EN GR

References

 
For citations you must follow the Harvard style: (author's name and year of publication in parentheses).

[e.g. ... Even the administrative integration of libraries with other information organizations (eg archives, municipal archives) is at least at the local level (Giannakopoulos, 2008). The implementation and use of technologies and open access will be crucial (Sakkas & Giannakopoulos, 2013, Skourlas et al., 2007). As reported by Kyriaki - Manessi et al (2013), information integration has already begun in many digital libraries and repositories. ...]


For writing the references you must follow the AMA format.

General note: Use et al. instead of names after the 3rd author when the authors are more than 6.


Journal articles in Print
Citation format:
Authors. Title. Journal name. Year;Volume number(issue number):initial-final page.

Example:
Kjellstrom T, Lemke B, Otto M. Climate conditions, workplace heat and occupational health in South-East Asia in the context of climate change. WHO South East Asia J Public Health. 2017;6(2):69-73. doi:10.4103/2224-3151.213786

Journal articles Online
All references that are from journal articles must contain a Digital Object Identifier (DOI): A DOI is a unique character string created to identify a digital object, such as a journal article in an online environment. The DOI is a permanent identifier of all versions of an article and the DOI for a document remains fixed over the lifetime of the document. The DOI must be included in the citation.

Citation format:
Authors. Title. Journal name. Year;Volume number(issue number):initial-final page. Doi.

Example:
Joy LH, Kandi LW, Clara GS, et al. The ‘state’ of tobacco: Perceptions of tobacco among Appalachian youth in Kentucky. Tob Prev Cessation. 2018;4(January):1-11. doi:10.18332/tpc/81857

Books
Citation format:
Authors. Title. Volume number (for more than 1 volume). Edition number. Name of publisher; year of publication:page numbers.

Example:
Patterson JT. The dread disease: cancer and modern American culture. Harvard University Press; 1989.

Web links and URLs
All web links and URLs, including links to the authors' own websites, should be given a reference number, and included in the reference list, rather than within the text of the manuscript. They should be provided in full, including both the title of the item, the title of the site and the URL, as well as the date the site was accessed.

Website
Citation format:
Authors. Title. Name of the website. Published date. Updated date. Accessed date. URL.

Example:
Tobacco: fact sheet. World Health Organization. November, 2017. Accessed November 24, 2017. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs339/en/

Report Online
Citation format:
Authors or Institution. Title. Published date. Accessed date. URL.

Example:
World Health Organization. Equitable access to essential medicines: a framework for collective action. March, 2004. Accessed November 24, 2017. http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/pdf/s4962e/s4962e.pdf
 
ISSN:1106-6822
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top