Referencing Using OSCOLA
Referencing Using OSCOLA
When writing for an academic or professional audience, provide evidence for your claims by
citing your sources in footnotes. Legal writing cites primary legal sources such cases, law
reports and legislation from the UK and the EU, as well as secondary sources such as books,
journal articles, Hansard, websites and policy statements. OSCOLA is a footnote style: all
citations appear in footnotes. It does not use endnotes or in-text citations.
OSCOLA was originally designed for use within Oxford University but is now used by law
schools in the UK and overseas, and by a number of legal journals and publishers. As far as
possible, the guidelines in OSCOLA are based on common practice in UK legal citation but
with minimum punctuation.
Primary Sources
Do not use full stops in abbreviations. Separate citations with a semi-colon.
Cases
Give the name of the case, followed by the neutral citation (if appropriate), and the volume
and first page of the relevant law report and where necessary the court.
If there is no neutral citation, give the Law Reports citation followed by the court in
brackets. If the case is not reported in the Law Reports, cite the All ER or the WLR, or failing
that a specialist report.
Secondary Sources
Books
Give the authors name in the same form as in the publications, except in bibliographies,
where you should give only the surname followed by the initial(s). Italicise titles of books.
Capitalise the first letter in all major words in a title. Give relevant information about
editions, translators and so forth before the publisher, and give page numbers at the end of
the citation, after the brackets.
Andrew Burrows, Remedies for Torts and Breach of Contract (3rd edn, OUP 2004)
Gareth Jones, Goff and Jones: The Law of Restitution (1st supp, 7th edn, Sweet &
Maxwell 2009)
Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (first published 1651, Penguin 1985) 268
Francis Rose, The Evolution of the Species in Andrew Burrows and Alan Rodger
(eds), Mapping the Law: Essays in Memory of Peter Birks (OUP 2006)
Encyclopedias
Journal Articles
When citing articles, give the authors name first, followed by a comma, and the title of the
article within single quotation marks. After the title, give the year of publication in brackets,
the volume number (if applicable), the name of the journal with no full stops and finally the
first page of the article. Abbreviations for journals can be used (see appendix of OSCOLA
guidelines for a full list of abbreviations) but be consistent when using them.
Online Journals
When citing journal articles which have been published only electronically, give publication
details as for articles in hard copy journals, but note that online journals may lack some of
the publications elements (eg page numbers). Follow the citation with the web address and
the date you most recently accessed the article.
Command Papers
Command papers include White and Green Papers, relevant treaties, government responses
to select committee reports, and reports of committees of inquiry. When citing a command
paper, begin the citation with the name of the department or other body that produced the
paper and then give the title of the paper in italics, followed by the command paper number
and the year in brackets.
Home Office, Report of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment (Cmd 8932,
1953) para 53
Department for International Development, Eliminating World Poverty: Building our
Common Future (White Paper, Cm 7656, 2009) ch 5
Sarah Cole, Virtual Friend Fires Employee (Naked Law, 1 May 2009) <http://www.
nakedlaw.com/2009/05/index.html> accessed 19 November 2009
Newspaper Articles
When citing newspaper articles, give the author, the title, the name of the newspaper in
italics and then in brackets the city of publication and the date. If know, give the number of
the page on which the article was published, after the brackets.
Jane Croft, Supreme Court Warns on Quality Financial Times (London, 1 July 2010) 3