harvard referencing for criminology
TRANSCRIPT
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An Introduction to ReferencingHarvard Referencing StyleCriminology
Susan McGlamery
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What is referencing and why should I do it?
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• Acknowledge when using someone’s work
• To make clear to the reader that this idea is not your own
• Demonstrate breadth of reading• Support your argument and
make your assignment more academic.
• To allow you, your tutor and other readers to retrieve the documents cited
• To avoid accusations of plagiarism
What is referencing and why should you do it?
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What is plagiarism?
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Plagiarism
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“Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work or ideas as your own, with or without their consent, by incorporating it into your work without full acknowledgement.”
(University of Oxford, 2015)
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Plagiarism
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• Using someone’s work without clear acknowledgement
• Paying someone to write your essay
• Collusion
• Poor paraphrasing and summarising
• Self Plagiarism
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Paraphrasing thoughts
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Your work flows better if you learn to put different authors’ ideas in your own words
You can use some key words and phrases but the key is understanding meaning and significance
Be careful not to change the odd word here or there. Direct quote if you can not paraphrase
Always use a reference
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Summarising thoughts
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A brief statement of the main points of an article, web page, chapter or book, known as a summary
Only lists the main topics or headings
Most of the detailed information is left out
Always use a reference
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How to avoid plagiarism?
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• Take effective notes
• Don’t leave it to the last minute
• Keep a note of the sources used
• Paraphrase and summarise properly
• Reference accurately
Avoid Plagiarism
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Harvard Referencing
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In-text citation
Reference list
Correctly referenced
A reference consists of …
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Acknowledgment in your text directly after you have quoted or used someone
else's words or ideas.
Helps the reader locate the correct reference from the
reference list.
List of the full bibliographic information about the source
you have used.
Helps the reader know exactly what information you
used, and how to find it.
You must give both parts of the reference to avoid the
charge of plagiarism!
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In Text CitationsDirect Quoting“Academics in their own writing cite the work of others to respect the original thinking and consequent ownership of that work” (McMillan and Weyers, 2013, p.16)
Paraphrasing• It its important to cite the work of other academics in your assignment in
order to acknowledge their ownership and respect the original work. (McMillan and Weyers, 2013, p.16)
• McMillan and Weyers (2013, p.16) state that it is important to cite the work of other academics in your assignment in order to acknowledge their ownership and respect the original work.
Harvard Referencing
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Full Reference• Follow a specific template depending on source you have
used e.g. book, journal article etc.
Huczynski, A. and Buchanan, D. (2013) Organizational behaviour. 8th edn. Harlow: Pearson.
Harvard Referencing
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When to cite?
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• Distinctive ideas• Distinctive structure or
organising strategy• Information or data from
a particular source• Verbatim phrase or
passage• If it’s not common
knowledge• Whenever in doubt, cite
it!(Greetham, 2015)
When to cite
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• If you make a legal proposition always give the authority on which that proposition is based. This will normally be a primary source (a reported
case or legislation).• Commentary about the law can be found in a secondary
source (textbooks or articles)
• When making a primary legal proposition do not cite a student textbook as authority.
For legal materials
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• From the Library homepage, go to Databases A – Z
• Select “C” then Cite Them Right Online
UWL uses Cite Them Right Online
19UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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Book
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Use cite them right to make the:
-In text citation
-Full reference
Book
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In text Citation
(Cottrell, 2013)
Full reference list
Cottrell, S. (2013) The study skills handbook. 4th edn. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Book
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Journal Article
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Use cite them right to make the:
-In text citation
-Full reference
Journal Article
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In text Citation(Badcock, Pattison and Harris, 2010)
Full reference listBadcock, P., Pattison, P. and Harris, K. (2010) ‘Developing generic skills through university study: a study of arts, science and engineering in Australia’, Higher Education, 60(4), pp. 441-458.
Journal Article
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Website
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You have been using the following website in your studies:
http://www.independent.co.uk/student/student-life/10-effortless-ways-to-beat-first-term-stress-at-university-9841312.html
Website
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In text Citation
(Garlick, 2014)
Full reference list
Garlic, L. (2014) 10 effortless ways to beat first term stress at university. Available at: http://www.independent.co.uk/student/student-life/10-effortless-ways-to-beat-first-term-stress-at-university-9841312.html (Accessed: 18 August 2015).
Website
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Legal materials: UK Legislation
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Citation order:• Title of Act including year and chapter number (in
italics)• Country/jurisdiction (only if referencing more than one
country's legislation)• Available at: URL• (Accessed: date)
UK legislation
30UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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In-text citation• In chapter 7 of recent social care legislation (Health and Social
Care Act 2012) ...
Reference list• Health and Social Care Act 2012, c. 7. Available at:
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/7/contents/enacted (Accessed: 23 August 2012).
OR if you use the pdf version:
• Available at: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/7/pdfs/ukpga_20120007_en.pdf (Accessed: 23 August 2012).
UK Legislation
31UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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• Oxford
• Standard for
• Citation of
• Legal
• Authorities
For cases: use OSCOLA
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Corr v IBC Vehicles Ltd [2008] UKHL 13, [2008] 1 AC 884
Corr v IBC Vehicles Ltd
[2008] UKHL 13
[2008] 1 AC 884
Pre-2001 case, with no neutral citation:R v Leeds County Court, ex p Morris [1990] 1 QB 523 (QB)Pinpointing a specific page: R v Leeds County Court, ex p Morris [1990] 1 QB 523 (QB) 530-31
Citing cases
Party Names
Neutral citation (for cases after 11/01/2001
Law reports citation
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• All judgments in the High Court and above are now assigned a unique “neutral citation” by the court which helps identify cases which have been published on the Internet even when they have not been reported in a law report series
Neutral Citations
34UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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• Corr v IBC Vehicles Ltd [2008] UKHL 13, [2008] 1 AC 884
UKHL = UK House of Lords (neutral citation)
AC = Law Reports, Appeal Cases
Guides to legal abbreviations:• Index to legal citations and abbreviations, Raistrick
• Cardiff online guide: http://www.legalabbrevs.cardiff.ac.uk/
Tip: legal abbreviations
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• Law Reports (AC, QB, Ch, Fam)
• Weekly Law Reports (WLR)
• All England Law Reports (All ER)
• Specialist law reports (Lloyd’s Law Reports, Industrial Cases Reports, Criminal Appeal Reports)
• Unreported cases: use the neutral citation, if available
Law reports: order of authority
36UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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Example: case
37UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
Tip
Use round brackets if the year is not needed to identify the correct volume, for example (2003) 167 JP 621. If in doubt which to use, hide the date with your finger and ask yourself whether you could still find the report in the library. If you can, then use round brackets; if not, use square brackets.
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In-text citation:
The case of Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] concerns an invasion of privacy lawsuit brought by supermodel Naomi Campbell against the publisher of the ‘Mirror’.
Reference list:
Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] UKHL 22; [2004] 2 A.C. 457
Example: Campbell v MGN Ltd
38UWL PPT Guidelines - Version 2 - February 2015
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Reference List
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• should be listed in alphabetical order of author’s surnames
• If author is presented as anonymous, use the abbreviation ‘Anon’
• If produced by a company /organisation, use the initial letter of organisation’s name to sort
Citing sources in the Ref. List
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Greetham, B. (2015) Referencing and avoiding plagiarism. Available at: http://www.palgrave.com/studentstudyskills/page/referencing-and-avoiding-plagiarism/ (Accessed: 18 August 2015).
Oxford University (2015) Plagiarism. Available at: http://www.ox.ac.uk/students/academic/guidance/skills/plagiarism (Accessed: 18 August 2015).
References
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