Harvard Author-Date Page Numbers
Hi,
I'm wondering if anyone can provide me with a bit of advice. I'm putting together a large academic manuscript that was converted from a thesis. The thesis originally used Chicago, but the book publisher prefers Harvard Author Date.
I have successfully converted it on the file (zotero is awesome). However, I'm having trouble with converting the page numbers. For instance, the publisher wants the in-text citations to be (Smith 2000: 11-12). At the moment, my in-puts through zotero have been (Smith 2000, pp 11-12). How do I get rid of pp?
I am aware of going into into Editor (when adding the citation) and changing it manually. I am wondering if there is an easier way to do it without having to change each one individually.
Thanks.
I'm wondering if anyone can provide me with a bit of advice. I'm putting together a large academic manuscript that was converted from a thesis. The thesis originally used Chicago, but the book publisher prefers Harvard Author Date.
I have successfully converted it on the file (zotero is awesome). However, I'm having trouble with converting the page numbers. For instance, the publisher wants the in-text citations to be (Smith 2000: 11-12). At the moment, my in-puts through zotero have been (Smith 2000, pp 11-12). How do I get rid of pp?
I am aware of going into into Editor (when adding the citation) and changing it manually. I am wondering if there is an easier way to do it without having to change each one individually.
Thanks.
If all that matters is the colon and the lack of pp, you can use, e.g. the American Sociological Association style, which is a harvard-family style.
Otherwise you'll have to manually edit the style you like best:
http://www.zotero.org/support/dev/citation_styles/style_editing_step-by-step
I just found out that "Harvard" is a family (I never realized there were so many styles until today) - I've been using the Harvard Author-Date style (which is what was advised), but have been going into the editor and changing it.
The American Sociological Association style seems be almost perfect. I might attempt to adjust it to perfection.
Your advice has been very helpful!