Library Guide On Harvard Referencing: Referencing. You May Be Penalised For Not Conforming To Your School's Requirements
Library Guide On Harvard Referencing: Referencing. You May Be Penalised For Not Conforming To Your School's Requirements
Library Guide On Harvard Referencing: Referencing. You May Be Penalised For Not Conforming To Your School's Requirements
Introduction
The author-date system originated at Harvard University, and although they no longer produce a
standard guide to referencing, a version of the author-date system is still commonly referred to as the
Harvard style. Other author-date referencing styles include: Chicago, APA and MLA.
The Harvard Style of referencing is widely accepted in scholarly circles. Each reference is indicated in
the text by the author and date of the publication cited, sometimes with added information such as
page numbers. The full details of these references are listed at the end of the text in a Reference list.
There are many different styles or ways of using the Harvard or author-date system. This document is
meant only as a guide. It is important that you check with your School as to what they require for
referencing. You may be penalised for not conforming to your School’s requirements.
Further details and examples may be found in the Style manual for authors, editors and printers
(2002). Electronic resources are not adequately addressed in the Style manual for authors, editors and
printers (2002) and so the principles of author-date citing have been applied in developing those
examples.
The information and examples are derived from the following source:
Style manual for authors, editors and printers 2002, 6th edn, John Wiley & Sons, Australia.
What is referencing?
Referencing an information source used in an academic work means to employ a standardised
method of acknowledging that source. The full details of the source must be given. All information
used in your assignment, thesis, etc., whether published, or unpublished, must be referenced.
Why reference?
When writing a piece of academic work (ie. essay, thesis, etc.) you are required to acknowledge the
sources of information that you have used:
to prove that your work has a substantial, factual basis
to show the research you've done to reach your conclusions
to allow your readers to identify and retrieve the references for their own use
Information obtained from the Internet is covered by copyright law. For this reason it is important to
cite Internet references just as you would cite print references. Many style guide producers have
Plagiarism can take many forms - written, graphic and visual forms, and includes use of electronic
data and material used in oral presentations. Plagiarism may even occur unintentionally, such as when
the origin of the material used is not properly cited.
What constitutes plagiarism?
Under the charter, you may be accused of plagiarism if you do any of the following:
Copy sentences or paragraphs word-for-word from any source, whether published or
unpublished (including, but not limited to books, journals, reports, theses, websites, conference
papers, course notes, etc.) without proper citation.
Closely paraphrase sentences, paragraphs, ideas or themes without proper citation.
Piece together text from one or more sources and add only linking sentences without proper
citation.
Copy or submit whole or parts of computer files without acknowledging their source.
Copy designs or works of art and submit them as your original work.
Copy a whole or any part of another student‟s work.
Submit work as your own that someone else has done for you.
In-text references
In the text of your essay or thesis you should identify your source by giving, in parentheses, the
author's name and year of publication of the work to which reference has been made. From the textual
reference, the reader can turn to the alphabetical list of references for full publication details. Page
numbers are essential if directly quoting from a work, use single quotation marks and relevant page
number. If a work being referred to is long then page numbers may be useful to the reader.
For example:
Larsen (1971) was the first to propound the theory.
OR
The theory was first propounded in 1970 (Larsen 1971).
For example:
Larsen (1971, p. 245) noted „many of the facts in this case are incorrect‟.
OR
‟Many of the facts in this case are incorrect‟ (Larsen 1971, p. 245).
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Library guide on Harvard Referencing
For example:
Larsen (1971, p. 245) questions certain aspects of this case.
OR
Many aspects of this case have been questioned (Larsen 1971, p. 245).
If citing multiple works at one point in the text it is recommended that the authors‟ names be
ordered alphabetically inside the parentheses, with a semicolon to separate them.
For example:
Other studies of globalization focus on its cultural and human implications (Bauman 1998;
Tomlinson 1999).
Reference List
At the end of your work you should include a list of ALL the references you have cited in your text. In
the Harvard Style sources that are not cited in the text but are relevant to the subject may be listed
separately as a bibliography. The same method of presentation is used for both a list of references and
a bibliography.
The Reference List is arranged alphabetically by author, and thereafter chronologically, starting with
the earliest date.
For example:
Jones, AB 2000, …
Jones, B 1995, …
Smith, AK 1990, …
Smith, AK 1995, …
Stein, B 2003 …
Stein, B & Reynolds, JS 1995, …
Stein, B & Reynolds, JS 2000, …
Style manual for authors, editors and printers 2002, …
Yarbro, CH, Frogge, MH, Goodman, M & Groenwald, SL 2000, …
Young, JC 1988a, …
Young, JC 1988b, …
The format of the citation depends on the nature of the work, ie. whether it is a book, journal article,
website, etc.
In general the order of elements contained within each reference should include: author – date – title
of work – title of larger work (if any) – publishing details – date of access (if electronic).
Apart from the author and date, each element is separated from the others with a comma and the
citation finishes with a full stop.
Abbreviations
Acceptable abbreviations in the reference list for parts of books and other publications include:
app. appendix
c. circa
ch. chapter
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ed. (eds.) editor (Editors)
edn. edition
et al. and others
n.d. no date
n.p. no place
no. number
p., pp. page/s
para. paragraph
pt. part
rev. revised
suppl. supplement
vol. volume (as in Vol.4)
vols. volumes (as in 4 volumes)
Examples
Authors
Whatever type of work you are referencing, the way you list the authors‟ names depends on the
number of authors.
Two or three authors (Stein & Reynolds 2000) Stein, B & Reynolds, JS
or 2000, Mechanical and
Where there is more than one
Stein and Reynolds (2000) electrical equipment for
author, the in-text citation in
argue….. buildings, 9th edn, John
parentheses will use an
Wiley & Sons, New York.
ampersand (&) to join them,
whilst if the reference is part
of the sentence you use the
word „ and .‟
Four or more authors (Yarbro et al. 2000) Yarbro, CH, Frogge, MH,
or Goodman, M & Groenwald,
If there are four or more
Yarbro et al. (2000) have SL 2000, Cancer nursing,
authors only include the first
found…… 5th edn, Jones and Bartlett,
author in your in-text
Boston.
citation, adding the words „
et al. ‟ meaning „and others.‟
However the Reference List
should include all authors.
No author given Style manual for authors, Style manual for authors,
editors and printers (2002) editors and printers 2002,
Where an item has no named
or 6th edn, John Wiley & Sons,
author it is cited by its title.
According to the Style Australia.
manual for authors, editors
and printers (2002) …
Editor/s (eds. Muller, Cloete & Badat Muller, J, Cloete, N & Badat,
2001) S (eds.) 2001, Challenges of
Use the abbreviation ed. for
or globalisation: South African
editor or eds. for multiple
edited by Muller, Cloete and debates with Manuel
editors.
Badat (2001) Castells, Maskew Miller
Longman, Pinelands, Cape
Town.
Book chapter
Format:
Author‟s surname, Initials Year, „Title of chapter‟, [in] Author of book (if different), Title of book,
Edition, Publisher, Place of publication, Page number(s).
Examples:
Crawford, RJ 1998, 'Plastics available to the designer', in Plastics engineering, 3rd edn, Heinemann-
Butterworth, Oxford, pp. 6-18.
or
Christians, CG 2000, „Ethics and politics in qualitative research‟, in Denzin NK & Lincoln YS
Handbook of qualitative research, 2nd edn, Thousand Oaks, CA, Sage, pp. 133-154.
Encyclopaedia or dictionary
Encyclopaedias and dictionaries should be cited in the in-text reference only, NOT in the Reference
List.
Examples:
(Literacy in America: an encyclopedia 2001, p.25) states……
The Macquarie dictionary (1997) defines it as……
Secondary citation
While primary sources are essential, sometimes the source you wish to refer to may be unavailable
and you must refer to someone else's citation of that source. This is a secondary source and in this
case you must include both names in the in-text reference. The Reference List example would include
only the source you have seen.
In-text citation example:
MacDonald (1993, cited in Saunders, Lewis & Thornhill 2003, p. 48) states …
or
(MacDonald 1993, cited in Saunders, Lewis & Thornhill 2003, p. 48)
Reference List example:
Saunders, M, Lewis, P & Thornhill, A 2003, Research methods for business students, 3rd edn,
Pearson Educational, Essex, p. 48.
Journal articles
Note: Capitalise the first letter of the first word, and each of the major words of the journal name.
Do not use capital letters for words such as on, for, in, and
example: The Australian Journal of Language and Literacy
Journal article
Format:
Author(s) of article - surname and initials Year of publication, „Title of article‟, Journal name, volume
number, issue number, page number(s).
Example:
Zivkovic, B & Fujii, I 2001, 'An analysis of isothermal phase change of phase change material within
rectangular and cylindrical containers', Solar Energy, vol. 70, no.1, pp. 51-61.
Newspaper articles
Note: Capitalise the first letter of the first word, and each of the major words of the newspaper name.
Note: if the newspaper article does NOT have an author then provide details as an in-text citation
only, NOT in the Reference List.
For example: The Australian (10 July 2002, p.1) states……
Newspaper article
Format:
Author‟s surname, Initials Year of publication, „Title of article‟, Newspaper name, day month, page
number(s).
Example:
Tobler, K & Kerin, J 2002, „Hormone alert for cancer‟, The Australian, 10 July, p. 1.
Internet sources
Discussion list message
Format:
Author <author‟s email address> Year of posting, „Title of posting‟, description of posting, date and
month of posting, name of list owner, viewed day month year, <URL>.
Example:
Shively, E <[email protected]> 1997, „CA pre-1967 information‟, list server, 1 July,
Chemical Information Sources Discussion List, viewed 3 July 2003,
<http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/chminf-l.html>.
Newsgroup message
Format:
Author <author‟s email address> Year of posting, „Title of posting‟, description of posting, date and
month of posting, name of newsgroup owner, viewed day month year, <URL>.
Example:
Milinkovich, M 2005, „Oracle PL/SQL in Eclipse‟, newsgroup, 12 July, News.Eclipse.Technology, 15
September 2005, <http://dev.eclipse.org/newslists/news.eclipse.technology/msg01045.html>,
Blogs
Format:
Author <author‟s email address> Year of posting, „Title of posting‟, description of posting, date and
month of posting, name of list owner, viewed day month year, <URL>.
Example:
Steffen, A 2005, „Bird flu can we out-collaborate a pandemic?‟ blog, 15 August, World Changing:
another world is here, viewed 15 September 2005,
<http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003310.html>.
Legal cases
To fully cite legal authorities list name of case; (date) or volume number, or both; abbreviated name of
report series; and beginning page.
Example:
Greutner v. Everard (1960) 103 CLR 177
Other sources
Conference paper
Format:
Author‟s surname, Initials Year of publication, „Title of paper‟, [in] Editor (if applicable), Title of
published proceeding which may include place held and date(s), Publisher, Place of publication, page
number(s).
Example:
Kovacs, GL 1994, „Simulation-scheduling system using hybrid software technology‟, in Computer
Integrated Manufacturing and Automation Technology: Proceedings of the 4th International
conference, Troy, New York, October 10-12, 1994, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos,
California, pp.351-356.
Thesis
Format:
Author‟s surname, Initials Year of preparation of thesis, „Title of thesis‟, Award, Institution under
whose auspices the study was taken.
Example:
Garland, CP 1986, „Structure and removal of non-cellulosic components of eucalypt woods‟,
MApplSci thesis, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.
Patent
Format:
Name(s) of inventor. Name(s) of assignees, Patent title, Patent number Date of patent (including day
and month).
Example:
Wilmott, JM & Znaiden, AP Avon Products Inc., Cosmetic preparation incorporating stabilized
ascorbic acid, U.S. patent 4,983,382 Jan. 8 1991.
CD-ROM
Format:
Author/editor‟s name, Initials Year, Title, Edition, CD-ROM, Publisher, Place of publication.
Example:
Young, B & Heath, J 2000, Wheater's functional histology : a text and colour atlas, 4th edn, CD-
ROM, Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh.
Personal communication
Information gained through personal communication, either – face-to-face interview or conversation,
telephone call, facsimile, letter, email, etc. – should be provided as an in-text citation. Details of
personal communications do not need to be included in the Reference List.
The information, including day, month and year, is provided in the text, or parenthically. Details of
the organisation that the person represents may also be included. Note that initials precede the family
name.
Examples:
When interviewed on 24 April 1999, Ms S Savieri confirmed…..
Ms S Savieri confirmed this by facsimile on 24 April 1999.
It has been confirmed that an outbreak occurred in Shepparton (S Savieri 1999, pers. comm., 24
April).
Ms S Savieri (Australian Institute of Criminology) confirmed this by email on 24 April 1999.
It has been confirmed that an outbreak occurred in Shepparton (S Savieri [Australian Institute of
Criminology] 1999, pers. comm., 24 April).