Harvard Format Citation Guide
Harvard Format Citation Guide
This is a complete guide to Harvard in-text and reference list citations. This easy-to-
use, comprehensive guide makes citing any source easy.
In-text references are references written within the main body of text and refer to a
quote or paraphrase. They are much shorter than full references. The full reference
of in-text citations appears in the reference list. In Harvard referencing, in-text
citations contain the author(s)’s or editor(s)’s surname, year of publication and page
number(s). Using an example author James Mitchell, this takes the form:
When citing a source with two or three authors, state all surnames like so:
In this case, the first author’s surname should be stated followed by ‘et al’:
No Author:
If possible, use the organisation responsible for the post in place of the author. If not,
use the title in italics:
If referencing multiple works from one author released in the same year, the works
are allocated a letter (a, b, c etc) after the year. This allocation is done in the
reference list so is done alphabetically according to the author's surname and source
title:
List the in-text citations in the normal way but with semicolons between different
references:
Include the author(s)’s name only once followed by all the appropriate dates
separated by semicolons:
In this case simply state ‘no date’ in place of the year: (Mitchell, no date, p. 189).
In this case, state the reference you used first followed by ‘cited in’ and the original
author:
Smith 2000 (cited in Mitchell, 2017, p. 189) or (Smith, 2000, cited in Mitchell, 2017, p.
189)
2. How to format your reference list/
bibliography
A reference list is a complete list of all the sources used when creating a piece of
work. This list includes information about the sources like the author, date of
publication, title of the source and more. A Harvard reference list must:
Book referencing is the simplest format in Harvard referencing style. The basic format
is as follows:
Mitchell, J.A. and Thomson, M. (2017) A guide to citation.3rd edn. London: London
Publishings.
Edited books are collations of chapters written by different authors. Their reference
format is very similar to the book reference except instead of the author name, the
editor name is used followed by (eds.) to distinguish them as an editor. The basic
format is:
William, S.T. (eds.) (2015) Referencing: a guide to citation rules. New York: My
Publisher
For citing chapters, you need to add the chapter author and chapter title to the
reference. The basic format is as follows:
Troy B.N. (2015) ‘Harvard citation rules’ in Williams, S.T. (ed.) A guide to citation
rules. New York: NY Publishers, pp. 34-89.
To reference an e-book, information about its collection, location online and the date
it was accessed are needed as well as author name, title and year of publishing:
If the e-book is accessed via an e-book reader the reference format changes slightly:
Author surname(s), initial(s). (Year Published). Title. Edition. E-book format [e-book
reader]. Available at URL or DOI (Accessed: day month year)
This includes information about the e-book format and reader, for instance this could
be ‘Kindle e-book [e-book reader]’.
E-Book Example:
Mitchell, J.A., Thomson, M. and Coyne, R.P. (2017) A guide to citation. E-book
library [online]. Available at: https://www.mendeley.com/reference-
management/reference-manager (Accessed: 10 September 2016)
Mitchell, J.A. (2013) ‘How citation changed the research world’, The Mendeley, 62(9),
p70-81.
Mitchell, J.A. (2013) ‘How citation changed the research world’, The Mendeley, 62(9)
[online]. Available at: https://www.mendeley.com/reference-management/reference-
manager (Accessed: 15 November 2016)
Citing a newspaper article is similar to citing a journal article except, instead of the
volume and issue number, the edition and date of publication are needed:
Author surname(s), initial(s). (Year) ‘Article Title’, Newspaper Title (edition), day
month,
page number(s).
Mitchell, J.A. (2017) ‘Changes to citation formats shake the research world’, The
Mendeley Telegraph (Weekend edition), 6 July, pp.9-12.
To cite an online journal or newspaper article, the page numbers section from the
print journal or newspaper reference is swapped with the URL or DOI the article can
be accessed from and when it was accessed. So the reference for an online journal
article is:
Author surname(s), initial(s). (Year) ‘Article Title’, Newspaper Title (edition), day
month [online]. Available at: URL or DOI (Accessed: day month year)
Rear Window (1954) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock [Film]. Los Angeles: Paramount
Pictures.
TV Programme Example:
‘Fly’ (2010) Breaking Bad, Series 2, episode 10. AMC, 23 May 2010.
Music Example:
Beyonce (2016) Lemonade [Visual Album] New York: Parkwood Records. Available
at: https://www.beyonce.com/album/lemonade-visual-album/ (Accessed: 17 February
2016).
How to Cite a Website in Harvard Format
Website Example:
To learn more about citing a web page and entire websites in APA, MLA or Harvard
check out How to Cite a Website post.
For a summary of all the references for each source type along with examples take a
look at our Ultimate Citation Cheat Sheet. It also contains examples for MLA
8 and APA formats.