Faculty of Business & Law
Referencing in Coursework:
Guide to the
Harvard System of Referencing
Fifth Edition
Contents
Introduction
2
Why Reference?
Referencing Systems
Reference Lists and Bibliographies
Choosing Sources
Stages of Referencing
2
2
3
3
4
Stage 1: noting the details of sources
5
Stage 2: incorporating the references in the text
6
Quotations
Paraphrasing
Summarising
What do I do if…?
Amending Direct Quotes
Personal Communications
Legal Sources
Stage 3: compiling the reference list
Construct Individual References
Construct the Reference List
Referencing in Presentations
6
7
8
8
11
12
12
15
15
18
21
Stage 4: ensuring consistency between the citation and the reference list
22
Bibliography
23
Further Information
24
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Introduction
Why Reference?
Good academic practice requires the use of information, ideas and facts from a variety of
sources to support, evidence and illustrate your work. The key difference between academic
and other types of writing is that it based on traceable evidence. Therefore you must
acknowledge these sources by utilising a consistent system of referencing within your work.
Ignoring this convention is likely to lead to poor marks and disciplinary measures. For
further information see the University’s General Regulations and Procedures Affecting
Students, available online via the University website.
There are three particular reasons for referencing:
To say thank you.
When you use something that belongs to someone else, you normally say thank you. The
same principle applies when you use information and ideas too; it is just good manners!
To be academic.
One of the most significant differences between academic and other sorts of writing is that
academic writing is based on evidence. If your reader cannot see your evidence, then your
work is not academic.
To be traceable.
As well as being able to see that you have used evidence your reader needs to be able to go
back and look at it themselves, should they want to. Therefore the in-text reference
signposts people to the reference list and that directs them to the source. If your reader
cannot go from your writing to the source, and be sure that they are looking at what you
looked at, then your referencing is incomplete.
In summary, referencing:
acknowledges the source of an idea;
acknowledges other people’s words;
shows what you have read and what has influenced you;
makes it clear that you are not presenting someone else’s ideas or work as your own;
provides information to allow the reader or yourself to find the original source;
supports your assertions, points and arguments;
shows your reader how well you’ve understood a topic by integrating all of your sources
clearly; and
is a key part of good academic practice.
Referencing Systems
The Harvard system is the most popular referencing system used in Business Schools and
is explained in this guide and recommended by the Faculty of Business and Law.
The preferred method of referencing in LLB/LLM law modules is to use footnotes which are
explained in a separate guide (Britton and Lishman, 2014). For further clarification as to
which system to use check with your course team and module leaders.
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Reference Lists and Bibliographies
Referencing is not a chore or burden; it is a way of acknowledging the sources that you have
used and demonstrates that your learning skills/personal information management skills are
well developed. This is fundamental to almost any piece of work that you undertake at
University.
Referencing is a feature of most written coursework and has two components. The first is
referencing within the text at the point where you use information from another source, this is
called citation, and the second is the reference list/bibliography at the end of your work.
The two are interrelated; each component is of limited value on its own and each one
therefore needs equal attention.
To clarify, a reference list is an alphabetical list, by author, of all the materials that you have
used directly in the writing of your work. A bibliography may also include material that you
have read to help develop your understanding, but that you might not have used directly in
your own writing. In Business subjects you are usually just asked for a reference list.
Choosing Sources
Academic convention suggests that,
The important thing is to choose sources that give credence, authority and support to
the ideas and arguments that you present. Your tutor will suggest a range of reliable
sources, and this will be your starting point, but you will also be expected to look
beyond the recommended reading and search out relevant information for yourself.
...There are four main sets of questions … you can ask of any source, concerning:
(Neville, 2010, p16)
INTERROGATING SOURCES
Relevance and bias
To what extent is the source relevant and
applicable to the assignment?
Does the information presented give a partial
or restricted view of the subject?
How balanced and objective does the
language in the source appear to be?
Are counter-arguments to the author’s own
ideas treated with respect? If not, why not?
Currency
When was the source originally published?
Are the ideas, practices, assumptions etc. still
valid? You need to ask if the ideas
expressed are a product of a particular time
and place in history that no longer applies
today
Has the author revised or changed his or her
views since the date of the original source? If
so, when, why and how?
Authority
Is the source authoritative enough to be
included in the assignment? For example, is
the source a credible one, e.g. a reputable
publishing company or a peer reviewed
journal?
Do other authors refer to and discuss this
source?
How credible is the source to you? You can
turn your own reservations into a starting
point of critical enquiry about it.
Scope
How universal or general are the ideas,
models or practices described in the source?
Do they have a limited geographical or
occupational application?
Do the ideas in the source span a range of
cultures or are they just applicable to
particular groups?
(Neville, 2010, p17, Table 3.2)
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A good academic will use a reference list to assess the validity and quality of a piece of
academic work. So, consider the following:
An academic source is one that has been peer reviewed (i.e. other specialists in the
field have read and reviewed it before publication). It has evidence in the form of
citations in the text and/or reference list from which you can find out information
about the author as a specialist and/or academic in the field about which they are
writing.
Wikipedia is an example of a non-academic source; the information is not peer
reviewed, it does not always have citations and those it does have are themselves
not always reliable. Furthermore, you do not know who the authors are, so you
cannot check their academic or professional backgrounds. However, this may be a
good place to start to obtain basic information on a subject.
When using the web, learn to read web addresses. Usually, for example, .co or
.com is a commercial site, .org is a charity or NGO (non-government organisation)
and .gov is a government site. Countries are also often indicated in the web
address. For example, .co.uk is a British company, while .gov.au is from the
Australian government site. .ac and .edu are educational institutions; .edu is usually
from the US and can include schools; .ac usually denotes further and higher
educational establishments and is followed by country information. Websites, like
books, have their own hierarchy of status and reliability.
Stages of Referencing
Referencing comprises of four stages. As you gain confidence though some of these stages
will probably start to merge and before too long referencing will become a natural part of the
writing process.
Stage 1
NOTING the details of your sources
Stage 2
INCORPORATING the references in the text as
you write
Stage 3
COMPILING the reference list
Stage 4
ENSURING consistency between your in-text
references and the reference list
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
A checklist and explanatory notes
can be found on pages 5 and 6.
This is covered in detail on pages
6 to 12.
Examples and guidance are on
pages 15 to 21.
A checklist of things to remember
is provided on page 22.
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Stage 1: noting the details of sources
Author
Year of publication
Title of article/chapter
Title of publication
Issue information
Place of publication
Publisher
Edition
Page number(s)
URL
Date accessed
Database used
Adapted from Pears and Shields, 2010, p13
Component
Author
Year of publication
Title of article/chapter
Title of publication
Issue Information
Place of Publication
Publisher
Edition
Newspaper / magazine
article (online)
Newspaper / magazine
article (hard copy)
Market research report
Journal article from a
database
Electronic journal
article
Journal article
Internet site
E-book
Chapter in an edited
book
Book
For each source used you need to note down key information, which varies according to the
type of source. The following checklist and accompanying notes gives further details for the
most widely used source types.
Notes
This should be a named person/people, otherwise, the author will be the
name of the company, organisation or newspaper / magazine. Surnames
and the first name initials of all the authors should be noted. For a chapter
in an edited book note the name(s) of the chapter author(s) as well as the
editor(s).
If this isn’t provided, for example on some webpages, note ‘nd’ for ‘no date’.
For journal articles you will also need the article title and for chapters in
edited books you will also need the chapter title.
This is always needed and may be a journal title, or the individual titles of
an organisation’s webpages.
This could be the volume and issue number. If there is no issue number,
include the date, for example, for trade press and newspapers. Note the
publication date of certain sources, for example, for press releases / news
reports.
This is usually at city/town (not county) level, but could include the country,
if outside the UK.
This is the publishing company and not the printers. In some instances this
could be the name of the website/database.
This is only for second edition and beyond.
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Component
Page number(s)
URL
Date accessed
Database used
Notes
The first and last page numbers need to be noted for chapters in edited
books, journal articles and newspaper / magazine articles.
‘pp’ is an abbreviation of ‘pages’ and ‘p’ is an abbreviation of ‘page’.
Additionally, you should note specific page numbers which can be used as
part of the in-text citation for ALL applicable source types (see pages 6 to
12).
A URL is the web address. Do not make use of redirecting sites such as
TinyURL to shorten the addresses. Do not include the web address in the
citation; this should only appear in the reference list.
A note should be made of the date which an online electronic source was
accessed.
A note should be made of the name of the database, for example,
ABI/Inform Global (from ProQuest), EBSCO, Mintel.
Stage 2: incorporating the references in the text
Referencing within the text as you write comprises the follow elements:
the AUTHOR - this should be surname(s) only (not the first name/initials), if available,
otherwise the name of a company, organisation or newspaper / magazine;
the YEAR of publication; AND
the PAGE NUMBER of what you are referring to. Where page numbers are not
available, for example for a web page, then use an appropriate convention such as
‘online’, ‘e-book’, etc.
This is called citation and is the essence of the Harvard system. You refer to the source as
you use it in the text, which acts as a signpost. After the main text of your coursework, and
normally before any appendices you then present a list of all of the sources you have used in
one continuous, alphabetically ordered, list.
Below you can see how references can be presented in the text. There are some variations
depending on your writing approach, the number/type of authors and the year of publication.
With experience you will be able to use a combination throughout your academic writing.
Quotations
Short Quotations
For example:
Williams (2009, p17) states that a “critical approach to reading starts before you have read
anything.”
This approach can be used where quotations are less than three lines.
The words used directly from another source should be enclosed within double quotation
marks.
The number of the page(s) from which the quote is taken has to be included.
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Long (block) quotations
For example:
Students need to learn how to both paraphrase and summarise information from their
reading to use, and reference, in their assignments. It is easy to confuse the two but
Godfrey explains that,
while a paraphrase expresses all the information contained in a specific part of a text,
a summary gives only the main points from a much larger section, or from the whole
text. Summarising is a complex skill and one that is central to academic writing and
that you will need both at university and in your future career (2013, p45).
It is easier to undertake these tasks at the note taking stage of your work rather than at the
formal writing stage.
Use this approach for quotations that are more than three lines long.
The quoted material should be indented and does not need quotation marks.
The number of the page(s) from which the quote is taken has to be included.
Paraphrasing
Active
For example:
Williams (2009, p32) argues that while the web can be a highly valuable source of
information it is crucial to learn to be critical of and evaluate the information that you
uncover.
If the author’s name is grammatically essential to the sentence (‘active’ reference), you
only put the year of publication and page number in brackets.
Passive
For example:
It has been suggested that while the web can be an invaluable source of information, the
user needs to be able to assess the value of the information found (Williams, 2009, p32).
or
For example:
It has been highlighted (Williams, 2009, p32) that while the web can be an invaluable source
of information, the user needs to be able to assess the value of the information found.
If the sentence is grammatically complete without the author’s name and year of
publication (‘passive’ reference), include name, date and page number in brackets.
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Summarising
For example:
Williams (2009) offers a useful guide to critical thinking and why it is important at University.
In this example, the reference relates to the whole book, so page numbers are not
needed in the citation.
What do I do if...?
…there is one author
For example:
Students reviewing past exam papers are able to assess broad topics or themes, and the
types of questions that are commonly asked in a specific subject (McIlroy, 2003, p189).
You do not need a first name or initial unless you need, for example, to differentiate
between say, M Patel and S Patel.
…there are two or three authors
For example:
Williams and Reid (2011) strongly believe that an important study skill is time management,
and planning for the tasks that you need to undertake.
Include all author names in the citation.
In this example, the reference relates to the whole book, so page numbers are not
needed in the citation.
… there are more than three authors
For example:
Price et al (2008, online) put forward the position that higher education assessment should
be primarily about “enabling students to engage in and achieve high-level, complex
learning”.
In this example, the reference has four author names.
Use the first author surname followed by et al (which means ‘and others’).
In the reference list, you will need to include ALL authors.
There is no page number available for this quote as this was from an online source. This
is indicated by ‘online’ next to the date.
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… there are multiple references
For example:
Pettigrew (1979, p574) and Schein (1984, p5) were two of the earlier writers to discuss the
concept of organisational culture based on shared beliefs and meanings of the organisation.
Watson (2006, pp254-5) considers this concept in relation to an organisation as both a
dynamic living being and a fixed structure.
or
For example:
Early writers developed ideas on organisational culture based on shared beliefs and
meanings about that organisation (Pettigrew, 1979, p574 and Schein, 1984, p5). These
ideas were then considered in relation to an organisation both as a living being and a fixed
structure (Watson, 2006, pp254-5).
When the references are grouped together they are in date order.
…there is an author cited in another source
For example:
“…most students will use sources inappropriately before they learn how to use them
appropriately” (Pecorari, 2003 cited in Davis and Carroll, 2009, p59).
Include the cited author and year, as well as the author(s) and year of the source that
you have read.
In the reference list, only include the work that you looked at, i.e. in this example Davis
and Carroll (2009).
It is always advisable to refer to the original source if possible.
… there is no named person as author, for example, a newspaper editorial, webpage or
company document
For example:
The Guardian (2012, online) reported that even the president of Hungary was not able to
avoid an allegation of plagiarism, resulting in his resignation.
For example:
The student make-up of DMU comprised over 20,600 students last year of which 10% are
from outside the UK, 27% are on part-time courses and 44% are over 21 years of age
(Which?, 2013, online).
Use the newspaper name, website name or company name as the author.
Do not include the web address in the citation – this should only appear in the reference
list.
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… it is an edited book
For example:
The higher education sector has recently undertaken job evaluation processes in order to
develop a single pay scale, the National Framework Agreement, covering academic and
support staff (Thompson and Ryan, 2010, p515).
Cite the name(s) of the chapter author(s) in the text.
The full publication details including the name of the editor and the title of the book need
to be included in the reference list.
In the reference list the item is listed under the name(s) of the chapter author(s).
… there is no publication date
For example:
Places for People make a significant commitment to neighbourhood investment (Places for
People, nd).
You may find that some website pages and company documentation do not state the
original date of publication.
Use (nd) to show there is no date available.
… there are several works by the same author(s) in different years
For example:
It is important for lecturers to be explicit in what they expect from students’ work (Carroll,
2002, 2008).
Include the name of the author(s) followed by the dates in chronological order.
… there are several works by the same author(s) in the same year
For example:
Over the spring of 2012, interpretation of the International Monetary Fund statements
seemed to suggest that policies in the UK would allow it to ride the global economic storm
(Flanders, 2012a, 2012b). Summer updates in the same year, however, put this into doubt
(Flanders, 2012c).
Note the ‘a’, ‘b’ and ‘c’ which denote the alphabetical order of the titles (of the articles,
books, etc) within the same year of publication.
If Flanders had written four works in 2012 that you had referenced, the publications
would be assigned the letters ‘a’ to ‘d’ in alphabetical order of titles.
In the reference list the ‘a’, ‘b’ and ‘c’ should be included next to the year of publication.
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Amending Direct Quotes
As you quote directly from sources, there may be a reason for you to modify the quotation
(although this should never affect its meaning). The modifications can take a number of
forms, but these conventions should be used sparingly.
Italics in Quotes
For example:
“Only use quotations sparingly, and for a specific purpose, not as a substitute for your own
summary of the relevant law or the writer’s arguments” (Wilson and Kenny, 2007, p149
emphasis added).
Italics provide a way to emphasise key words within a quotation. You should always
state that you have added italics.
If the italics were already in the quotation, you should state ‘original emphasis’.
Square brackets [ ]
For example:
“The [result] is that referencing has become a real bugbear for many people, and worse still,
students (and tutors!) often fail to distinguish between what is important in referencing and
what isn’t” (Williams and Carroll, 2009, p9).
Anything that is within square brackets is indicated as not part of the original quote.
You may correct sexist, racist or homophobic language.
sic
For example:
“Over the last few years, a number of psychologists have begun to look more closely at the
role these kind of unconscious – or as they like to call them, implicit – associations play in
our beliefs and behavior [sic]” (Gladwell, 2006, p77).
You may also see [sic] within quotations. This is useful when you encounter a spelling
or grammatical mistake in a quote.
You must retain the mistake in the quote but you should insert [sic] after the mistake to
signal that it is the original author’s mistake and not yours.
Ellipsis …
For example:
“For most of the second half of the twentieth century there was a very buoyant system of
legal aid … the last decade has seen almost an abandonment of … legal aid for litigation”
(Wilson and Kenny, 2007, p37).
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Should you need to quote only parts of a long section of text, you can use ellipsis (three
dots) to signal that you have trimmed unnecessary material from your quote.
Personal Communications
A personal communication can be, for example, a letter, memo, email, fax, an interview, an
informal conversation, telephone call, etc. Reference to information gained this way should
be included within the text but not generally in the reference list as it is not traceable. You
should ask permission of the person before quoting them.
When referring to a personal communication remember to include:
the author and recipient’s initials and surname;
the type of communication; and
the exact date of the communication.
For example:
In an email to the author (23 July 2014), T Hillier stated that…
In a conversation with A Britton (25 July 2014), R Lishman confirmed that…
It is important that you consider any ethical elements that might be raised in this instance.
Further guidance and an approval form regarding research ethics are available on the
University website.
Legal Sources
Occasionally you may be required to cite legal sources; this section provides information on
citing case law and legislation. Further information can be found in Britton and Lishman
(2013). Unless you have been advised otherwise, cases and legislation should not be
included in the reference list.
Case Law
You should provide a full reference in your text the first time you refer to a case.
Subsequently it is sufficient just to give the case name (see below). The traditional form of
referencing cases is to include the following components:
Component
Name of Case
Year
Volume Number
Notes
This should be printed in italics (do not underline, highlight or use
different coloured ink).
This should be in square brackets [1981] or round brackets (1976).
Most modem law reports use a square bracket indicating that the year is
an integral part of the reference. Some series adopt a system of volume
numbering that runs consecutively through the series in which case the
year is in round brackets and simply indicates the date of judgement.
Never change the shape of the brackets!
Many reports have several volumes each year, numbered 1, 2, 3, etc.
In this instance the year will be in square brackets and will be an integral
part of the reference. Series which are numbered consecutively from
the beginning will have the year in round brackets.
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Component
Abbreviation for
the Series
Page Number or
Case Number
[Optional] Court
Notes
This indicates the series in which the law report is published – the All
England Reports (All ER) will probably be the series you use most often.
Key abbreviations are listed below and a detailed list of law
abbreviations can be found in the law subject guide on the University
library webpages.
The page number is the number within the volume of the report where
you will find the start of the case in the hard copy of the report and
which you will see on the Lexis/Westlaw database versions.
Since 2001 some series have started using unique numbers of each
case within each year. Thus, [2001] 2 Cr. App. R. 4 is the fourth case of
volume 2 of Criminal Appeal Reports 2001.
Recent reports also number each paragraph, so that the precise point in
the case may be cited. This is especially useful if you are quoting
directly from a judgement. In the past, particular passages could be
identified by reference to the letter to be found in the margin of the
printed report.
It is always important to know which court made the decision and it is
good practice to develop the habit of including an indication of the court
at the end of the reference.
Examples
Knowlsey Housing Trust v McMullen
[2006] HLR43, EWCA Civ
R v Lawson [2006] EWCA Crim
2674 [2007] All ER (D) 61 (Mar)
Notes
This is the usual form in civil cases: claimant (plaintiff)
v defendant. ‘v’ stands for versus or against, but the
case is normally referred to in speech, and after the
first reference, in your text as Knowlsey Housing
Trust and McMullen.
A criminal case: the Crown v the defendant. R
stands for Rex (the King) or Regina (the Queen).
This case would normally be referred to in speech,
and after the first reference, in your text as the Crown
against Lawson, or just Lawson.
Some more recent law reports use paragraph rather than page numbers. When you
reference these, use the abbreviation ‘para’ rather than ‘p’ to distinguish from page.
Legislation
The full text of published primary and secondary legislation for England, Scotland and Wales
can be found on the Government’s legislation website. It includes original versions of Acts
and statutory instruments, any subsequent revisions and explanatory notes.
Acts of Parliament
An Act of Parliament should be referred to by its short title, for example the Human Rights
Act 1998. You might be surprised to know that the complete title of this Act is:
Human Rights Act 1998: 1998 CHAPTER 42: An Act to give further effect to rights and
freedoms guaranteed under the European Convention on Human Rights; to make provision
with respect to holders of certain judicial offices who become judges of the European Court of
Human Rights; and for connected purposes.[9th November 1998] BE IT ENACTED by the
Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual
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Faculty of Business & Law
and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of
the same, as follows:
It is never necessary to put this full title in any work. So, as long as you make it clear, this
short title can then be abbreviated. Your first use would be the Human Rights Act (HRA)
1998, you can then refer to it as the HRA 1998.
The first letter of the first word of the title and the first letter of all other words except
prepositions (of, by, with, etc.), article (the, a, an) and conjunctions (and, or) should be
capitalised. The short title should be immediately followed by the year of the Act. The year
is important since there are a number of Acts of Parliament with the same short title, for
example, Criminal Justice Act 1967, Criminal Justice Act 1972, Criminal Justice Act 1994,
etc.
Secondary Legislation
Statutory Instruments
Name date Serial Number.
Double Taxation Relief (Taxes on Income) (Finance) Order 1987 SI 1987/466.
Parliamentary Bills
Short title HC Bill (Parliamentary session) [Serial number].
Education (Student Loans) Bill HC Bill (1989-90) [66].
Short title HL Bill (Parliamentary session) Serial number.
Further and Higher Education Bill HL Bill (1991-92) 66.
Command Papers
The abbreviation preceding a command paper number depends on the year of publication:
1833–69 (C (1st series)); 1870–99 (C (2nd series)); 1900–18 (Cd); 1919–56 (Cmd); 1957–
86 (Cmnd), 1986–(Cm).
Title (Command paper number, Year).
Royal Commission on Local Government, 1966-1969 (Cmnd. 4040, 1969).
Common abbreviations
Court
United Kingdom Supreme Court
House of Lords
Court of Appeal
Court of Appeal
High Court
High Court
High Court
High Court
Note: UKSC replaced UKHL in 2009
Division
Civil
Criminal
Chancery
Queen's Bench
Administrative Court
Family
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
Abbreviation
UKSC or SC
UKHL or HL
EWCA Civ
EWCA Crim
EWHC (Ch)
EWHC (QB)
EWHC (Admin)
EWHC (Fam)
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Report
All England Law Reports
Weekly Law Reports
Law Reports: Appeal Cases
Law reports: Queen’s Bench Division
European Court Reports
European Human Rights Reports
Criminal Appeal Reports
Housing Law Reports
Abbreviation
All ER
WLR
AC
QB
ECR
EHRR
Cr. App. R
HLR
Country
England and Wales
Northern Ireland
Scotland
Abbreviation
EW
NI
Scot
Stage 3: compiling the reference list
At the end of your written coursework you will need to present a list of references. In some
cases, your tutor may require you to submit both a list of references and a bibliography (see
page 3).
Compiling the list of references should be undertaken in two steps.
a.
Construct the individual reference for each source used. The precise format
depends on the source’s type (i.e. whether it is a book, journal article, report, etc.);
and
b.
Construct the list of references.
You may notice that tutors, journals and publishers use slightly different formatting in their
reference lists. What is important is for you to use these guidelines consistently throughout
your piece of work.
Construct Individual References
This table shows the most common source types:
Source
Book
Format of individual reference
King, P. (2010) Housing Policy
Transformed: the right to buy and the
desire to own, Bristol, Policy Press
Notes
The book name should be in
italics.
Hirst, M. (2001) Andrews and Hirst on
Criminal Evidence, 4th edition, Bristol,
Jordan
If the book is a second or
subsequent edition, this
information should also be
included. Edition is sometimes
abbreviated to ‘ed’.
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Source
Chapter in
an edited
book
Format of individual reference
Richardson, J. and Ryder, A. (2009) New
Labour’s Policies and their Effectiveness
for the Provision of Sites for Gypsies and
Travellers in England, in Sigona, N. and
Trehan, N. (eds) Romani Politics in
Contemporary Europe, Basingstoke,
Palgrave Macmillan, pp246-271
E-book
Gerber, M.E. (2003) The E-Myth
Manager, (E-book) PerfectBound, New
York, available from
http://us.perfectbound.com/, accessed 30
April 2010
Internet site
Department for Business, Innovation and
Skills (2011) Government cuts
apprenticeship red tape, 6 September,
available from
http://www.bis.gov.uk/news/topstories/201
1/Sep/apprenticeships-red-tape-slashed,
accessed 8 September 2011
Notes
You will need to include the
name(s) of the chapter
author(s) as well as the book
editor(s) - the abbreviation (ed)
or (eds) is used to differentiate.
The chapter title is contained in
the reference and the title of
the book is in italics. The page
numbers of the chapter are
required.
For an e-book include all of the
information in the reference
you would for a traditional
book. Additionally you should
indicate the source.
As for a traditional book, the
title is in italics.
The date that you accessed the
source is always included as
well as the web address.
The title of the webpage is in
italics, unless the source is a
journal / newspaper / magazine
article.
O’Brien, J. (2013) Do sporty women make
better entrepreneurs?, BBC News, 22
August, available from
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business23582532, accessed 2 September 2013
In this example from the BBC
News website, the name of the
author is available and has
been used as well as the name
of the site.
Journal
article
Electronic
journal
article
The journal title is in italics. In
this example, the article was
published in volume 28, issue
1, and can be found on pages
43 to 64 of the journal. You
may also see this information
abbreviated to 28 (1), 43-64.
McCarthy, L. (2013) Homelessness and
The journal title is in italics.
identity: a critical review of the literature
Reference as you would a
and theory, People, Place & Policy Online, paper journal article but add
‘available from’ and the web
Vol 7, No 1, pp46-58, available from
address of the article.
http://extra.shu.ac.uk/pppThe date that you accessed the
online/issue_1_120613/article_4.html,
source should also be stated.
accessed 6 September 2013
Herbane, B. (2010) Small business
research - time for a crisis-based view,
International Small Business Journal, Vol
28, No 1, pp43-64
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
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Faculty of Business & Law
Source
Journal
article from a
database
Format of individual reference
Gourlay, L. and Deane, J. (2012) Loss,
responsibility, blame? Staff discourses of
student plagiarism, Innovations in
Education & Teaching International, Vol
49, No 1, pp19-29, available from
Academic Search Premier (EBSCO),
accessed 12 April 2012
Market
Research
Report
Mintel (2013) Department Store Retailing
– UK – May 2013, Mintel Oxygen,
available from Mintel, accessed 25 July
2013
Newspaper /
magazine
article (hard
copy)
Newspaper /
magazine
article
(online)
Bowcott, O. (2013) Criminal defendants
forced to pay to see evidence, The
Guardian, 18 July, p11
Bowcott, O. (2013) Defendants in criminal
trials forced to pay to see key forensic
evidence, The Guardian, 18 July,
available from
http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2013/jul/17/
defendants-forced-pay-forensic-evidence,
accessed 22 July 2013
Notes
The journal title is in italics.
Reference as you would a
paper journal article but add
‘available from’ and the
database name, for example
Business Source Complete.
The date that you accessed the
source should also be stated.
The report title is in italics.
Include as much information as
is available, including ‘available
from’ and the database name,
for example, Mintel Oxygen.
The date that you accessed the
source should also be stated.
The newspaper / magazine title
is in italics.
The newspaper / magazine title
is in italics.
You will notice that while these
two examples of newspaper
articles are identical, the titles
for the hard copy and online
versions are different. Make
sure that you cite the one that
you used!
Additional common source types:
Source
Report
Format of individual reference
Bank of England (2012) Your money:
what the Bank does, London, Bank of
England
Notes
The title of the report is in
italics.
Government
publication
House of Commons Business, Innovation
and Skills Committee (2011) Government
reform of Higher Education: Twelfth Report
of Session 2010-12, Volume 1, London,
HMSO
The publication title is in italics.
In this example Volume 1 is
part of the title.
Conference
paper
Ram, M. and Trehan, K. (2008) Policy
learning, action learning and small firms:
experimenting with African-Caribbean
entrepreneurs, International Action
Learning Conference, Henley, 17-19
March
The title of the conference
paper is in italics.
Note that the date of the
conference event is included.
If you obtain this source online,
include the relevant details.
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
17
Faculty of Business & Law
Source
Media,
(video, film
or television
programme)
Industry
standard
Format of individual reference
BBC (2010) The Politics Show,
(Television Broadcast on BBC1) 28
March, 12.00pm
Lecture /
Lecture
notes
Brown, T. (2010) Better Quality Services
at Less Cost, from BEHS2406 Housing
and Business Strategy, De Montfort
University, Hugh Aston, Leicester, 14
January
Thesis /
dissertation /
work-based
project
Omoteso, K. (2006) The impact of
information and communications
technology on auditing, PhD Thesis,
Leicester, De Montfort University
ISO/IEC (2000) Information technology:
Code of practice for information security
management ISO/IEC 17799:2000,
International Organization for
Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland
Notes
The title of the ‘show’ is in
italics. Also include the time of
broadcast, for example for
radio programmes.
The name of the industry
standard is in italics.
The title of the lecture or the
briefing notes is in italics.
However, it is always better to
go back to the original
published source if you can.
If you obtain this source online,
include the relevant details.
The title of the project is in
italics.
This is not an exhaustive list, but it provides the main varieties of sources that you are likely
to reference in your assignment. If there is something not listed here that you need to
reference in your work, please ask your tutor.
Construct the Reference List
Take the individual references and reorder them into an alphabetical list (by surname or
otherwise) then year of publication if an author has more than one publication in your list.
Do not separate items by type, such as books, newspapers and websites, as you
sometimes see in your reading lists. Your reference list should be located at the end of the
main text of your coursework, and normally before any appendices. Below are two
examples of reference lists.
This reference list is compiled using the sources in the tables on pages 15 to 18 of this
guide.
References
Bank of England (2012) Your money: what the Bank does, London, Bank of England
BBC (2010) The Politics Show, (Television Broadcast on BBC1) 28 March, 12.00pm
Bowcott, O. (2013) Criminal defendants forced to pay to see evidence, The Guardian, 18
July, p11
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
18
Faculty of Business & Law
Bowcott, O. (2013) Defendants in criminal trials forced to pay to see key forensic evidence,
The Guardian, 18 July, available from http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2013/jul/17/defendantsforced-pay-forensic-evidence, accessed 22 July 2013
Brown, T. (2010) Better Quality Services at Less Cost, from BEHS2406 Housing and
Business Strategy, De Montfort University, Hugh Aston, Leicester, on 14 January, accessed
16 January 2010
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (2011) Government cuts apprenticeship red
tape, 6 September, available from
http://www.bis.gov.uk/news/topstories/2011/Sep/apprenticeships-red-tape-slashed,
accessed 8 September 2011
Gerber, M.E. (2003) The E-Myth Manager (E-book) PerfectBound, New York, available from
http://us.perfectbound.com/, accessed 30 April 2010
Gourlay, L. and Deane, J. (2012) Loss, responsibility, blame? Staff discourses of student
plagiarism, Innovations in Education & Teaching International, Vol 49, No 1, pp19-29,
available from Academic Search Premier (EBSCO), accessed 12 April 2012
Herbane, B. (2010) Small business research - time for a crisis-based view, International
Small Business Journal, Vol 28, No 1, pp43-64
Hirst, M. (2001) Andrews and Hirst on Criminal Evidence, 4th edition, Bristol, Jordan
House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills Committee (2011) Government reform of
Higher Education: Twelfth Report of Session 2010-12, Volume 1, London, HMSO
ISO/IEC (2000) Information technology: Code of practice for information security
management ISO/IEC 17799:2000, International Organization for Standardization, Geneva,
Switzerland
King, P. (2010) Housing Policy Transformed: the right to buy and the desire to own, Bristol,
Policy Press
McCarthy, L. (2013) Homelessness and identity: a critical review of the literature and theory,
People, Place & Policy Online, Vol 7, No 1, pp46-58, available from
http://extra.shu.ac.uk/ppp-online/issue_1_120613/article_4.html, accessed 6 September
2013
Mintel (2013) Department Store Retailing – UK – May 2013, Mintel Oxygen, available from
Mintel, accessed 25 July 2013
O’Brien, J. (2013) Do sporty women make better entrepreneurs?, BBC News, 22 August,
available from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-23582532, accessed 2 September 2013
Omoteso, K. (2006) The impact of information and communications technology on auditing,
PhD Thesis, Leicester, De Montfort University
Ram, M. and Trehan, K. (2008) Policy learning, action learning and small firms:
experimenting with African-Caribbean entrepreneurs, International Action Learning
Conference, Henley, 17-19 March
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
19
Faculty of Business & Law
Richardson, J. and Ryder, A. (2009) New Labour’s Policies and their Effectiveness for the
Provision of Sites for Gypsies and Travellers in England, in Sigona, N. and Trehan, N. (eds)
Romani Politics in Contemporary Europe, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp246-271
This reference list is compiled using the sources from the examples on pages 6 to 10 of this
guide.
References
Carroll, J. (2002) Suggestions for teaching international students more effectively, Learning
and Teaching Briefing Papers Series, Oxford, Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning
Development, Oxford Brookes University
Carroll, J. (2008) Assessment Issues for International Students and for Teachers of
International Students, The Enhancing Series Case Studies: International Learning
Experience, Higher Education Academy, available from
http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/hlst/documents/case_studies/carroll.pdf, accessed 1
July 2013
Davis, M. and Carroll, J. (2009) Formative feedback within plagiarism education: Is there a
role for text-matching software? International Journal for Educational Integrity, Vol 5, No 2,
pp58-70
Flanders, S. (2012a) IMF expects less of the UK and a lot of the US and Europe, BBC News
Business, 16 July, available from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18860288, accessed
1 July 2013
Flanders, S. (2012b) IMF: 'Great policies - shame about the economy', BBC News Business,
22 May, available from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18165420, accessed 10 July
2013
Flanders, S. (2012c) IMF report on UK makes for unhappy reading, BBC News Business, 19
July, available from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18917898, accessed 17 July 2013
Godfrey, J. (2013) How to use your reading in your essays, Basingstoke, Palgrave
Macmillan
McIlroy, D. (2003) Studying @ University: how to be a successful student, London, Sage
Pettigrew, A.M. (1979) On Studying Organizational Cultures, Administrative Science
Quarterly, Vol 24, No 4, pp570-581
Places for People (nd) Investing in neighbourhoods, Preston, Places for People
Price, M., O’Donovan, B., Rust, C. and Carroll, J. (2008) Assessment Standards: A
Manifesto for Change, Brookes eJournal of Learning and Teaching, Vol 2, No 3, Oxford
Brookes University, available from
http://bejlt.brookes.ac.uk/article/assessment_standards_a_manifesto_for_change/, accessed
16 July 2013
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
20
Faculty of Business & Law
Schein, E.H. (1984) Coming to a New Awareness of Organizational Culture, Sloan
Management Review, Vol 25, No 2, pp3-16
The Guardian (2012) Hungarian president resigns over doctorate plagiarism scandal, The
Guardian, 2 April, available from http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/02/hungarianpresident-resigns-doctorate-plagiarism, accessed on 18 July 2013
Thompson, A. and Ryan, A.J. (2010) Employee Reward, in Beardwell, J. and Claydon, T.
(eds) Human Resource Management, A contemporary approach, 6th edition, Harlow,
Pearson Education, pp490-530
Watson, T.J. (2006) Organising and managing work: organisational, managerial and
strategic behaviour in theory and practice, 2nd edition, Harlow, Pearson Education
Which? (2013) Which? University: De Montfort University, available from
http://university.which.co.uk/de-montfort-university-d26 accessed 12 July 2013
Williams, K. (2009) Getting Critical, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan
Williams, K. and Reid, M. (2011) Time Management, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan
Referencing in Presentations
If you are asked to give a presentation, you can follow the same principles as above with
regard to referencing. For example, if you are using MS PowerPoint slides, or equivalent,
include the name/date of the reference at an appropriate point on your presentation slide.
The last slide of your presentation could be the reference list, or you could provide this
separately to your tutor. Importantly, confirm the requirements with your tutor well in
advance of your presentation.
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
21
Faculty of Business & Law
Stage 4: ensuring consistency between the citation and the
reference list
This will take very little time but it will ensure that you do not have missing entries in the
reference list. Simply work your way through the text of your assignment and whenever you
come across an author/date reference check to ensure that the full citation can be found in
the reference list.
In addition, before you submit your coursework, work through the following checklist:
I have referenced all sources of information, including facts, figures, ideas and arguments
that I have used
I have cited all sources quoted directly or used indirectly in my work
All citations are complete
All quotations are clearly indicated
All references are complete
I have used original sources rather than relying on lecture notes
My reference list corresponds with all sources cited in the text
My reference list is in alphabetical order
Another person could find my sources with the information I have provided
As a final check, when you are doing your referencing, consider whether or not another
person who is not familiar with your subject could find the source and access the items. If
you use a website, for example, and only reference the web address and the website is
reorganised, would you or say, your flat mate or colleague, be able to find the same
information again? If not then there is not enough referencing information.
So, remember that referencing is NICE!
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
NOTING
INCORPORATING
COMPILING
ENSURING
22
Faculty of Business & Law
Bibliography
Britton, A. and Lishman, R. (2014) Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Footnote
System of Referencing, 5th edition, Leicester, Faculty of Business and Law, De Montfort
University
Neville, C. (2010) The Complete Guide to Referencing and Avoiding Plagiarism, 2nd edition,
Maidenhead, Open University Press
Nolan, D. and Meredith, S. (eds) (2010) OSCOLA Oxford Standard for the Citation of Legal
Authorities, 4th edition, Oxford, Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, available from
http://www.law.ox.ac.uk/published/OSCOLA_4th_edn.pdf, accessed 26 July 2012
Pears, R. and Shields, G. (2010) Cite Them Right, 8th edition, Basingstoke, Palgrave
Macmillan
Williams, K. and Carroll, J. (2009) Referencing & Understanding Plagiarism, Basingstoke,
Palgrave Macmillan
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
23
Faculty of Business & Law
Further Information
If at any time you are unsure about referencing conventions you can ask:
your tutor/course team
your subject librarian, http://libguides.library.dmu.ac.uk/
CLaSS (the Centre for Learning and Study Support) in the Kimberlin Library,
[email protected], www.library.dmu.ac.uk/Services/LSS
Authors
Annie Britton
[email protected] and Ros Lishman
[email protected]
Contributing Authors
NICE stages: Brahim Herbane
Harvard: Anselm Kersten
Legal Sources: Tim Hillier and Robert Brown
th
5 Edition Last Updated: 8 August 2014
© Faculty of Business & Law, De Montfort University, Leicester
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0
International License.
Harvard_v5.1
Referencing in Coursework: Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing
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