Community on myBU.
Copyright
You do not have to seek permission to include third party copyright material in your academic work, as long as it is fully referenced. Further information about copyright can be found on notices next to photocopiers, on the copyright compliance web pages at www.bournemouth.ac.uk/library/citing_references/c opyright.html or via the Using Information Community on myBU.
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Endnote
A version of the Bournemouth University Harvard Style is available for both EndNote and EndNote Web users. Further information about Endnote can be found on the Citing References web pages at www.bournemouth.ac.uk/library/citing_references/c iting_refs_main.html or via the Using Information Community on myBU. Student and Academic Services Bournemouth University July 2009
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Notes
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