Rule 18.electronic Sources

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The key takeaways are that there are different ways to cite electronic sources depending on whether a print version exists, and the proper citation structure for web pages includes the author, title, website, date, and URL.

There are two main ways to cite electronic sources - including an 'available at' citation if both print and electronic versions exist, or citing directly to the electronic source if only an electronic version exists or the print version is unavailable. Direct electronic citations do not include 'available at'.

You should cite directly to the electronic source if it is the only version available or if the print version is practically unavailable. You should include an 'available at' citation if both print and electronic versions exist.

ELECTRONIC SOURCES (Rule 18)

1. Available at Citations
(use this if there is a print version and an electronic version)
Lots of times, electronic versions of sources are more readily
accessible than the print version. If a print version does exist, though,
the Bluebook usually requires citation to the print version. You can
assist the reader in finding this material by including a parallel citation
to the electronic source. Join these two citations with available at.
(Rule 18.2.3.) In the citation below, the substantive print citation is red.
The appended electronic citation is blue:
John Kass, Dont Let Science Suck Life Out of Chupacabra Story, CHIC.
TRIB., Mar. 31, 2011, at 2, available at
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/ct-met-kass-033120110331,0,2711028.column.
Elements:
1. Full print citation - John Kass, Dont Let Science Suck Life Out
of Chupacabra Story, CHIC. TRIB., Mar. 31, 2011, at 2,
2. Available at italicized
*Put comma after the full print
3. URL no underline, and should not be in blue font
*Put comma after the full print
2. Electronic Citations
(use this if there is NO print version and only electronic version is
available)
You can cite the electronic source directly in two circumstances:
First, when the electronic version is the only version of the source.
(Rule 18.2.2.) Second, you can cite directly to the electronic version if a
print version exists but is practically unavailable. (Rule 18.2.1(b).) Cite
directly to the electronic version by simply adding the URL directly to
the end of the citation. (As discussed above, be careful to remove the
hyperlink that your word processor might automatically generate.)
Again, the substantive citation is in red, the electronic citation is blue:
Conference Report, German Socy for Contemporary Theatre and
Drama in English, Mediated Drama/Dramatized Media: From Boards to
Screens to Cyberspace (Jun. 17-20, 1999), http://fb14.unimainz.de/projects/CDE/conf/1999/.

Take note:
- when citing directly to the electronic source material, do
not join the URL and the citation with available at. Simply
separate the URL and the citation with a comma only.
- Also, do not underline the URL
Author (Rule 18.2.2(a))
If the web page denotes an author, list the authors name in
ordinary type:
Eric Posner, MoreonSection7oftheTortureConvention,THE VOLOKH
CONSPIRACY (Jan. 29, 2009, 10:04 AM),
http://www.volokh.com/posts/1233241458.shtml.
Elements:
1. Eric Posner author (put comma after)
2. More on Section 7 of the Torture Convention - Title of the
webpage (italics, put comma after)
3. THE VOLOKH CONSPIRACY Title of the website (small caps
and abbreviated under table T13.)
4.(Jan. 29, 2009, 10:04 AM) Date and Time
5. http://www.volokh.com/posts/1233241458.shtml. - URL
address
If the web page has no named author, but the website has a
clear institutional owner, use the name of the institutional owner in the
spot for the authors name (example 1) unless the institutional owner
is clear from the title of the website (example 2). When the website
lacks a named author or clear institutional author, omit the author
section completely:
Example 1: Kraft Foods, Chocolate Turtle Cheesecake,
WWW.KRAFTRECIPES.COM,
http://www.kraftrecipes.com/recipes/chocolate-turtlecheesecake-112859.aspx (last visited Apr. 11, 2011).
Example 2: The Butterfly Conservatory, AM. MUSEUM OF
NATURAL HISTORY,
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/butterflies/?src=h_h (last
visited Feb. 1, 2009).
When citing to a specific comment or posting, list the username of the
commenter or poster as the author rather than the author of the
original piece:
Martinned, Comment to More on Section 7 of the Torture

Convention, THE VOLOKH CONSPIRACY (Jan. 29, 2009, 11:02


AM), http://www.volokh.com/posts/1233241458.shtml.
Title of Web Page (Rule 18.2.2(b)(ii)-(iii))
The citation should also include the title of the specific page to
which you are citing. You can find the title in the title bar of your webbrowser or from a clearly announced heading on the page. Italicize this
title, and capitalize it according to Rule 8 (regardless of how the web
page or title bar capitalize the title):
Eric Posner, More on Section 7 of the Torture Convention,
THE VOLOKH CONSPIRACY (Jan. 29, 2009, 10:04 AM),
http://www.volokh.com/posts/1233241458.shtml.
When citing to a specific posting or comment within an article, say so
in the title section of the citation. Importantly, this annotation should
not be italicized:
Martinned, Comment to More on Section 7 of the Torture
Convention, THE VOLOKH CONSPIRACY (Jan. 29, 2009, 11:02
AM), http://www.volokh.com/posts/1233241458.shtml.
If the comment or posting has its own title, include that title in addition
to the title of the page to which the comment or posting responds.
Separate the two titles with a comma and designate the relationship
between the two pages with a phrase such as comment to:
Packerland Progressive, How is SEC 115 Constitutional Under
INS v. Chadha?, Comment to This Week in Congress, DAILY
KOS (Jan. 19, 2009, 9:20 AM),http://www
.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/1/18/235223/489/683/685802.
Finally, when the web page does not have a clear title, you can use a
descriptive title. Descriptive titles SHOULD NOT be italicized:
Archive of Columns by William Saffire, N.Y. TIMES,
http://www.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/c
olumnists/williamsafire/ (last visited Jan. 17, 2004).
Title of the Website (Rule 18.2.2(b)(i))
Following the title of the specific page to which you are citing, you
should indicate the title of the main website. This title should be listed
in small caps and abbreviated under table T13. Capitalize the title of
the website as it appears on the site:
Weird and Dumb International Laws, JUSTICEDAILY.COM,

http://www.justicedaily.com/weird/part2.html (last visited


May 21, 2004).

DateandTime(Rule 18.2.2(c))
If the web page is dated and the date refers to the specific subject
matter to which you are citing, include this date and time in
parentheses after the main website title and any pinpoint citations.
Abbreviate the date using Table T12:
Pavement Planning New Album Release, GLIDE MAGAZINE
(Nov. 06, 2009),http://www
.glidemagazine.com/articles/55317/pavement-planning-newalbum-release.html.
For comments, blog postings, or other content that can be easily
identified by the time of posting, include a timestamp with the date:
Ashby Jones, Activists, Research Facilities Taking Disclosure
Battles to Court, WALL ST. J. L. BLOG (Feb. 26, 2009, 9:40 AM),
http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2009/02/26/activists-researchfacilities-taking- disclsoure-battles-to-the-courts.
If the web page lacks a date for the specific subject matter to which
you are citing, indicate the last modified or last updated date from
the website in a parenthetical following the URL.
Dale Fast, History of Biology and Medicine, ST. XAVIERUNIV.,
http://faculty.sxu.edu/~fast/general_biology/history.htm (last
updated Oct. 31, 2001).
If the web page lacks any date, indicate the last time you visited the
website in a parenthetical placed after the URL:
YAHOO!, http://www.yahoo.com (last visited Dec. 15, 2004).
The URL Address (Rule 18.2.2(d))
Always include the URL of the exact web page you visited after either
the main website title or the date parenthetical. Generally, include the
exact URL that you used to access the website. The Bluebook does
allow you to cite the root URL (as opposed to the full URL) when:
S
S

The URL is long, unwieldly, or full of nontextual characters; or


The source can only be obtained by submitting a form or
query.When you do not cite the full URL, include a parenthetical that
explains how to navigate to the specific web page to which you are

citing:
S
S

http://fjsrc.urgan.org/nofram/wqs/q_data_1.html#2001
(follow 2001:AOUSC out hyperlink; then follow Offenses:
TTSECMO hyperlink).

S
S SHORT FORM CITATIONS TO INTERNET SOURCES For the short form
citation to internet sources, simply use the supra form described in
Rule 4. You do not need to include the URL in the short-form citation.
(Rule 18.8.)
S 1 See Douglas Gantenbein, Mad Cows Come Home, SLATE
(Jan. 5, 2004, 12:10 PM), http://slate.msn.com/id/2093396.
S 2 PFIZER, INC., http://www.pfizer.com (last visited Jan. 17,
2004).
S 3 Gantenbein, supra note 1.
S 4 Weird and Dumb International Laws, JUSTICEDAILY.COM,
http://www.justicedaily.com/weird/part2.html (last visited
May 21, 2004).
S When the original full citation does not have an author, cite to the web
page title (footnote 5) or website title (footnote 6) in the short form.
Maintain the formatting and font from the full citation:
S 5 Weird and Dumb International Laws, supra note 4.
S 6 PFIZER, INC., supra note 2.

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