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Butler, J. D. & Walbert, D.F. (eds) 1986, Abortion, Medicine and the Law, Facts on File Publications, New York. Harvard Referencing Guide 2 Steps Involved in Referencing Take down full bibliographical details and include the page number(s) from which the information istaken. In the case of a book, "bibliographical details" refers to: • author/editor • year of publication • title • edition • volume number • publisher and place of publication. Note: not all of these details will necessarily be applicable.In the case of a journal article it refers to: • author of article • year of publication • title of article • journal/serial title • volume number • issue number • page numbers on which the article appears. In the case of electronic information it refers to: • Author (person or organization), editor or compiler. • Year of the most recent version. If date of origin is not given, write 'n.d' (no date). • Title (should be on the first page of the document) • Version number (if applicable) • Description of document (if applicable) • Name and place of the sponsor of the source • Viewed Day Month Year • <URL either full location details or just the main site details>. Note: not all of these details will necessarily be applicable How to Cite References within the Text of an Assignment When citing references within the text of an assignment use only the name of the author, followed by the year of publication: Larsen (1991) was the first to propound the theory Or The theory was first propounded in 1990 by Larsen (1991). When directly quoting from another source, ensure that quotation marks are used and the relevant page number(s) are given: Larsen (1991, p. 245) noted that ‘many of the facts in this case are incorrect’. Or 'Many of the facts in this case are incorrect' (Larsen 1991, pp. 245-6). Authors with the same surname and same publication year Including the initials of the authors in the in-text citation indicates different people: Based upon research conducted in 2003, the theory was developed in early 2004 (Broad, K.L 2005) and was later modified to…(Broad, M.P 2005). Harvard Referencing Guide 3 Works with no author When a work has no author (including legal materials) or the author is anonymous, cite in-text the first few words of the reference list or bibliography entry (usually the title) and the year. Use italics for the title as follows: This was apparently not the case in seventeenth-century England (On travelling to London 1683). Or On travelling to London (1683) reveals that this was not true. Multiple authors When a work by two or three authors is cited in parentheses, the textual reference should be as: |