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{{short description|Citation system}}
{{selfref|For the use of Harvard referencing in Misplaced Pages, see ]}}
{{morefootnotes|date=June 2020}}
'''Harvard referencing''' &mdash; also known as the '''author-date system''' <ref>, based on the ''Chicago Manual of Style'', University of Georgia, retrieved October 18, 2005.</ref> and '''parenthetical system''' <ref>, ''The Mayfield Handbook of Technical and Scientific Writing'', retrieved August 4, 2006.</ref> &mdash; is a format for writing and organizing ]s of source materials.
{{Use British English|date=October 2022}}
{{use dmy dates|date=July 2021|cs1-dates=y}}
'''Parenthetical referencing''' is a ] in which ] are made using ].<ref>{{cite web|last1=libguides|first1=liu.cwp|title=Parenthetical Referencing|url=https://liu.cwp.libguides.com/APAstyle/parenthetical#:~:text=Parenthetical%20references%20are%20used%20within,the%20article%20you%20are%20citing.|access-date=7 October 2022|website=liu.cwp.libguides.com|archive-date=26 July 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200726214158/https://liu.cwp.libguides.com/APAstyle/parenthetical#:~:text=Parenthetical%20references%20are%20used%20within,the%20article%20you%20are%20citing.|url-status=live}}</ref> They are usually accompanied by a full, alphabetized list of citations in an end section, usually titled "references", "reference list", "works cited", or "end-text citations".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://library.williams.edu/citing/styles/chicago2.php|title=Author–date system|work=Chicago Manual of Style, Williams College Libraries|access-date=2010-10-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Pears|first1=R.|last2=Shields|first2=G.|title=Cite them right: the essential referencing guide|year=2008|publisher=Pear Tree Books |isbn=978-0-9551216-1-6}}</ref> Parenthetical referencing can be used in lieu of ] citations (the ]).


Parenthetical referencing normally uses one of these two ]:
The Harvard referencing system consists of ''citations'' (in the text) and ''references'' (alphabetized in a ''References'' section). An example of a citation, providing the author's name, publication year, and page range, is at the end of this sentence (Deane 2001, 449–51). A corresponding example of a reference is
* Author–date (also known as Harvard referencing):<ref name="Ruskin">{{cite web|url=http://libweb.anglia.ac.uk/referencing/harvard.htm|title=Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing (5th edition)|date=21 May 2012|publisher=]|access-date=17 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200222045426/http://www.libweb.anglia.ac.uk/referencing/harvard.htm|archive-date=22 February 2020|url-status=dead}}</ref> primarily used in the natural sciences and social sciences, and recommended by the ] and the ] (APA) (see ]);
* Author–title or author–page: primarily used in the arts and the humanities, and recommended by the ] (MLA) (see ]).


=={{anchor|Author-date}} Author–date (Harvard referencing)==
<blockquote>Deane, Sandra. 2001. Principles of trauma management. In Textbook of surgery, ed. J. Tjandra, G. Clunie, and R. Thomas, 434–65. Victoria, Australia: Blackwell Publishing.</blockquote>
In the author–date method (Harvard referencing),<ref name="Ruskin"/> the in-text citation is placed in parentheses after the sentence or part thereof that the citation supports. The citation includes the author's name, year of publication, and page number(s) when a specific part of the source is referred to (Smith 2008, p.&nbsp;1) or (Smith 2008:1). A full citation is given in the references section: Smith, John (2008). ''Name of Book''. Name of Publisher.


==Origins and variations== ===How to cite===
The structure of a citation under the author–date method is the author's surname, year of publication, and page number or range, in parentheses, as in "(Smith 2010, p. 1)".
Harvard referencing was first used in 1881 in a paper by Edward Laurens Mark, <ref>Mark, Edward Laurens. 1881. Maturation, fecundation, and segmentation of Limax campestris. ''Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology'' vol. 6, part 2, no. 12: 173&ndash;625.</ref> professor of anatomy and director of the zoological laboratory at ], who derived it from the laboratory library's cataloguing system. <ref name=Chernin>Chernin, Eli. "The "Harvard System: a mystery dispelled," British Medical Journal vol 297 October 22, 1988, 1062-1063.</ref>
* The page number or page range may be omitted if the entire work is cited, as in "(Smith 2010)".
* {{anchor|Narrative style}}Narrative style citations have the author appearing as part of the regular text sentence, outside parentheses, as in: "Jones (2001) revolutionized the field of trauma surgery."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://apastyle.apa.org/style-grammar-guidelines/citations/basic-principles/parenthetical-versus-narrative|title=Parenthetical Versus Narrative In-Text Citations|website=apastyle.apa.org|access-date=May 26, 2020}}</ref>
* Two authors are cited using "and" or "&": (Deane and Jones 1991) or (Deane & Jones 1991). More than two authors are cited using "]": (Smith ''et al.'' 1992).
* In some documentation systems (e.g., MLA style), an unknown date is cited as having "no date of publication" by the abbreviation for "no date" (Deane, n.d.).<ref name="EastAnglia">{{cite web|url=http://libweb.anglia.ac.uk/referencing/harvard.htm?harvard_id=66#66|title=References with missing details|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181122041745/http://libweb.anglia.ac.uk/referencing/harvard.htm?harvard_id=66#66|archive-date=2018-11-22|work=Harvard System of Referencing Guide|publisher=University of East Anglia|access-date=2010-10-25}}</ref>
* In such documentation systems, works without pagination are referred to in the References list as "not paginated" with the abbreviation for that phrase (n. pag.).<ref name=EastAnglia/>
* "No place of publication" and/or "no publisher" are both designated the same way (n.p.) and placed in the appropriate spot in the bibliographical citation (''Harvard Referencing''. N.p.).<ref name="EastAnglia"/>
* A reference to a republished work is cited with the original publication date either in square brackets (Marx 1967, p.&nbsp;90) or separated with a slash (Marx, 1867/1967, p.&nbsp;90).<ref>{{cite book|author=American Psychological Association|title=Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association|edition=5th|publisher=American Psychological Association|location=Washington, DC, USA|date=2001|isbn=978-1-55798-791-4|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/publicationmanu000amer|url-access=registration|via=]}}</ref> The inclusion of the original publication year qualifies the suggestion otherwise that the publication originally occurred in 1967.
* If an author published several books in 2005, the year of the first publication (in the alphabetic order of the references) is cited and referenced as 2005a, the second as 2005b and so on.
* A citation is placed wherever appropriate in or after the sentence. If it is at the end of a sentence, it is placed before the period, but a citation for an entire block quote immediately follows the period at the end of the block since the citation is not an actual part of the quotation itself. When citing quotes it’s advisable to insert the page number as this points directly to the page of the content that has been used.
* Complete citations are provided in alphabetical order in a section following the text, usually designated as "Works cited" or "References." The difference between a "works cited" or "references" list and a bibliography is that a bibliography may include works not directly cited in the text.
* All citations are in the same font as the main text.
* There is no official guide to Harvard citation style,<ref>{{cite web|last=Mullan|first=W. M. A.|title=DFST Harvard Reference Generator|url=https://www.dairyscience.info/harvard/referencegen.php|publisher=Dairy Science and Food Technology (DSFT)|access-date=17 July 2016|quote=Note the Harvard system of referencing is not 'tightly' specified and some variation in the use of capital letters, italics, the use of parentheses and text styles does occur in different institutions and journals. Please check the 'house style' that is specified for your publication, thesis, dissertation or assignment before submitting your work.}}</ref> consequently variations occur across various online Harvard citation and referencing guides. For example, some universities instruct students to type a book's publication date ''without'' parentheses in the reference list.<ref>{{cite web|title=Your Guide to Harvard Style Referencing|url=https://library.sydney.edu.au/subjects/downloads/citation/Harvard_Complete.pdf|website=University Library|publisher=The University of Sydney|access-date=17 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180915145204/https://library.sydney.edu.au/subjects/downloads/citation/Harvard_Complete.pdf|archive-date=15 September 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Ruskin"/>


===Examples===
Traditionally, Harvard referencing has been used mostly in the sciences (''University of Chicago Press'' 2006). In the fine arts, history, and literature, the footnote-style ''documentary-note'' or ''humanities'' system has traditionally been preferred. The ], a variation of Harvard referencing, has been used primarily for medical works. In recent decades, "most scholarly and professional organizations" have turned to Harvard referencing.
An example of a journal reference:
<ref>
A citation guide sponsored by an MIT-Microsoft joint venture states that "most scholarly and professional organizations have abandoned because redundant and cumbersome.... In the 1980s the Modern Language Association, the largest American organization of scholars in English and foreign literatures, changed its recommended form of citation from a note style to its own version of the parenthetical style" (Mayfield, section 10.3).
</ref>


* Heilman, J. M. and West, A. G. (2015). "Misplaced Pages and Medicine: Quantifying Readership, Editors, and the Significance of Natural Language." ''Journal of Medical Internet Research'', 17(3), p. e62. doi:10.2196/jmir.4069.
This article follows the University of Chicago Manual of Style.


Following is an explanation of the components, where the coloring is for demonstration purposes and is not used in actual formatting:
==How works are cited==
<br>
The structure of a citation under the Harvard referencing system is the author's surname, year of publication, and page number or range, in parentheses, as illustrated in the Deane example near the top of this article.
<span style="border:3px orange; border-style:none dotted solid;">Heilman, J. M. and West, A. G.</span>
<span style="border:3px lightgreen; border-style:none dotted solid;">(2015).</span>
<span style="border:3px blue; border-style:none dotted solid;">"Misplaced Pages and Medicine: Quantifying Readership, Editors, and the Significance of Natural Language."</span>
<span style="border:3px lightgreen; border-style:none dotted solid;">''Journal of Medical Internet Research'',</span>
<span style="border:3px red; border-style:none dotted solid;">]</span>
<span style="border:3px yellow; border-style:none dotted solid;">],</span>
<span style="border:3px blue; border-style:none dotted solid;">p.e62.</span>
<span style="border:3px plum; border-style:none dotted solid;">doi:10.2196/jmir.4069.</span>
* <span style="border:3px orange; border-style:none dotted solid;">Author(s)</span> first listed author's name inverted in the bibliography entry
* <span style="border:3px lightgreen; border-style:none dotted solid;">Year</span>
* <span style="border:3px blue; border-style:none dotted solid;">Article title</span>
* <span style="border:3px lightgreen; border-style:none dotted solid;">Journal title</span> in ]
* <span style="border:3px red; border-style:none dotted solid;">]</span><ref name="vol">{{Cite book|title=The Chicago Manual of Style|url=https://archive.org/details/chicagomanualofs16edunse|url-access=registration|date=2010|publisher=The University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-10420-1|edition=16th|location=Chicago|oclc=495102182|chapter=Notes and Bibliography: Journal Volume, Issue, and Date}}</ref>
* <span style="border:3px yellow; border-style:none dotted solid;">]</span><ref name="vol"/>
* <span style="border:3px blue; border-style:none dotted solid;">Page numbers</span>{{NoteTag|The Heilman and West example article was published electronically without page numbers.}} specific page number in a note; page range in a bibliography entry
* <span style="border:3px plum; border-style:none dotted solid;">]</span>


Examples of book references are:
*The page number or page range is omitted if the entire work is cited. The author's surname is omitted if it appears in the text. Thus we may say: Author (2001) revolutionized the field of trauma surgery.
* Smith, J. (2005a). ''Dutch Citing Practices''. The Hague: Holland Research Foundation.
* Smith, J. (2005b). ''Harvard Referencing''. London: Jolly Good Publishing.


In giving the city of publication, an internationally well-known city (such as London, The Hague, or New York) is given as the city alone. If the city is not internationally well known, the country (or state and country if in the U.S.) is given.
*Two or three authors are cited using "and" or "&": (Author, Smith, and Jones 1991) or (Author, Smith & Jones 1991). Four or more authors are cited using ''et al'' (Author et al 1992).


An example of a newspaper reference:
*An unknown date is cited as ''no date'' (Deane n.d.). A reference to a reprint is cited with the original publication date in square brackets (Marx 1967, 90).
* Bowcott, Owen (October 18, 2005). , ''The Guardian''.


===Advantages===
*If an author published two books in 2005, the year of the first (in the alphabetic order of the references) is cited and referenced as 2005a, the second as 2005b.
{{prose|section|date=June 2020}}
* The principal advantage of the author–date method is that a reader familiar with a field is likely to recognize a citation without having to check in the references section. This is most useful in fields whose works are commonly known by their date of publication (for example, the sciences and social sciences in which one cites, say, "the 2005 Johns Hopkins study of brain function"), or if the author cited is notorious (for example, HIV denialist ] on the cause of ]).
* The use of author–date systems helps the reader easily identify sources that may be outdated.
* If the same source is cited more than once, even a reader unfamiliar with the author may remember the name. It quickly becomes obvious if the publication is relying heavily on a single author or single publication. When many different pages of the same work are cited, the reader does not need to flip back and forth to footnotes or endnotes full of "]" citations to discover this fact.
* With the author–date method, there is no renumbering hassle when the order of in-text citations is changed, which can be a scourge of the ] if house style or project style insists that citations never appear out of numerical order. (Computerized ] automates this aspect of the numbered system ], or ]<nowiki>]</nowiki>.)
* Parenthetical referencing works well in combination with substantive notes. When the note system is used for source citations, two different systems of note marking and placement are needed—in Chicago Style, for instance, "the citation notes should be numbered and appear as endnotes. The substantive notes, indicated by asterisks and other symbols, appear as footnotes" (], 16.63–64). This approach can be cumbersome in any circumstances. When it is not possible to use footnotes altogether probably because of the publisher's policy, it results in two parallel series of endnotes, which can be confusing to readers. Using parenthetical referencing for sources avoids such a problem.
* The reader can find the in-text author–date citations of a specific work more easily. Finding in-text numbered citations is more difficult because some will not appear if they are included in ranges.
* The author–date method can be more convenient for manuscript/draft preparation, or revisions, that are handled by multiple contributing authors. For example, multiple authors are not necessarily able to use the same ]. As such, it may be a preferred style to be used for submission to journals that allow any reference style before acceptance, such as journals that follow ]'s ''Your Paper Your Way'' <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.elsevier.com/authors/tools-and-resources/your-paper-your-way|title=Your Paper, Your Way|website=elsevier.com|access-date=September 8, 2022}}</ref> guidelines.


===Disadvantages===
*A citation is placed wherever appropriate in or after the sentence. If it is at the end of a sentence, it is placed before the period, but a citation for an entire block quote immediately ''follows'' the period at the end of the block.
{{prose|section|date=June 2020}}


* Taking up space and distracting, especially when many works are cited in a single place (which often occurs when reviewing a large body of previous work). Numbered footnotes or endnotes, by contrast, can be combined into a range, e.g. "<nowiki></nowiki>". However this disadvantage is offset by the fact that parenthetical referencing may be economical for the overall document since, for instance, "(Smith 2008: 34)" takes up a small amount of space in a paragraph, whereas the same information would require a whole line in a footnote or endnote.
*Complete citations are provided in alphabetical order in a section following the text, usually designated as "Works cited" or "References." The difference between "works cited" and a bibliography is that a bibliography section may include works not cited.
* In many disciplines in the arts and humanities, date of publication is often not the most important piece of information about a particular work. Thus, in author–date references such as "(Dickens 2003: 10)", the date is essentially redundant or meaningless when read on the page, since works may go through numerous editions or translations long after the original publication. Compare a reference in a science discipline such as "The last survey indicated that four hundred were left in the wild (Jones ''et al.'' 2003)", where the date ''is'' meaningful. The reader of certain forms of arts and humanities scholarship may thus be better aided by the use of author–title referencing styles such as MLA: for example, "(Dickens ''Oliver'', 10)", where meaningful information is given on the page. Historical scholarship is an exception, since, when citing a primary source, date of publication ''is'' meaningful, though in most branches of history footnotes are preferred on other grounds. Generally speaking, however, it is instructive that author–date systems such as ], whereas author–title systems such as ] were devised by humanities scholars.
* Similarly, because works are frequently reprinted in many arts and humanities disciplines, different author–date references might refer to the same work. For example, "(Spivak 1985)", "(Spivak 1987)", and "(Spivak 1996)" might all refer to the same essay — and might be better rendered in author–title style as "(Spivak 'Subaltern')". Such ambiguities may be resolved by adding an original date of publication, for example, "(Spivak 1985/1996)", though this is cumbersome and exacerbates the principal disadvantage of parenthetical referencing, namely its distraction for the reader and unattractiveness on the page.
* Rules can be complicated or unclear for non-academic references, particularly those where the personal author is unknown, such as government-issued documents and standards.
* When removing a portion of text which has citations in it, the editor(s) must also check the ''Reference'' sections to see if the sources cited in the removed text is used elsewhere in the paper or book, and if not, to delete any reference not actually cited in the text (although this issue can be eliminated by the use of ]).
* The use of the author–date methods (but not author–title) can be confusing when used in monographs about particularly prolific authors. In-text citation and back-of-the-book listings of works arranged by date of publication are conducive to errors and confusion: for example, Harvey 1996a, Harvey 1996b, Harvey 1996c, Harvey 1996d, Harvey 1995a, Harvey 1995b, Harvey 1986a, Harvey 1986b, and so on.
* The mixing of text with frequent parentheses and long strings of numbers is typographically inelegant.
* Most historical journals (apart from economic and social history) use footnotes because of the need for maximum flexibility. Primary source references to archives, etc., involve long and complex information, all of which may be immediately relevant to a serious reader. An interesting example of this arose with the famous work of the anthropologists John and Jean Comaroff, ''Of Revelation and Revolution'' which treated historical events from anthropological perspective: although parenthetical references were used for scholarly sources, the authors found it necessary to use notes for the historical archive material they were also using.
* If parenthetical referencing is combined with alphabetic order of author names, studies have demonstrated this can lead to discrimination against authors with last names starting with a letter near the end of the alphabet, for funding and future citations.<ref>Einav, L., & Yariv, L. (2006). What's in a surname? The effects of surname initials on academic success. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20(1), 175–187.</ref> Some style guides therefore suggest listing the authors chronologically instead.


=== Origins and use ===
*All citations are in the same font as the main text.
The origin of the author–date style is attributed to a paper by ], Hersey professor of anatomy and director of the zoological laboratory at ], who may have copied it from the cataloguing system used then and now by the library of Harvard's ].<ref name="Chernin">{{cite journal |last=Chernin |first=Eli |year=1988 |title=The 'Harvard system': a mystery dispelled |journal=British Medical Journal |volume=297 |issue=6655 |pages=1062–1063|pmc=1834803 }}</ref> In 1881 Mark wrote a paper on the embryogenesis of the garden slug, in which he included an author–date citation in parentheses on page 194, the first known instance of such a reference.<ref name="mark_1881_firstharvardcite">{{cite journal|last=Mark|first=Edward Laurens|year=1881|title=Maturation, fecundation, and segmentation of Limax campestris, Binney|journal=Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College|volume=6|page=194|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bn0tAAAAYAAJ|doi=10.1086/273085|oclc=6822275174|doi-access=free}}</ref> Until then, according to Eli Chernin writing in the '']'', references had appeared in inconsistent styles in footnotes, referred to in the text using a variety of printers' symbols, including asterisks and daggers. Chernin writes that a 1903 ] dedicated to Mark by 140 students, including ], confirms that the author–date system is attributable to Mark. The festschrift pays tribute to Mark's 1881 paper, writing that it "introduced into zoology a proper fullness and accuracy of citation and a convenient and uniform method of referring from text to bibliography." According to an editorial note in the ''British Medical Journal'' in 1945, an unconfirmed anecdote is that the term "Owen system" was introduced by an English visitor to Harvard University library, who was impressed by the citation system and dubbed it "Harvard system" upon his return to England.<ref name="Chernin"/>


Although it originated in biology, it is now more common in humanities, history, and social science.{{cn|date=September 2023}} It is favored by a few scientific journals such as '']'',<ref>{{cite web |title=AAS Journal Reference Instructions |url=https://journals.aas.org/references/ |publisher=The Amrerican Astronomical Society |date=2023 |access-date=September 17, 2023}}</ref> but the major biology journal '']'' announced in 2022 that it was moving away from the Harvard style.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Numbered referencing style now standard across Cell Press journals |url=https://www.cell.com/news-do/cell-press-referencing-style |date=October 3, 2022 |access-date=September 17, 2023}}</ref>
===Examples===
Examples of book references are:


==Author–title==
* Smith, J. (2005a). ''Harvard Referencing'', Wherever, Florida:Wikimedia Foundation. ISBN 1-899235-74-4.
In the author–title or author–page method, also referred to as ], the in-text citation is placed in parentheses after the sentence or part thereof that the citation supports, and includes the author's name (a short title only is necessary when there is more than one work by the same author) and a page number where appropriate (Smith 1) or (Smith, ''Playing'' 1). (No "p." or "pp." prefaces the page numbers and main words in titles appear in capital letters, following MLA style guidelines.) A full citation is given in the references section.
* Smith, J. (2005b). ''More Harvard Referencing'', Wherever, Florida:Wikimedia Foundation. ISBN 1-899235-74-4.


==Content notes==
An example of a journal reference is:
{{See also|The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers#Content notes}}
A content note generally contains useful information and explanations that do not fit into the primary text itself. Content notes may be given as ]s or ]s or even a combination of both footnotes and endnotes. Such content notes may themselves contain a style of parenthetical referencing, just as the main text does.


== See also ==
*Smith, John Maynard. (1998). The origin of altruism. ''Nature'' 393: 639–40.
* ]


== Notes ==
A newspaper article is usually cited in running text and omitted from the ''References'' section. An example of a formal newspaper reference is:
{{NoteFoot}}


== References ==
* Bowcott, O. , ''The Guardian'', October 18, 2005.
=== Citations ===
{{Reflist|30em}}


=== Sources ===
If the publication is offline:
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite web|author=American Psychological Association|year=2001|url=http://apastyle.apa.org/electext.html|title=Citations in Text of Electronic Material|work=APA Style}}
* {{cite book|author=British Standards Institution|year=1990|title=Recommendations for citing and referencing published material|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=British Standards Institution}}
* {{cite book|title=]|year=2003|edition=15th|location=Chicago|publisher=]|isbn=0-226-10403-6}} (hardcover). {{ISBN|0-226-10404-4}} (]).
* {{cite book|author=((Council of Science Editors))|year=2006|title=Scientific Style and Format: The CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers|edition=7th|location=Reston, VA (US)|publisher=]|isbn=0-9779665-0-X}}
* {{cite book|author=]|year=2009|title=]|edition=7th|location=New York|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-60329-024-1}}
* {{cite book|title=MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing|year=2008|publisher=Modern Language Association|edition=3rd|isbn=978-0-87352-297-7}}
* {{cite journal|last=Roediger|first=Roddy|date=April 2004|url=http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=1549|title=What Should They Be Called?|journal=APS Observer|volume=17|number=4|access-date=2009-03-11|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090219013551/http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=1549|archive-date=2009-02-19}}
{{refend}}


== Further reading ==
*Bowcott, O. 2005. Protests halt online auction to shoot stag. ''The Guardian'', October 18, 2005. <nowiki>http://www.guardian.co.uk/animalrights/story/0,11917,1594716,00.html</nowiki>.
{{refbegin|40em}}
* {{cite web|url=http://hcl.harvard.edu/news/2006/refworks_lamont.html|archive-date=2012-02-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120222045721/http://hcl.harvard.edu/news/2006/refworks_lamont.html|title=Lamont Libraries Lead RefWorks Workshops|year=2006|publisher=] Library}}
* {{cite web|url=http://hcl.harvard.edu/news/2009/research_services_sharing.html|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120222045715/http://hcl.harvard.edu/news/2009/research_services_sharing.html |archive-date=2012-02-22 |title=Research Service Libraries Take Part in Pilot Project |year=2009|publisher=]|access-date=2009-03-11}}
* {{cite book|author-link=Kate L. Turabian|last=Turabian|first=Kate L.|display-authors=etal|year=2007 |title=A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations|edition=7th|location=Chicago |publisher=]|isbn=978-0-226-82336-2}}
* {{cite web|url=http://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=citationtools&pageid=icb.page148723|archive-date=2012-02-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120209150932/http://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=citationtools&pageid=icb.page148723|title=Citation Tools|publisher=]|year=2008}} – Includes hyperlinked.
* {{citation|author=] (ALA)|date=November 2003|title=ALA Standards Manual |url=http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/ors/standardsa/standardsmanual/manual.cfm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090227135504/http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/ors/standardsa/standardsmanual/manual.cfm|archive-date=2009-02-27}}
* {{cite web|author=((] (CSE), previously named ] (CBE)))|year=2009|url=http://councilscienceeditors.org/publications/style_introduction.cfm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071022091544/http://councilscienceeditors.org/publications/style_introduction.cfm |archive-date=2007-10-22|title=Scientific Style and Format: Introduction}} and {{cite web |url=http://councilscienceeditors.org/reference_links.cfm|title=Reference Links|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090206180037/http://councilscienceeditors.org/reference_links.cfm|archive-date=6 February 2009}} – Includes section on "Grammar and Style" with hyperlinked "Citing the Internet: Formats for Bibliographic Citations".
* {{cite web|author=] Library|date=2008-06-02|title=Citing Sources: Documentation Guidelines for Citing Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism |url=http://library.duke.edu/research/citing/}} – Provides hyperlinked "Citation Guides" pertaining to the most commonly used citation guidelines, including parenthetical referencing. Also includes APA, Chicago, CBE, CSE, MLA, and Turabian style guidelines.
* {{cite web|author=Harvard College Library|year=2008|url=http://hcl.harvard.edu/research/guides/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121205070212/http://hcl.harvard.edu/research/guides/|archive-date=2012-12-05|title=Research Guides|publisher=(Compiled by the Staff of Harvard College Library)}}
* {{cite web|author=Harvard College Writing Program |publisher=]|year=2008 |url=http://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k24101&pageid=icb.page123040 |archive-date=2012-12-10 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20121210092053/http://isites.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k24101&pageid=icb.page123040|title=Resources for Students: Guides to Using Sources}}
* {{cite web|author=] Library|year=2009|url=https://library.leeds.ac.uk/skills-referencing|title=References and citations explained|access-date=2016-02-02}}
* {{cite web|author=] Library|year=2008 |url=http://www.usq.edu.au/library/Breeze/Fac_Business/HarvardAGPS/|archive-date=2009-03-01|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090301173055/http://www.usq.edu.au/library/Breeze/Fac_Business/HarvardAGPS/ |title=Your Guide to the Harvard AGPS Referencing System}} and {{cite web|url=http://www.usq.edu.au/library/help/ehelp/ref_guides/harvardonline.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070703124746/http://www.usq.edu.au/library/help/ehelp/ref_guides/harvardonline.htm|archive-date=2007-07-03|title=Harvard Style (AGPS) – Web sources|access-date=2010-10-25}}
* {{cite web|author=]|year=2009 |url=http://www.lasalle.edu/academ/sba/faculty/Harvard.pdf|archive-date=2009-05-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090521015014/http://www.lasalle.edu/academ/sba/faculty/Harvard.pdf |title=Harvard (AGPS) Style: A Guide to Referencing Sources Used in Assignments|access-date=2010-10-25}}
{{refend}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Parenthetical Referencing}}
==Harvard referencing and content notes==
]
Harvard referencing is compatible with footnotes used for ''content notes''. Harvard referencing is an alternative to footnotes used for ''reference notes'' (that is, the documentary-note system). Footnotes, if used for content notes, often contain Harvard referencing citations, just as the main text does.


==See also==
*]

==Notes==

<blockquote>
''Warning: the items in this section follow neither the Harvard referencing system nor any other accepted guidelines for citing references. Do not consider these items to be examples of any footnote or reference system.''
</blockquote>

<references/>

==Further reading==
* MIT. 2006. , in ''The Mayfield Handbook of Technical and Scientific Writing''.
] ]
] ]
]

]
]

Latest revision as of 22:26, 24 November 2024

Citation system
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Parenthetical referencing is a citation system in which in-text citations are made using parentheses. They are usually accompanied by a full, alphabetized list of citations in an end section, usually titled "references", "reference list", "works cited", or "end-text citations". Parenthetical referencing can be used in lieu of footnote citations (the Vancouver system).

Parenthetical referencing normally uses one of these two citation styles:

Author–date (Harvard referencing)

In the author–date method (Harvard referencing), the in-text citation is placed in parentheses after the sentence or part thereof that the citation supports. The citation includes the author's name, year of publication, and page number(s) when a specific part of the source is referred to (Smith 2008, p. 1) or (Smith 2008:1). A full citation is given in the references section: Smith, John (2008). Name of Book. Name of Publisher.

How to cite

The structure of a citation under the author–date method is the author's surname, year of publication, and page number or range, in parentheses, as in "(Smith 2010, p. 1)".

  • The page number or page range may be omitted if the entire work is cited, as in "(Smith 2010)".
  • Narrative style citations have the author appearing as part of the regular text sentence, outside parentheses, as in: "Jones (2001) revolutionized the field of trauma surgery."
  • Two authors are cited using "and" or "&": (Deane and Jones 1991) or (Deane & Jones 1991). More than two authors are cited using "et al.": (Smith et al. 1992).
  • In some documentation systems (e.g., MLA style), an unknown date is cited as having "no date of publication" by the abbreviation for "no date" (Deane, n.d.).
  • In such documentation systems, works without pagination are referred to in the References list as "not paginated" with the abbreviation for that phrase (n. pag.).
  • "No place of publication" and/or "no publisher" are both designated the same way (n.p.) and placed in the appropriate spot in the bibliographical citation (Harvard Referencing. N.p.).
  • A reference to a republished work is cited with the original publication date either in square brackets (Marx 1967, p. 90) or separated with a slash (Marx, 1867/1967, p. 90). The inclusion of the original publication year qualifies the suggestion otherwise that the publication originally occurred in 1967.
  • If an author published several books in 2005, the year of the first publication (in the alphabetic order of the references) is cited and referenced as 2005a, the second as 2005b and so on.
  • A citation is placed wherever appropriate in or after the sentence. If it is at the end of a sentence, it is placed before the period, but a citation for an entire block quote immediately follows the period at the end of the block since the citation is not an actual part of the quotation itself. When citing quotes it’s advisable to insert the page number as this points directly to the page of the content that has been used.
  • Complete citations are provided in alphabetical order in a section following the text, usually designated as "Works cited" or "References." The difference between a "works cited" or "references" list and a bibliography is that a bibliography may include works not directly cited in the text.
  • All citations are in the same font as the main text.
  • There is no official guide to Harvard citation style, consequently variations occur across various online Harvard citation and referencing guides. For example, some universities instruct students to type a book's publication date without parentheses in the reference list.

Examples

An example of a journal reference:

  • Heilman, J. M. and West, A. G. (2015). "Misplaced Pages and Medicine: Quantifying Readership, Editors, and the Significance of Natural Language." Journal of Medical Internet Research, 17(3), p. e62. doi:10.2196/jmir.4069.

Following is an explanation of the components, where the coloring is for demonstration purposes and is not used in actual formatting:
Heilman, J. M. and West, A. G. (2015). "Misplaced Pages and Medicine: Quantifying Readership, Editors, and the Significance of Natural Language." Journal of Medical Internet Research, 17 (3), p.e62. doi:10.2196/jmir.4069.

  • Author(s) first listed author's name inverted in the bibliography entry
  • Year
  • Article title
  • Journal title in italic type
  • Volume
  • Issue
  • Page numbers specific page number in a note; page range in a bibliography entry
  • Digital object identifier

Examples of book references are:

  • Smith, J. (2005a). Dutch Citing Practices. The Hague: Holland Research Foundation.
  • Smith, J. (2005b). Harvard Referencing. London: Jolly Good Publishing.

In giving the city of publication, an internationally well-known city (such as London, The Hague, or New York) is given as the city alone. If the city is not internationally well known, the country (or state and country if in the U.S.) is given.

An example of a newspaper reference:

Advantages

This section is in list format but may read better as prose. You can help by converting this section, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (June 2020)
  • The principal advantage of the author–date method is that a reader familiar with a field is likely to recognize a citation without having to check in the references section. This is most useful in fields whose works are commonly known by their date of publication (for example, the sciences and social sciences in which one cites, say, "the 2005 Johns Hopkins study of brain function"), or if the author cited is notorious (for example, HIV denialist Peter Duesberg on the cause of AIDS).
  • The use of author–date systems helps the reader easily identify sources that may be outdated.
  • If the same source is cited more than once, even a reader unfamiliar with the author may remember the name. It quickly becomes obvious if the publication is relying heavily on a single author or single publication. When many different pages of the same work are cited, the reader does not need to flip back and forth to footnotes or endnotes full of "ibid." citations to discover this fact.
  • With the author–date method, there is no renumbering hassle when the order of in-text citations is changed, which can be a scourge of the numbered endnotes system if house style or project style insists that citations never appear out of numerical order. (Computerized reference-management software automates this aspect of the numbered system .)
  • Parenthetical referencing works well in combination with substantive notes. When the note system is used for source citations, two different systems of note marking and placement are needed—in Chicago Style, for instance, "the citation notes should be numbered and appear as endnotes. The substantive notes, indicated by asterisks and other symbols, appear as footnotes" ("Chicago Manual of Style" 2003, 16.63–64). This approach can be cumbersome in any circumstances. When it is not possible to use footnotes altogether probably because of the publisher's policy, it results in two parallel series of endnotes, which can be confusing to readers. Using parenthetical referencing for sources avoids such a problem.
  • The reader can find the in-text author–date citations of a specific work more easily. Finding in-text numbered citations is more difficult because some will not appear if they are included in ranges.
  • The author–date method can be more convenient for manuscript/draft preparation, or revisions, that are handled by multiple contributing authors. For example, multiple authors are not necessarily able to use the same reference-management software. As such, it may be a preferred style to be used for submission to journals that allow any reference style before acceptance, such as journals that follow Elsevier's Your Paper Your Way guidelines.

Disadvantages

This section is in list format but may read better as prose. You can help by converting this section, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (June 2020)
  • Taking up space and distracting, especially when many works are cited in a single place (which often occurs when reviewing a large body of previous work). Numbered footnotes or endnotes, by contrast, can be combined into a range, e.g. "". However this disadvantage is offset by the fact that parenthetical referencing may be economical for the overall document since, for instance, "(Smith 2008: 34)" takes up a small amount of space in a paragraph, whereas the same information would require a whole line in a footnote or endnote.
  • In many disciplines in the arts and humanities, date of publication is often not the most important piece of information about a particular work. Thus, in author–date references such as "(Dickens 2003: 10)", the date is essentially redundant or meaningless when read on the page, since works may go through numerous editions or translations long after the original publication. Compare a reference in a science discipline such as "The last survey indicated that four hundred were left in the wild (Jones et al. 2003)", where the date is meaningful. The reader of certain forms of arts and humanities scholarship may thus be better aided by the use of author–title referencing styles such as MLA: for example, "(Dickens Oliver, 10)", where meaningful information is given on the page. Historical scholarship is an exception, since, when citing a primary source, date of publication is meaningful, though in most branches of history footnotes are preferred on other grounds. Generally speaking, however, it is instructive that author–date systems such as Harvard were devised by scientists, whereas author–title systems such as MLA were devised by humanities scholars.
  • Similarly, because works are frequently reprinted in many arts and humanities disciplines, different author–date references might refer to the same work. For example, "(Spivak 1985)", "(Spivak 1987)", and "(Spivak 1996)" might all refer to the same essay — and might be better rendered in author–title style as "(Spivak 'Subaltern')". Such ambiguities may be resolved by adding an original date of publication, for example, "(Spivak 1985/1996)", though this is cumbersome and exacerbates the principal disadvantage of parenthetical referencing, namely its distraction for the reader and unattractiveness on the page.
  • Rules can be complicated or unclear for non-academic references, particularly those where the personal author is unknown, such as government-issued documents and standards.
  • When removing a portion of text which has citations in it, the editor(s) must also check the Reference sections to see if the sources cited in the removed text is used elsewhere in the paper or book, and if not, to delete any reference not actually cited in the text (although this issue can be eliminated by the use of reference manager software).
  • The use of the author–date methods (but not author–title) can be confusing when used in monographs about particularly prolific authors. In-text citation and back-of-the-book listings of works arranged by date of publication are conducive to errors and confusion: for example, Harvey 1996a, Harvey 1996b, Harvey 1996c, Harvey 1996d, Harvey 1995a, Harvey 1995b, Harvey 1986a, Harvey 1986b, and so on.
  • The mixing of text with frequent parentheses and long strings of numbers is typographically inelegant.
  • Most historical journals (apart from economic and social history) use footnotes because of the need for maximum flexibility. Primary source references to archives, etc., involve long and complex information, all of which may be immediately relevant to a serious reader. An interesting example of this arose with the famous work of the anthropologists John and Jean Comaroff, Of Revelation and Revolution which treated historical events from anthropological perspective: although parenthetical references were used for scholarly sources, the authors found it necessary to use notes for the historical archive material they were also using.
  • If parenthetical referencing is combined with alphabetic order of author names, studies have demonstrated this can lead to discrimination against authors with last names starting with a letter near the end of the alphabet, for funding and future citations. Some style guides therefore suggest listing the authors chronologically instead.

Origins and use

The origin of the author–date style is attributed to a paper by Edward Laurens Mark, Hersey professor of anatomy and director of the zoological laboratory at Harvard University, who may have copied it from the cataloguing system used then and now by the library of Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology. In 1881 Mark wrote a paper on the embryogenesis of the garden slug, in which he included an author–date citation in parentheses on page 194, the first known instance of such a reference. Until then, according to Eli Chernin writing in the British Medical Journal, references had appeared in inconsistent styles in footnotes, referred to in the text using a variety of printers' symbols, including asterisks and daggers. Chernin writes that a 1903 festschrift dedicated to Mark by 140 students, including Theodore Roosevelt, confirms that the author–date system is attributable to Mark. The festschrift pays tribute to Mark's 1881 paper, writing that it "introduced into zoology a proper fullness and accuracy of citation and a convenient and uniform method of referring from text to bibliography." According to an editorial note in the British Medical Journal in 1945, an unconfirmed anecdote is that the term "Owen system" was introduced by an English visitor to Harvard University library, who was impressed by the citation system and dubbed it "Harvard system" upon his return to England.

Although it originated in biology, it is now more common in humanities, history, and social science. It is favored by a few scientific journals such as The Astrophysical Journal, but the major biology journal Cell announced in 2022 that it was moving away from the Harvard style.

Author–title

In the author–title or author–page method, also referred to as MLA style, the in-text citation is placed in parentheses after the sentence or part thereof that the citation supports, and includes the author's name (a short title only is necessary when there is more than one work by the same author) and a page number where appropriate (Smith 1) or (Smith, Playing 1). (No "p." or "pp." prefaces the page numbers and main words in titles appear in capital letters, following MLA style guidelines.) A full citation is given in the references section.

Content notes

See also: The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers § Content notes

A content note generally contains useful information and explanations that do not fit into the primary text itself. Content notes may be given as footnotes or endnotes or even a combination of both footnotes and endnotes. Such content notes may themselves contain a style of parenthetical referencing, just as the main text does.

See also

Notes

  1. The Heilman and West example article was published electronically without page numbers.

References

Citations

  1. libguides, liu.cwp. "Parenthetical Referencing". liu.cwp.libguides.com. Archived from the original on 2020-07-26. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  2. "Author–date system". Chicago Manual of Style, Williams College Libraries. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
  3. Pears, R.; Shields, G. (2008). Cite them right: the essential referencing guide. Pear Tree Books. ISBN 978-0-9551216-1-6.
  4. ^ "Guide to the Harvard System of Referencing (5th edition)". Anglia Ruskin University. 2012-05-21. Archived from the original on 2020-02-22. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  5. "Parenthetical Versus Narrative In-Text Citations". apastyle.apa.org. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  6. ^ "References with missing details". Harvard System of Referencing Guide. University of East Anglia. Archived from the original on 2018-11-22. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
  7. American Psychological Association (2001). Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (5th ed.). Washington, DC, USA: American Psychological Association. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-55798-791-4 – via Internet Archive.
  8. Mullan, W. M. A. "DFST Harvard Reference Generator". Dairy Science and Food Technology (DSFT). Retrieved 2016-07-17. Note the Harvard system of referencing is not 'tightly' specified and some variation in the use of capital letters, italics, the use of parentheses and text styles does occur in different institutions and journals. Please check the 'house style' that is specified for your publication, thesis, dissertation or assignment before submitting your work.
  9. "Your Guide to Harvard Style Referencing" (PDF). University Library. The University of Sydney. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-09-15. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  10. ^ "Notes and Bibliography: Journal Volume, Issue, and Date". The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. 2010. ISBN 978-0-226-10420-1. OCLC 495102182.
  11. "Your Paper, Your Way". elsevier.com. Retrieved 2022-09-08.
  12. Einav, L., & Yariv, L. (2006). What's in a surname? The effects of surname initials on academic success. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20(1), 175–187.
  13. ^ Chernin, Eli (1988). "The 'Harvard system': a mystery dispelled". British Medical Journal. 297 (6655): 1062–1063. PMC 1834803.
  14. Mark, Edward Laurens (1881). "Maturation, fecundation, and segmentation of Limax campestris, Binney". Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. 6: 194. doi:10.1086/273085. OCLC 6822275174.
  15. "AAS Journal Reference Instructions". The Amrerican Astronomical Society. 2023. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
  16. "Numbered referencing style now standard across Cell Press journals" (Press release). 2022-10-03. Retrieved 2023-09-17.

Sources

Further reading

Categories: