Journal articles, books etc. should be cited with the author's name as shown in the work being cited. If a journal title is abbreviated, it should follow the guide in the appendix, which includes some standard abbreviations including specific journals, law reports and some authoritative books (e.g. J for Journal, Crim for Criminal, Bl Comm for Blackstone's
Commentaries on the Laws of England); in all cases the abbreviations do not have full stops. If the journal does not have consecutive volume numbers, the year should be shown in square brackets, as in the second example. •
Alison L Young, 'In Defence of Due Deference' (2009) 72 MLR 554 • Paul Craig, 'Theory, "Pure Theory" and Values in Public Law' [2005] PL 440 Books follow a similar pattern. Note the order is Author,
Title (Edition, Publisher Year) page. • Joseph Raz,
The Authority of Law: Essays on Law and Morality (2nd edn, OUP 2009) If a title and a subtitle have nothing in between, a colon should be used to separate them. A chapter in an edited book would be cited as follows. • Justine Pila, 'The Value of Authorship in the Digital Environment' in William H Dutton and Paul W Jeffreys (eds),
World Wide Research: Reshaping the Sciences and Humanities in the Century of Information (MIT Press 2000) ==Legislation==