Harvard Author Date version
Anyone know what style the following most closely matches?
Bibliography
A bibliography is a list of all the sources you have used during the preparation of your work- both those consulted and those directly referred to in the text. The list is organised in the following way:
1. Alphabetical order by author’s surname
2. If more than one book by the same author, then list in order
of publication, earliest first
3. If the publication has more than one author, keep to the
order on the publication title page. First three authors only.
Book: Surname, Initials. (Date) Title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher.
Gross, R. and McILveen, R. (1996) Abnormal Psychology. 2nd edition. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
Chapter in Book: Surname, Initials. (Date) ‘Chapter title’, in Book title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher, page numbers.
Jones, H. (2005) ‘Values and Ethics’, Social Work. London: Polity Press, pp 25-35.
Article: Surname, Initials. (Date) ‘Article title.’ Journal title. Volume Number (Part Number), pages.
Smith, R. (2006) ‘Child protection.’ Children Now,16(4),
pp 8-12.
Television programme: ‘Title of episode’ (Date) Title of programme/series. Name of channel, Date of transmission (day/month).
ASBOs on trial (2005) Panorama. BBC1, 16 May.
Film: Film title. (Date) Directed by Name [Format eg; Film, DVD, Video cassette] Place of publication: Publisher.
Mrs. Dalloway. (2002) Directed by Gorris, M. [Film] UK : Artificial Eye.
Website: Author/Editor/Organisation (Date) Title of page. (Online) Available at: URL (Accessed : Date).
BBC (2006) Buddhism. [online] Available from: www.bbc.co.uk/religion/buddhism (Accessed: 8 March 2006)
▪ Remember: there may not be a specific author - use the
organisation instead. If no date is available write (No date)
Electronic Journal: Author of article, Initial (Date) ‘Article title.’ Journal title. Volume Number (Part Number), Pages (if given). Available at: URL [Accessed: Date].
McHugh, M. (2001) ‘Employee absence’, International Journal of Public Sector Management, [online], 14(1), pp 43-58. Available at www.emeraldinsight.com (Accessed: 6 February 2006).
Electronic Book: Author, Initial. (Date) Title. Name of e-book collection [Online]. Available at: URL (Accessed: date).
Blythe, J. (2004) Essentials of marketing. Dawsonera [Online]. Available at: www.dawsonera.com (Accessed: 20 January 2009).
Citations
A. Citations in the text
In the text you should refer to information sources by the surname of the author (not first names or initials). You also need to add the year of publication and page numbers (if appropriate) in brackets.
You must include an author and a publication date (and a page number, if available) within the sentence. Two alternative ways to cite are shown below:
Of the various studies of children’s attitudes to television, Andrews (2003) offers the most convincing argument for regulation.
Surveys of bank robbers have shown that they are also likely to have committed other serious crimes (Jones, 1996, p.56).
Quotations (including cut and pastes from a website) must be in quotation marks. Longer quotations (over a line’s length) should be indented and single spaced. A page number should be included after the publication year.
Smith has argued that “good practices must be taught” (2005, p.21).
Electronic information must be referenced. The author is often not a named individual but a ‘corporate author’ such as the BBC, Government department etc.
Page numbers may not be available – in this case, leave them out. The following example is an extract from the website www.doh.gov.ac.uk:
“In 2004, 73 per cent of smokers who were asked said they wanted to give up” (Department of Health, 2005).
If you refer to a source quoted in another source you cite both in the text:
A survey by Humphreys (1960, cited in Hillier, 2003, p.36) showed that…
Only the source you have used, i.e the Hillier book in this example, will be added to your bibliography.
Bibliography
A bibliography is a list of all the sources you have used during the preparation of your work- both those consulted and those directly referred to in the text. The list is organised in the following way:
1. Alphabetical order by author’s surname
2. If more than one book by the same author, then list in order
of publication, earliest first
3. If the publication has more than one author, keep to the
order on the publication title page. First three authors only.
Book: Surname, Initials. (Date) Title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher.
Gross, R. and McILveen, R. (1996) Abnormal Psychology. 2nd edition. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
Chapter in Book: Surname, Initials. (Date) ‘Chapter title’, in Book title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher, page numbers.
Jones, H. (2005) ‘Values and Ethics’, Social Work. London: Polity Press, pp 25-35.
Article: Surname, Initials. (Date) ‘Article title.’ Journal title. Volume Number (Part Number), pages.
Smith, R. (2006) ‘Child protection.’ Children Now,16(4),
pp 8-12.
Television programme: ‘Title of episode’ (Date) Title of programme/series. Name of channel, Date of transmission (day/month).
ASBOs on trial (2005) Panorama. BBC1, 16 May.
Film: Film title. (Date) Directed by Name [Format eg; Film, DVD, Video cassette] Place of publication: Publisher.
Mrs. Dalloway. (2002) Directed by Gorris, M. [Film] UK : Artificial Eye.
Website: Author/Editor/Organisation (Date) Title of page. (Online) Available at: URL (Accessed : Date).
BBC (2006) Buddhism. [online] Available from: www.bbc.co.uk/religion/buddhism (Accessed: 8 March 2006)
▪ Remember: there may not be a specific author - use the
organisation instead. If no date is available write (No date)
Electronic Journal: Author of article, Initial (Date) ‘Article title.’ Journal title. Volume Number (Part Number), Pages (if given). Available at: URL [Accessed: Date].
McHugh, M. (2001) ‘Employee absence’, International Journal of Public Sector Management, [online], 14(1), pp 43-58. Available at www.emeraldinsight.com (Accessed: 6 February 2006).
Electronic Book: Author, Initial. (Date) Title. Name of e-book collection [Online]. Available at: URL (Accessed: date).
Blythe, J. (2004) Essentials of marketing. Dawsonera [Online]. Available at: www.dawsonera.com (Accessed: 20 January 2009).
Citations
A. Citations in the text
In the text you should refer to information sources by the surname of the author (not first names or initials). You also need to add the year of publication and page numbers (if appropriate) in brackets.
You must include an author and a publication date (and a page number, if available) within the sentence. Two alternative ways to cite are shown below:
Of the various studies of children’s attitudes to television, Andrews (2003) offers the most convincing argument for regulation.
Surveys of bank robbers have shown that they are also likely to have committed other serious crimes (Jones, 1996, p.56).
Quotations (including cut and pastes from a website) must be in quotation marks. Longer quotations (over a line’s length) should be indented and single spaced. A page number should be included after the publication year.
Smith has argued that “good practices must be taught” (2005, p.21).
Electronic information must be referenced. The author is often not a named individual but a ‘corporate author’ such as the BBC, Government department etc.
Page numbers may not be available – in this case, leave them out. The following example is an extract from the website www.doh.gov.ac.uk:
“In 2004, 73 per cent of smokers who were asked said they wanted to give up” (Department of Health, 2005).
If you refer to a source quoted in another source you cite both in the text:
A survey by Humphreys (1960, cited in Hillier, 2003, p.36) showed that…
Only the source you have used, i.e the Hillier book in this example, will be added to your bibliography.
This is an old discussion that has not been active in a long time. Instead of commenting here, you should start a new discussion. If you think the content of this discussion is still relevant, you can link to it from your new discussion.
Upgrade Storage
If you need specific changes see:
http://www.zotero.org/support/requesting_styles
Harvard (adapted for Leeds Met) or Harvard (Author-Date) European Archaeology look like two that most closely fit.