Error in American Sociological Association style
According to page 2 of the American Sociological Association's "Quick Tips for ASA Style" - http://www.asanet.org/documents/teaching/pdfs/Quick_Tips_for_ASA_Style.pdf - correctly citing websites using ASA style requires location information (i.e. - the city and state where the person/organization publishing the web page is located). However, the current Zotero web page citation window doesn't seem to have location info, meaning this information has to be added in manually once a bibliography is created.
Is this something that's an easy fix? Or would it involve making major changes to the way the plugin works?
Thanks for any help you can offer.
- Zachary
Is this something that's an easy fix? Or would it involve making major changes to the way the plugin works?
Thanks for any help you can offer.
- Zachary
This is an old discussion that has not been active in a long time. Before commenting here, you should strongly consider starting a new discussion instead. If you think the content of this discussion is still relevant, you can link to it from your new discussion.
Where does the ASA expect you to find that information? It is often difficult to identify any single specific place of origin for a web page. Your linked document didn't provide guidance. The webpages of many organizations (including those of several sociological ones) list contact info for officers but not an organization office location. Membership matters are handled with online forms so we don't have a postal address. If one of the officers addresses should be used, which one? President? Newsletter editor? Maybe the company that designed and operates the website -- this seems analogous to a journal publisher.
Even when I have performed a whois search of the domain name, I often find the registration contact address to be private. The possibility of automated retrieval of the publisher location is remote.
On a similar topic, many (predatory?) journal publishers do not list a city or nation on their website. Even the LOC and ISSN registry record lists the publisher location as SN.
@DWL-SDCA: The legal term for these kind of information (also on a webpage) is impressum. In Germany: The same is not true for other countries, e.g. for the US. Moreover, it is possible that "German" pages does not have an impressum, however, you can then sue aggainst such websites (and laywers make money with it).
Thanks to all who replied. It looks like this may no longer be an issue in the 5th Edition of the style, but I will confirm this when I get my hands on the new style book.