Harvard Library Guide 19 20
Harvard Library Guide 19 20
Referencing in the
Harvard Style
guides.library.ulster.ac.uk
Why is referencing important?
Referencing is an essential part of writing at university and may account for a portion of your
marks. Consistent and accurate referencing:
• means readers can identify and find the material you have used in your work
• helps you avoid accusations of plagiarism (copying others’ work)
• demonstrates that you have carried out the necessary research.
Your lecturer will tell you which referencing style to use.
Journal article
Lawson, C.L. and Katz, J. (2004) Restorative justice: an alternative approach to juvenile
crime. Journal of Socio-Economics, 33 (2), 175-188.
Newspaper article
Timmons, N. (2011) Pay divide between top executives and public widens. Financial Times,
16 May, 3.
Insert quotations?
• If a quotation is less than a line, include it in the body of the text in double quotation
marks.
e.g. According to Bruce (2011, p.3) marketing involves “selling people things they do not
need.”
• If a quotation is longer than a line it should be indented, single spaced and appear in
double quotation marks.
e.g. According to Bruce (2011, p.3)
“Over the last fifty years the approach, practice and techniques of marketing
have transformed the commercial world and its provision of goods.”
Examples in this Guide are based on Ulster University Guides to Citation in the Harvard Style.
For more examples see guides.library.ulster.ac.uk/harvardref
@UlsterUniLib