Top Banner
REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles
18
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

REFERENCING USING OSCOLASection 5

Journal Articles

Page 2: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

Author’s name Title of the article Name of the journal Volume number (if there is one) Year of publication First page of the article

WHAT INFORMATION DO YOU NEED?

Page 3: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

First, the title of the journal: Legal Studies

Page 4: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

Next to that, we can find the volume number:

Vol 30 No.1

Page 5: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

And then the date: 2010

Page 6: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

And finally the pages of the article

Page 7: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

The title of the articleitself

Page 8: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

and the author

Page 9: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

As with books, the first thing is the author, followed by a comma:

Gerard McCormick,

PUTTING IT TOGETHER

Page 10: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

‘Reconstructing European insolvency law – constructing a new paradigm’ – in single quotation marks

NOW THE TITLE OF THE ARTICLE

Page 11: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

Round or square brackets?

Round brackets if there is a separate volume number, but square brackets if there isn’t a separate volume number.

In this example we know there is a volume number – Vol 30 no 1

So the year will be in round brackets: (2010)

WHEN IT WAS PUBLISHED

Page 12: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

30(1) LS 126

The volume number, followed by the issue number in brackets

Then the title of the journal – which can be abbreviated

Then the first page of the article

AND FINALLY…WHERE TO FIND IT

Page 13: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

Gerard McCormick, ‘Reconstructing European insolvency law – constructing a new paradigm’ (2010) 30(1) LS 126

SO THE COMPLETE REFERENCE IS…

Page 14: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

When pinpointing, put a comma between the first page of the article and the page pinpoint.

Gerard McCormick, ‘Reconstructing European insolvency law – constructing a new paradigm’ (2010) 30(1) LS 126, 131

PINPOINTING

Page 15: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

THE FORMULAE FOR JOURNAL ARTICLES

author, | ‘title’ | [year] | journal name or abbreviation | first page of article

[OR]

author, | ‘title’ | (year) | volume | journal name or abbreviation | first page of article

Page 16: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

Paul Craig, ‘Theory, “Pure Theory” and Values in Public Law’ [2005] PL 440

Alison L Young, ‘In Defence of Due Deference’ (2009) 72 MLR 554

EXAMPLES OF REFERENCES WITHOUT AND WITH VOLUME NUMBERS

Page 17: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.

List in section 4.2.1 of the OSCOLA guide

For other journals, use the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations

http://www.legalabbrevs.cardiff.ac.uk/

Above all, be consistent!

FINDING ABBREVIATIONS FOR JOURNALS

Page 18: REFERENCING USING OSCOLA Section 5 Journal Articles.