Example of bibliography of books
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Current Students
Source-reflective statements
Sometimes, summarizing arguments from your sources can leave the reader in doubt as to whose opinion he or she is seeing. If the language is too close to the original source’s, you can leave yourself open to charges of low-level plagiarism or “word borrowing.” Using a source-reflective statement can clarify this problem, allowing you the freedom to assert your voice and opinion without causing confusion. For example:
Myers (1997) reported that “structured decision aids, as a factor in a more structured audit approach, are designed to focus the auditor on relevant information to improve effectiveness, and to improve audit efficiency, by eliminating the time needed to develop or organize individual approaches to the audit problems.” (sec. 1, “Introduction”) Thus, audit pricing by firms with a structured audit approach is lower, on average, than firms with an intermediate or unstructured audit approach.
Is the observation
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Chicago Style Guide
Blue text | Replace with kunskap from source |
Purple bold text | Text required by the Chicago style |
[Gray ord in brackets] | Tips |
General Tips
- Place of Publication List the first place of publication given on the title page. No state or country is usually necessary, but if the location of the city is not clear, use a comma and then the two-letter abbreviation for the state or the country.
- Associations, corporations, agencies, government departments and organizations are considered authors when there is no single author
- Publishers: Write the name of the publisher given on the title page. You may shorten the publisher, for example, using "Knopf" for Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Book – Print Version
Format:
Last, FirstM. Book Title., Edition ed.[only after the first]City: Publisher, Year published.
Examples:
1. Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice (New York: Penguin Classics, 2007), 265.
2. Austen, Pride and Prejudice, 401.
Austen
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If you’ve used various references to research for the manuscript for a book, then there’s a good chance that you’ll need to compose a bibliography.
Your bibliography will keep track of every reference that you have used. It will also help you to stay on track with your background research plans. There are no shortcuts here, but there are some different formats that can be used to convey the information you’ve collected.
Collecting the Components of a Bibliography for a Book
Here is what you’ll need to collect for each printed resource that you’ve used.
- Name of the author(s).
- Title of the publication OR the title of the article is found in a magazine or periodical.
- Date of the publication.
- Place of publication when citing a book.
- Publishing company when citing a book.
- Volume number for a periodical.
- The page number(s) where the information was found.