- It gives acknowledgment to another person or organisation's ideas and research.
- It demonstrates your reading and provides evidence for the argument you are making.
- It helps the reader find the source of the information and ideas in your writing.
- It helps you to avoid plagiarism. Plagiarism means presenting another person’s words or ideas as your own or modifying another person’s words and ideas without proper acknowledgment. Plagiarism, whether deliberate or accidental, is not tolerated at the University of Cumbria.
RKC Referencing Guide
Help with Referencing
You are welcome to look below for guidance about referencing. Please email studentcare@rkc.edu for any further support.
What is Referencing and Plagiarism?
Whilst studying you will need to refer to information from books, websites, journals and other sources in your assignments. You must acknowledge or ‘cite’ this information in your work and include full details in your list of references. If you don’t do this correctly, you could be accused of stealing other people’s ideas or words and trying to pass them off as your own. This is known as plagiarism. Plagiarism is a serious form of Academic Malpractice. The regulations governing Malpractice can be found in full in this document: Academic Regulations Appendix 3d Malpractice
Referencing Styles
There are many different referencing styles in existence, please contact your module tutor for advice regarding the referencing style required for your module
Harvard - Cite Them Right:
Our Quick Guide to Referencing provides examples of how to reference some of the more common types of sources using Harvard-Cite-Them-Right style. Our Quick Guide to Referencing UK Legal Sources, covers key legal materials using Harvard-Cite-Them-Right style.
More online guidance on referencing can be found on our referencing webpage.
OSCOLA:
If you are studying law you may be required to use the OSCOLA (Oxford University Standard for the Citation of Legal Authorities) referencing style. Here are some useful guides
- OSCOLA - The Basics (from UoC - includes details of footnotes and bibliographies)
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Quick referencing guide ( from OSCOLA website)
Refworks
You also have access to Refworks - our reference management system. This allows you to export references from various databases into Refworks and then helps you to create your reference lists. You can even link to Refworks from within Word to insert citations as you write. How to access and use Refworks is explained in our introductory guide.
NB: For law students: Refworks is not available within Westlaw.
Referencing and Plagiarism FAQs: