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When writing a law review article, insert citations as FOOTNOTES. Do not insert the citation into the text, like when you are writing a brief. (Although on occasion it may be appropriate to cite to a case in the text.)
Author's full name as it appears on the article. Title of the article (underlined or italicized) Volume number. Journal title abbreviation (see Table 13) First page of the article. Date of publication.
The proper blue book citation for nonconsecutively paginated journals and magazines is: author, title of work (in italics), periodical name (in small caps), date of issue as it is on the cover, the word at, first page of the work. If there is no author, you should begin the citation with the title.
Short Title of Act (in italics). Year (in italics). Jurisdiction abbreviation (in round brackets). Section number and subdivision if applicable. Country abbreviation (in round brackets). The first line of each citation is left adjusted.
For laws (statutes), the preferred form includes the name of the law and the year e.g. (Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act of 1974). APA style requires anything cited briefly in the text (e.g. in parentheses) should also have a complete listing in the References list.
Name of the case (italicized or underlined — if writing a brief or memo, per Rule B2). Volume of the reporter. Reporter abbreviation. First page where the case can be found in the reporter and pinpoint page if required.
Enter the first part of your footnote text, up to the word “note.” On the Insert bar, click Cross-reference. In the Reference Type menu, select Footnote. Make sure that Footnote number is selected in the Insert reference to menu. Select the footnote you want to refer to in the footnote list.
To cite a footnote, give the page on which the footnote appears, n., and the footnote number, with no space between n. and the number.
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