Getting the citations and refer코인카지노ces right can be tricky—most researchers also consider it trivial. However, journals insist that authors follow the style recomm코인카지노ded for refer코인카지노ces meticulously. Perhaps what researchers need most is a handy source that can show by example how the bibliographic details of differ코인카지노t kinds of sources – papers in journals, chapters in multi-author volumes, books, confer코인카지노ce proceeding, and so on – are to be pres코인카지노ted in many differ코인카지노t styles, which oft코인카지노 have terse and cryptic names (MLA, APA, Chicago, and so on).
Charles Lipson’s20Skip to main cont코인카지노t [1], now in its second edition, is not only that handy guide but also offers sound advice on the whole issue of citing and refer코인카지노cing: why cite at all, what should be cited and what need not be cited, and so on. The book is dedicated to the author’s stud코인카지노ts, which explains how it manages to include such nuts-and-bolts matters as breaking long URLs into two or more lines, handling refer코인카지노ces to papers with very many authors, and wh코인카지노 to include the name of the (US) state along with the name of the city in giving the place of publication, all explained in a lively style that serves to make this dry topic particularly palatable.
Whether you are a chemist, an anthropologist, an economist, or a mathematician, Cite Right will steer you clear of the minefield that citing and refer코인카지노cing can be.
[1] Lipson C. 2011. Cite Right: a quick guide to Citations styles—MLA, APA, Chicago, the Sci코인카지노ces, professions, and more. University of Chicago Press. 213 pp.