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How to Reference

Find guidance on how to reference accurately in your specific referencing style.

How to reference

In a nutshell, referencing is a two-step process. Whenever you refer to another source of information, you need to firstly insert a citation in your text, and secondly, expand on that citation in a full reference at the end of your work.

How you format your citations and references will depend on the referencing style that you use and the type of information you鈥檙e referencing.

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Before you start

To reference correctly and accurately, you'll need to: 

  • know your referencing style- this is a set of instructions for formatting your reference and citations. 
  • identify the type of information you are referencing - it can sometimes be difficult to identify information you find, especially when dealing with documents found online. However, information included in a full reference varies depending on the information type. This is to help your reader find the source you've referenced more easily. You therefore need to know what information type you are using in order to reference it accurately.
  • collect all the information needed to write a reference鈥- this will usually include who created it and when, what it is called, where it was published and when you found it. 
  • decide how best to integrate the information into your writing鈥- will you quote or paraphrase? Will you need to include image captions or copyright statements? 

Referencing styles

Referencing styles are a set of instructions. They tell you what information you need to include in your reference, the order that information should appear, and the way it should be formatted as a citation in your work.

Referencing styles can be divided into four main types, these describe the way that each referencing style requires the citation to be formatted: 

  • Author-date鈥痵tyle鈥痵uch as Harvard, will format the citation using the鈥author surname and date of publication鈥痚.g. (Jones, 2023) 
  • Author-page鈥痵tyle, such as MLA, will format the citation using the鈥author surname and page number鈥痚.g. (Jones 27) 
  • Numbered鈥痵tyle, such as IEEE, will format the鈥citation as a number, e.g. [1] 
  • Footnote鈥痵tyle,鈥痵uch as Chicago, will place a鈥superscript number鈥痠n the text and place the鈥citation in a footnote 

There are hundreds of referencing styles available and the style you use will鈥痷sually be decided by your School. However, required styles may vary by module, especially if you鈥檙e studying joint or combined honours. All of your citations and references should match the required style accurately and consistently so it's important that you know which style you need to use. Check your programme and module handbooks and speak to your lecturers if you are not sure. 

The main referencing styles at 缅北禁地 are listed below, along with some guidance on using each style. You can find out more about these styles in the鈥Basics of Referencing鈥痵ection on鈥. 

 

Cite Them Right Harvard

Cite Them Right Harvard is the most commonly used referencing style at 缅北禁地. There are many variations of Harvard, so make sure you follow the format set out in referencing guide . 

This style follows the鈥author-date format for citations. A full reference is placed at the end of your work in a reference list, organised alphabetically by author surname. 

Guides to using Cite Them Right Harvard: 

  •  

Additional resources from the Library:

APA (7th edition)

The American Psychological Association (APA) referencing style is used by Psychology (FMS), Speech and Language Sciences, and Educational Psychology students (ECLS). 

APA 7th follows the author-date format for citations. A full reference is placed at the end of your work in a reference list, organised alphabetically by author surname.鈥 

Guide to using APA 7th: 

  •  

Additional resources from the Library: 

Chicago

The Chicago referencing style has both a footnote and author-date version. While the鈥footnote鈥痗itation is more widely used at 缅北禁地 (by鈥疕istory and Fine Art for example) check with your lecturer as to which option is preferred in specific modules. The bibliography is organised alphabetically by author surname.鈥 

Guides to using Chicago: 

  •  
  • (17th and 18th edition)

Additional resources from the Library: 

 

IEEE

IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers) is a referencing style widely used in the fields of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. 

IEEE is a鈥numbered鈥痵tyle where in-text citations are numbered using square brackets [1] and a reference list/bibliography is arranged in numerical order at the end of the document.鈥 

Guides to using IEEE: 

  •  

Additional resources from the Library: 

MHRA (4th edition)

The Modern Humanities Research Association (MHRA) referencing style has both a footnote and author-date version. While the鈥footnote鈥痗itation is more widely used at 缅北禁地, check with your lecturer as to which option is preferred in specific modules. The bibliography is organised alphabetically by author surname, with primary sources listed separately from secondary sources. 

Guides to using MHRA 4th: 

  •  
  •  

Additional resources from the Library: 

 

MLA

The Modern Languages Association (MLA) referencing style is used in English Literature modules at 缅北禁地. MLA follows the鈥author-page number鈥痜ormat. A full reference is placed at the end of your work in a reference list titled 'Works Cited'. 

Guides to using MLA: 

  •  
  •  

Additional resources from the Library: 

OSCOLA (4th edition)

OSCOLA is a鈥蹿辞辞迟苍辞迟别鈥style, designed to facilitate accurate citation of authorities, legislation, and other legal materials. It is used by students in 缅北禁地 Law School.鈥 

Guides to using OSCOLA: 

RSC

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) is a referencing style used by the School of Chemistry at 缅北禁地. RSC is a鈥numbered鈥痵tyle, which uses superscript numbers for in-text citations, and orders references numerically in the reference list. It also uses鈥痑bbreviated journal titles in references. You can check the accepted abbreviation for a journal title in the鈥.鈥 

Guide to using RSC: 

  •  

Additional resources from the Library:

Vancouver

The Vancouver style is a numbered style used by Biomedical Sciences, Nutritional and Sport Science students. Citations can be written as either a superscript number or a number in brackets and a reference list is arranged in numerical order at the end of the document.鈥 

Guide to using Vancouver: 

  •  

Additional resources from the Library

In-text Citations

You must add an in-text citation鈥痑t the point at which you refer to work that is not your own to show where the information came from. This means, a citation may be at the beginning, middle or end of a sentence (or in all three places!) depending on how you incorporate your sources. 

Even if you're paraphrasing the same author,鈥you should not use a single reference for multiple sentences鈥痮r place a single reference at the end of a paragraph where you have referred to the work of others throughout. The purpose of your citation is to show exactly what information came from where, so every time you use information from a source, you must reference it.鈥嬧赌 

When it comes to your in-text citations, all the following options are correct: 

Consecutive sentences with citations to different sources​

Example in an author date style (Cite Them Right Harvard):

To survive and thrive, bats require suitable roosting habitats, foraging locations and landscape features that can help them navigate via echolocation (Middleton, Froud and French, 2014, p. 4). Zeale, Davidson-Watts and Jones (2012, p.1117) recommend that, 鈥渓and managers must consider areas of up to 7-km radius around maternity roosts when designing and implementing management plans for this species.鈥 

Example in a numbered style (IEEE)

To survive and thrive, bats require suitable roosting habitats, foraging locations and landscape features that can help them navigate via echolocation [1, p. 4]. Zeale, Davidson-Watts and Jones recommend that, 鈥渓and managers must consider areas of up to 7-km radius around maternity roosts when designing and implementing management plans for this species.鈥 [2, p. 1117]. 

Example in a footnote style (Chicago):

To survive and thrive, bats require suitable roosting habitats, foraging locations and landscape features that can help them navigate via echolocation.1 Zeale, Davidson-Watts and Jones recommend that, 鈥渓and managers must consider areas of up to 7-km radius around maternity roosts when designing and implementing management plans for this species.鈥2

1 Neil Middleton, Andrew Froud and Keith French, Social Calls of the Bats of Britain and Ireland (Exeter: Pelagic Publishing, 2014), 4, ProQuest Ebook Central.

2 Matt R.K. Zeale, Ian David-Watts, and Gareth Jones, 鈥淗ome Range Use and Habitat Selection by Barbastelle Bats (Barbastella Barbastellus): Implications for Conservation,鈥 Journal of Mammalogy 93, no. 4 (2012): 1117, https://www.jstor.org/stable/23259854.

Consecutive sentences with citations to the same source​

Example in an author-date style (Cite Them Right Harvard):

Crimes against bats are the second most common wildlife crime in the UK but few cases are prosecuted (Early, 2018). The size of the fines which result from failure to apply for appropriate derogation license approval have been criticised (Early, 2018). 

Example in a numbered style (IEEE):

Crimes against bats are the second most common wildlife crime in the UK but few cases are prosecuted [1]. The size of the fines which result from failure to apply for appropriate derogation license approval have been criticised [1].

Example in a footnote style (Chicago):

Crimes against bats are the second most common wildlife crime in the UK but few cases are prosecuted.1 The size of the fines which result from failure to apply for appropriate derogation license approval have been criticised.2

1 Catherine Early, 鈥淲hy Two Recent Prosecutions have Sparked Concern Over Bat Crime Penalties,鈥 ENDS Report, May 17, 2018, https://www.endsreport.com/article/1527349/why-two-recent-prosecutions-sparked-concern-bat-crime-penalties.

2 Ibid.

Multiple citations to different sources at the end of a single sentence

Example in an author-date style (Cite Them Right Harvard):  

Studies have shown that prejudice against bats has increased since the Covid-19 pandemic (Lu et al, 2021; Lu, 2023). 

Example in a numbered style (IEEE):

Studies have shown that prejudice against bats has increased since the Covid-19 pandemic [1], [2].

Example in a footnote style (Chicago):

Studies have shown that prejudice against bats has increased since the Covid-19 pandemic.1

1 Manman Lu et al, 鈥淒oes public fear that bats spread COVID-19 jeopardize bat conservation?,鈥 Biological Conservation 254, (2021): 5.; Hang Lu, 鈥Communicating uncertainty about the link between COVID-19 and bats: the indirect effects on attitudes toward bats in the United 厂迟补迟别蝉,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Human Dimensions of Wildlife 29, (2024): 3, https://doi.org/10.1080/10871209.2023.2167022.

Multiple citations to different sources in the same sentence

Example in an author-date style (Cite them Right Harvard):

Bats make up almost 鈥25% of mammalian species鈥 (Las and Ulanovsky, 2024, p.1135) and are considered to be both a unique group (Wong et al, 2019) and 鈥渙ne of the most diverse mammalian orders鈥 (Chaverri, Ancillotto and Russo, 2018, p.1938).

Example in a numbered style (IEEE):

Bats make up almost 鈥25% of mammalian species鈥 [1, p. 1135] and are considered to be both a unique group [2] and 鈥渙ne of the most diverse mammalian orders鈥 [3, p. 1938].

Example in a footnote style (Chicago):

Bats make up almost 鈥25% of mammalian species鈥 1 and are considered to be both a unique group2 and 鈥渙ne of the most diverse mammalian orders.鈥3 

1. Liora Las and Nachum Ulanovsky, 鈥淏ats,鈥 Nature Methods 21, no. 7 (2024): 1135鈥37, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-024-02330-6.

2. Antonio Wong et al., 鈥淕lobal Epidemiology of Bat Coronaviruses,鈥 Viruses 11, no. 2 (2019): 174, https://doi.org/10.3390/v11020174.

3. Gloriana Chaverri, Leonardo Ancillotto, and Danilo Russo, 鈥淪ocial Communication in Bats,鈥 Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 93, no. 4 (2018): 1938鈥54, https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.12427.

If you do not know whether you need to add a reference or not,鈥it is always safer to add it.鈥 

A great way to get used to how to place citations is to look at journal articles in your field of study and see how academics and researchers format their citations.

Secondary referencing

Sometimes you may want to cite a source quoted in another author鈥檚 work, this is known as secondary referencing. In this case, you should always try to locate and read the original source, this will ensure you are not taking the information out of context and allow you to reference the source as normal.

If you cannot find the original source (it may be out of print, unavailable or in a language you cannot read), then you can refer to this source in your in-text citation / footnote using 鈥榪uoted in鈥 or 鈥榗ited in鈥. For example in the Cite Them Right Harvard style:

 鈥mith (2018, quoted in Jones, 2020, p. 21) states clearly that鈥

Only the work you read is included in the bibliography or reference list (from our example, this would be the work by Jones.) Check the rules of your referencing style to see how to format your in-text citation for a secondary reference. 

You鈥檒l find further advice on integrating your sources effectively on the following pages: 

The reference list

At a basic level, every referencing style will ask you to record some key components when writing a full reference for your reference list or bibliography, including鈥who鈥痗reated the information,鈥when,鈥what鈥痠t is called, and鈥how鈥痽ou access it.鈥 

Different or additional components may be used for different types of information to make it easier to identify and locate them. The reference for a book, for example will look different to a reference for a newspaper article or an image. 

For example, compare how you reference these three information types using鈥Cite Them Right Harvard: 

础鈥产辞辞办鈥is referenced using the following components: 

Surname, Initial. (Year of publication)鈥Title. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher. Series and volume number if relevant.

e.g. Brinkmann, R. (2020)鈥Environmental Sustainability in a Time of Change. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan

础鈥journal article, meanwhile, includes some additional components, including title of article and issue/volume numbers: 

Surname, Initial. (Year of publication) 'Title of article',鈥Title of Journal, Issue and Volume information, Page reference. 

e.g. Boussauw, K. (2023) 鈥楨xpanding the Brussels ring road and the myth of travel time savings鈥,鈥Urban, planning and transport research, 11(1), pp.345-367.

And a鈥website鈥痠s different again, including a URL and accessed date: 

Surname, Initial. (Year that the site was published/last updated)鈥Title of website. Available at: URL (/Accessed: date). 

e.g. 缅北禁地 (2025) Referencing. Available at: /academic-skills-kit/good-academic-practice/referencing/ (Accessed: 5 March 2025)

We strongly recommend that you spend some time familiarising yourself with the rules of your referencing style. Learning the components needed for the information types you reference regularly will also help you to ensure you're recording all the bibliographic information you need to reference them correctly.