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PLEASE READ THESE GUIDELINES FOR CITING NOTES AND REFERENCES Texts should be referenced with sequentially numerated endnotes that conform to Harvard conventions for the citation of books, articles, journals and electronic sources. References should be provided as follows:
For a Book
1. name/s of author/s, editor/s, compiler/s (surname, and initials or given name), or the institution responsible
One author Two or more authors Moir, A. & Jessel, D. (1991) Brain Sex: The Real Difference Between Men and Women , Mandarin, London. Cheek, J., Doskatsch, I., Hill, P. & Walsh, L. (1995) Finding Out : Information Literacy For the 21st century , MacMillan Education Australia, South Melbourne. Editor(s) Robinson, W. F. & Huxtable, C. R. R. (eds) (1988) Clinicopathologic Principles For Veterinary Medicine , Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Sjostrand, S. (ed.) (1993) Institutional Change: Theory and Empirical Findings , M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. Sponsored by institution, corporation or other organisation Australian Government Publishing Service (1994) Style Manual For Authors, Editors and Printers , 5th edn, AGPS, Canberra. Queensland Tourist and Travel Corporation, Market Research Department (1991) An Examination of the Effect of the Domestic Aviation Dispute on Queensland Tourism , Queensland Tourist and Travel Corporation, Brisbane. Series Simons, R. C. (1996) Boo!: Culture, Experience and the Startle Reflex , Series in Affective Science, Oxford University Press, New York.
Edition Chapter or part of a book to which a number of authors have contributed Bernstein, D. (1995) 'Transportation planning' in The Civil Engineering Handbook , ed. W.F.Chen, CRC Press, Boca Raton.
No author or editor The CCH Macquarie dictionary of business (1993) CCH Australia, North Ryde, NSW. For an Article The details required, in order, are:
1. name/s of author/s of the article (surname, and initials or given name) Journal article Huffman, L. M. (1996) 'Processing whey protein for use as a food ingredient', Food Technology , vol. 50, no. 2, pp. 49-52.
Conference paper
Newspaper article
For Non-Book/Multimedia Material Get the Facts (And Get Them Organised) (videorecording) (1990) Williamstown, Vic., Appleseed Productions. CDATA 91 With Supermap: Data For Australia 1995 , release 2.1 rev., Hawthorne East, Vic., Space-Time Research.
For Electronic Resources
1. name/s of author/s
Examples: ASTEC (1994) The Networked Nation, Available at: http://astec.gov.au/astec/net_nation/contents.html If no author is given, the title is used as the first element of a citation Example: Hacker Attack (videorecording) (1995) Sydney, NSW., SBS. Style within the text Parenthases: In the standard text (thus) are to be used. You should use square brackets [thus] only to indicate where you have added text. Punctuation: Please use single quotation marks and three dots to signify elipsis. Dates and numbers: Dates should be cited consistently throughout the article, e.g 11 January 1966. Year ranges should be indicated as 1939-45 and decades as 1890s. Please write other numbers as text i.e. seventy-two and present percentages as per cent. Titles: Please present titles of works in their original language with a subsequent translation in standard brackets with the date of production. Titles should be italicised. Illustrations The number and nature of illustrations can be discussed with the editors but as a general rule images will be reproduced as b/w in the journal. It is important to note that copyright clearance will be needed. The captions for illustration should be typed on a separate sheet. Captions should include any keys to symbols used. | |