When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Help:Wikipedia editing for researchers, scholars, and academics

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Wikipedia_editing_for...

    Wikipedia is not as fussy about citation formats as an academic journal. Any functional format can be used. The main thing is just to make sure that everything has a source, and that the citation to the source is complete enough that others can figure out what it is. You can take one of the two short "Referencing" tutorials.

  3. Wikipedia : Scientific citation guidelines

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Scientific...

    Five references are provided early on: two textbooks, a specialized monograph on aldol reactions, and two review articles. Most readers would assume that the bulk of the statements in the comparatively short Wikipedia article could be verified by checking any of these references, and so it may only be necessary to provide additional in-line references for controversial statements, for recent ...

  4. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Legal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/...

    When a case has been published in an official reporter (e.g. the United States Reports), editors should cite the version of the case that appears in the official reporter. Case citations. Case names are italicised, as in the Kelly v. Arriba Soft Corp. article. (Case citation or law report information is presented in normal font.) Citation signals

  5. Oxford Standard for Citation of Legal Authorities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Standard_for...

    If a journal title is abbreviated, it should follow the guide in the appendix, which includes some standard abbreviations including specific journals, law reports and some authoritative books (e.g. J for Journal, Crim for Criminal, Bl Comm for Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England); in all cases the abbreviations do not have full ...

  6. ALWD Guide to Legal Citation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALWD_Guide_to_Legal_Citation

    The ALWD Guide to Legal Citation is published as a spiral-bound book as well as an online version. It primarily competes with the Bluebook style, a system developed and still updated by law reviews students at Harvard, Yale, University of Pennsylvania, and Columbia. Citations in the two formats are essentially identical. [1]

  7. Wikipedia:Attribution/FAQ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Attribution/FAQ

    For example, an editor providing a citation to Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations might choose to include both a citation to a published copy of the work and a link to the work on the Internet, as follows: Smith, Adam. The Wealth of Nations, originally published 1776, this edition Methuen and Co, 1904, ed. Edwin Cannan.

  8. Stanford Law Review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_Law_Review

    The Stanford Law Review (SLR) is a legal journal produced independently by Stanford Law School students. The journal was established in 1948 with future U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher as its first president. The review produces six issues yearly between January and June and regularly publishes short-form content on the Stanford Law ...

  9. Bluebook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluebook

    In a 2011 Yale Law Journal article, he wrote: The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation exemplifies hypertrophy in the anthropological sense. It is a monstrous growth, remote from the functional need for legal citation forms, that serves obscure needs of the legal culture and its student subculture.