The Harvard referencing style (also known as ‘author-date’) is commonly used at TUS Midwest.
There are two elements to the Harvard referencing style. This means when you reference using the Harvard system, you have to do two things:
In summary, when you are writing up your college projects, you must remember to acknowledge the other authors you are using in two places:
If you have used the author’s exact words (direct quotation) or the author’s ideas (paraphrasing) from a book, journal article, etc. you must acknowledge this in your text. This is referred to as in-text citing:
In-text citations give the brief (abbreviated) details of the work that you are quoting from, or to which you are referring in your text. These citations will then link to the full reference in the reference list at the end of your work, which is arranged in alphabetical order by author (Pears and Shields, 2019, p. 7).
Author prominent citing
This citation method gives prominence to the author’s surname (family name) as part of your sentence with the date and page number in parentheses (round brackets).
Note: The page number is necessary if you are quoting directly.
Example According to Davidson (2019, p. 370) ‘interest in designing greener meetings and events has been growing among business events professionals’. |
Information prominent citing
This citation method gives prominence to the information with the required referencing details in parentheses at the end of the citation.
Example Results revealed ‘interviewees placed a strong focus on the need for better education and promotion of electric vehicles in the Irish context’ (O’Neill et al., 2019, p. 123). |
Author(s) name
Year:
Pages:
Examples ‘Ireland has contributed to, and being affected by, global warming’ (Robbins, 2020, p. 3). ‘It has implemented a carbon tax and encouraged renewable energy development’ (Robbins, 2020, pp. 3-4). |
Example According to Williams (2020, p. 12) ‘among the treasures to be collected from the woods are pine cones’. |
Example Williams (2020) inspires readers to experience the natural world for themselves. |
Quotations should be used sparingly, selected carefully, used in context, integrated into your text, and reproduced exactly (including the words, spelling, punctuation, capitalisation and paraphrasing of the original writer).
Short quotations
Short quotations (fewer than 30 words) should:
Example According to Barr (2016, p. 22) ‘sustainability must be analysed on a number of different levels, from principles to concepts and then to application’. |
Long quotations
Long quotations (more than 30 words) should:
Separate the quotation from the lead-in statement with one blank line. The lead-in statement ends with a colon(:). Separate the quotation from the text that follows it with one blank line.
Example The decline of nature and people is no coincidence, although as farming and fishing incomes have declined, tourism has taken up some of the slack. Achill is a popular spot in summer and it is particularly geared towards water-based activities. It lies along the Wild Atlantic Way, billed as the world’s longest scenic drive (Fogarty, 2017, p. 292). Green tourism is a relatively new phenomenon that is thriving in Ireland, particularly along scenic stretches of the Western seaboard. This type of tourism makes for a more sustainable way of living. It takes an environmentally friendly approach. |
Quotation marks
Example The decline of nature and people is no coincidence, although as farming and fishing incomes have declined, tourism has taken up some of the slack. Achill is a popular spot in summer and it is particularly geared towards water-based activities. It lies along the Wild Atlantic Way, billed as the world’s longest scenic drive (Fogarty, 2017, p. 292). |
Words omitted from quotations
Example ‘Achill is a popular spot in summer … It lies along the Wild Atlantic Way’ (Fogarty, 2017, p. 292). |
Example ‘… tourism has taken up some of the slack’ (Fogarty, 2017, p. 292). |
When you cite someone else’s work, you must state the author/editor and the date of publication. If the work has two authors/editors, you must cite both names. Don't forget to include page numbers for direct quotations.
There is no need to include the title, place of publication etc. These details are listed in the reference list at the end of your essay.
Example – One author cited in the body of your text Example – Two authors cited in the body of your text |
For a work that has three or more authors/editors, the abbreviation, et al. is used after the first author’s name.
Example According to Woodruff et al. (2016, p. 50) ‘the produced electricity from solar power plants is very low’. |
For a work that has the same author/editor, and was written in the same year as an earlier citation, you must use a lower case letter after the date to differentiate between the two.
Example Reference List: |
Citing from books with chapters written by different authors
Some books may contain chapters written by several different authors. In this case the author who wrote the chapter should be cited not the editor of the book.
Example Reference List: |
If you are reading a source by one author, for example, Garvey (2019) and he cites or quotes the work of another author, for example, Taylor (1996) you may cite or quote the original work, Taylor (1996) as a secondary reference.
Note: It is always best practice to try and locate the original reference and secondary references should only be used if it is difficult to access the original work
Example
In-text citation:
Taylor’s observations (1996, cited in Garvey, 2019) are based on a genuine respect for nature.
OR
‘Every living thing has a good of its own’ (Taylor, 1996, quoted in Garvey, 2019, p. 53).
Reference List:
Garvey, J. (2019) The ethics of climate change: right and wrong in a warming world. London: Continuum.
Charts, images, figures etc. should be treated as direct quotations in that the author/editor, year and page number should be acknowledged in-text, and the full reference to the item should be listed in the reference list.
Example
Reference List: |
The Library, Technological University of the Shannon: Midwest