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OSCOLA Referencing

OSCOLA has been one of the common formats of citation that most law students are familiar with. The post focuses on all the different types of resources that the citation style supports and how to cite them.

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OSCOLA Referencing

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  1. 4 Types of Sources You Can Cite As Per OSCOLA Citation Style Oxford University developed the OSCOLA referencing in 2000. The citation style is now considered as the industry standard for referencing legal materials. It’s adopted by many law schools in the UK and worldwide, and also by many legal journals and publishers. OSCOLA is created to encourage consistency and to assist the readers in finding crucial information easily. If you still find this referencing style too complicated, you can consider using an OSCOLA referencing generator tool online. On that note, mentioned here are some of the different types of sources students can cite through this style. 1. Books It’s useful to know how to develop a basic reference when working on your OSCOLA referencing bibliography. Essentially four pieces of information are required when you include books in the bibliography. ▪ Who: The author (if there’s no author, then the editor)? ▪ When: The date on which it was published ▪ What: The title ▪ Where: This may mean a place of publication, the publisher, web address etc. This trick will come handy for writing the OSCOLA referencing style of footnotes as well. 2. Websites and social media Finding details on the internet is simple, but finding excellent quality and trustworthy detail is tougher than you think. Before you add any resource from the web in your assignment, consider if the web resource is as credible as the details you’d find in a book or academic journal. This will help with your Oxford referencing for websites. See if the information is accurate and verified. Here are some other things to ponder over- ▪ When was the information published? Is it properly updated? ▪ Who wrote the text? Do they possess the right qualifications? Have they written other texts on a similar topic? You can use an Oxford referencing generator to cite websites correctly. 3. Court cases

  2. A law report is essentially a report for the judgment, consisting of additional details and facts associated with a particular case. Judgments can be reported by any number of law reports. However, some series of reports are considered more authoritative than others. The Law Reports series is recognised as the most authoritative as the text is verified by both counsel and the judge right before publication. Journal and newspaper articles It’s crucial that you include newspaper or journal articles in your academic papers as they offer high quality, reliable and relevant details related to your subject area. It also indicates that you have read up on your topic widely. ▪ If any article is accessible in print format to cite, then you should cite it as a printed article even if you’ve read it online. ▪ If the article is exclusively available online, add the web address and the date you accessed it. Hence, citing different types of sources in OSCOLA style can be easy when you remember these tricks. Original Source: https://articles.abilogic.com/463482/types-sources-you-cite-per.html

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