fmed style

edited December 18, 2017
Dear all,

I am looking for a style that fits to the prerequisites of Journals like Mediterranean Politics which use the "fmed system" - similar to the American Political Science Association Style but not quite.. (http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/style/layout/style_fmed.pdf)

In the text itself, there should be a short reference appearing in parenthesis, including page references separated not by comma, but by colon - e.g. (Ludlow ed., 1994: 2–8) or (Barbé & Grimm, 2000: 135–7)

Where there are two or more works by one author in the same year, they should be
distinguished as 1996a, 1996b, etc. Authors should not abbreviate publishers' names in the references (e.g., by using an acronym).

In the bibliography the referencing style is as follows:

- Çarkoglu, A. and E. Kalaycıoğlu (2007) Turkish Democracy Today: Elections, Protest and Stability in an Islamic Society (London: I.B. Tauris).
- De Larramendi, M.H. (2008) Intra-Maghrebi relations: unitary myth and national interests, in: Y.H. Zoubir & H. Amirah-Fernández (Eds) North Africa: Politics, Region, and the Limits of Transformation (London: Routledge).
- Bicchi, F. (2006) ‘Our Size fits all’: normative power Europe and the Mediterranean,
Journal of European Public Policy, 13(2), pp. 286-303.
- Pace, M. (2001) Rethinking the Mediterranean: Reality and Re-presentation in the
Creation of a ‘Region’, PhD thesis, University of Portsmouth. • Vassilikou, C. (2007) Immigrant women in Greece, Gender Sociologie, Available at http://www.genderonline.com ( accessed 4 February 2008).
- Tabar, T. (2008) Women, domestic workers join forces to fight abuse, The Daily
Star (Beirut), 21 October, p.1.
- Caritas Lebanon (2009) Committee on Migrant Workers: a day of general
discussion, October 14 (Beirut: Caritas Migrant Centre).


Can anyone help me find a similar style? (Or give advice on how to adapt an existing)
Thank you!
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