Most tertiary
institutions have style guides which they make available to students and which
they expect you to follow. Usually they either give you a copy or tell you
where to access it when you enrol. It might be hidden somewhere in the
course handouts. As Greg indicated, sometimes these are based in faculties
or schools rather than spreading across the whole institution because some
disiciplines have internationally agreed citation standards. What you
really need to do is to check with the person responsible for the unit you're
studying about how to access the particular style guide for your unit.
Having said
that, my copy of "A Style Manual for the Presentation of Papers and Theses in
Religion and Theology" (which is 10 years old now) says that when documenting an
interview by the author you need to provide (in this order):
name of
interviewee, inverted (ie Jones, Fred)
any further
identification of the inverviewee
year
title or
subject of interview
place and
date of interview
any details
on the availablity of the text of the interview (eg tape recording in author's
posession)
It also says
"Should you need to acknowledge your use of a a database or an item retrieved
from some computer service, the citation can follow the format used for print
items." It should, of course, include the precise URL - not just http://nsw.uca.org.au/
Have a look
at http://www.une.edu.au/aso/resources.htm#referencing
Try also your
own institution's website.
Hope this
helps.
Judy
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Katy & Glenn Martin
Sent: Tuesday, 24 August 2004 5:34 PM
To: 'insights-l'
Subject: bibliography type questionHello to all those students out there.I'm up to the bibliography for an assignment, and it consists of interviews, and bits of information from the uca website. They're not articles though, just descriptions.Do you know how I write them up for a bibliography?
