E. H. Butler Library - Asa Style
E. H. Butler Library - Asa Style
E. H. Butler Library - Asa Style
Butler Library
ASA Style
American Sociological Association (ASA)
The ASA Style Guide was designed for use by authors preparing manuscripts for
publication in American Sociological Association journals. This Butler Library guide
to ASA style is intended to aid students who are directed by their instructors to use
“ASA style” when writing research papers. Consult the ASA Style Guide for answers
to questions not covered herein.
American Sociological Association. 1997. ASA Style Guide. 2nd ed. Washington,
DC: American Sociological Association. Ref HM 73 .A54 1997
American Sociological Association. 2005. Quick Style Guide for Students Writing
Sociology Papers. Washington, DC: American Sociological Association.
Retrieved April 27, 2005 (http://www.asanet.org/apap/quickstyle.html).
Students are expected to use a specific bibliographic style to help foster clear
communication. Using a bibliographic style gives evidence of the students’ careful
scholarship and helps them avoid plagiarism. As with any writing assignment
students should pay attention to grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization,
usage, and accuracy. Should the instructor give directions that vary from ASA style,
students should follow those directions.
MANUSCRIPT FORMAT
Buffalo State (SUNY) " 1300 Elmwood Avenue " Buffalo, NY 14222 " (716) 878-6300
ASA Style
Page 2 of 6
! The beginning of the paper should NOT have a heading, i.e. do not use
INTRODUCTION
! Use citations in text. The citation includes the last name(s) of the author(s)
and the year of publication. Page numbers should be included to identify the
source of direct quotations. The page numbers follow the year of publication
and are separated from the year by a colon without spaces. The format of the
citation may vary to suit the style of the writer. See examples below.
CITATIONS IN TEXT
“In 1998, however, the data were reported by more specific job type
which showed that technologically oriented jobs paid better”
(Hildenbrand 1999:47).
Hildenbrand reported that “in 1998, however, the data were reported by
more specific job type which showed that technologically oriented jobs
paid better” (1999:47).
Use p. (lower case p period) for the page number when the author and year
do not accompany it in the citation.
Hildenbrand (1999) stated that “in 1998, however, the data were
reported by more specific job type which showed that technologically
oriented jobs paid better” (p. 47).
If the author’s name is in the text followed by the year in parentheses, put
the page reference, preceded by P. (upper case P period) in parentheses
following the end period of the quote.
o Three authors: give all three names in the first citation and use “et al.”
subsequently:
(Scott, Treas, and Richards 2004) - first citation
(Scott et al. 2004) - subsequent citations
o Four or more authors (e.g. Kashani, Daniel, Dandoy, and Holcomb): use “et
al.” in all citations including the first one:
(Kashani et al. 1999) - first & subsequent citations
REFERENCE LIST
! Begin the reference list on a separate page headed with the word “References”
in upper and lower case (no quotation marks).
! All references cited in the text must appear in the reference list.
! All references in the reference list must be cited in the text.
! Use hanging indentation.
! Double-space the references.
! Invert the authors’ names; if there are two or more authors in a citation,
invert only the first author’s name.
! The reference list should be arranged alphabetically by authors’ last names. If
there is no author, arrange the first significant word in the title in the
alphabetical sequence.
! Arrange multiple items by the same author in order by year of publication,
earliest year first.
! Use six hyphens and a period (------.) in place of the name(s) for second and
succeeding occurrences of works by the same author.
! Distinguish works by the same author in the same year by adding letters, e.g.
(2003a, 2003b, 2003c).
! Use city and state (U. S. postal abbreviation) for all cities except New York.
For cities outside of the U. S. provide the country.
! Use italics for book and periodical titles; underline if italics are not available.
Examples of References
Examples are single-spaced to conserve space.
o Books – Second Book by a Cited Author (i.e. Prus, the same author as
in the preceding reference; use the name if other authors intervene)
------. 1997. Subcultural mosaics and intersubjective realities: an
ethnographic research agenda for pragmatizing the social
sciences. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
o Books – Edited
Turner, Stephen P., ed. 1996. Social Theory and Sociology: The
Classics and Beyond. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
ASA Style
Page 5 of 6
o Books – No Author
The Chicago Manual of Style. 2003. 15th ed. Chicago, IL: University of
Chicago Press.
o Books – Chapters
Neuman, W. Lawrence. 1994. “Qualitative Research Design.” Pp.
316-29 in Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative
Approaches. 2nd ed. Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon.
Use the issue number or exact date for journals that do not
number pages consecutively within a volume.
o Electronic Books
The Chicago Manual of Style. 2003. 15th ed. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago
Press. Ref Z 253 .U69 2003
May 4, 2005
Carol J. Richards
Librarian