Popular Asian Studies Review style Citation Examples

How to cite a Book in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a book using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. (City: Publisher).

Example:

TENNEESSEE, WILLIAMS, ed. (1947) , in , A Street Car Named Desire. 1st ed. accessed 30 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

""Don't-don't hang back with the brutes!"" (TENNEESSEE, 1947)


How to cite a Journal in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a journal using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Publication Title Volume number, p. Pages Used. Available Via, Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Siegle, Lucy (2013) Are British-made clothes more sustainable?. The Guardian. accessed 28 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

""Made in Britain labeling is being associated with high sustainability standards by fashion designers and brands in the UK"" (Siegle, 2013)


How to cite Film or Movie in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a film or movie using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Anon. (Year Published) Title. Format. (City: Publisher).

Example:

Ebert, Roger (1982) First Blood. Chicago Sun-Times. Available at http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/first-blood-1982, accessed 29 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Anon., Year Published)

Example:

When he explodes near the beginning of “First Blood”, hurling cops aside and breaking out of a jail with his fists and speed, it's such a convincing demonstration of physical strength and agility that we never question the scene's implausibility. (Ebert, 1982)


How to cite an Online image or video in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an online image or video using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Format. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Brand, Anthony (2015) Gangs at the grassroots community solutions to street violence. (NLGN). Available at http://www.nlgn.org.uk/public/2008/gangs-at-the-grassroots-community-solutions-to-street-violence/, accessed 28 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

“We know that gangs exist for varying reasons; some driven by drug-dealing, some by geographical territorialism and some for mutual protection"". (Leslie 2008) (Brand, 2015)


How to cite a Website in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a website using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Adviceguide.org.uk, (2015) Citizens Advice - Pregnancy and maternity discrimination. Available at http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/wales/discrimination_w/discrimination_unlawful_conduct_e/ge15_pregnancy_and_maternity_discrimination.htm, accessed 20 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

The law which says you mustn’t be discriminated against is called the Equality Act 2010. Discrimination which is against the Equality Act is unlawful. This means you can take action in the civil courts (Adviceguide.org.uk, 2015)


Additional Asian Studies Review style Citation Examples

How to cite a Blog in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a blog using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Blog. Publication Title. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Gettman, Jon (2009) Marijuana Arrests in the United States (2007). Drugscience.org. Available at http://www.drugscience.org/Archive/bcr7/bcr7_index.html, accessed 29 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

This report provides an overview to a vast amount of data reported in the Marijuana Policy Almanac, available at http://www.drugscience.org/States/US/US_home.htm. This almanac provides the largest collection of detailed data about marijuana arrests in the United States ever released to the public. It contains detailed data at the national, state, county, and local agency level about marijuana arrests and related topics, such as marijuana use, criminal justice costs, and clearance rates for serious crimes. The Marijuana Policy Almanac also contains individual summary reports for each state, and rankings of states by penalties for marijuana possession, marijuana arrest rates, and the number of marijuana users.

These data shed some light on the growing national and regional debate over whether marijuana prohibition is a policy that effectively delivers benefits that justify its human or fiscal cost.

Specific findings include the following:

1) Nationally, there is little apparent relationship between increasing marijuana arrests and rates of use.

Marijuana arrests have nearly doubled from 1991 to 2009, increasing by 150% during the 1990s and increasing steadily in recent years, producing an annualized change of 6.56% per year during this period.
Overall, levels of marijuana use in the United States have remained fundamentally unchanged during this period. Population estimates of annual marijuana use, for example, have remained relatively constant over the last five years at approximately 25 million individuals.
From 2003 to 2007, the number of annual marijuana arrests increased by 2.93% per year, while the number of annual marijuana users decreased by 0.21% per year.
The overall marijuana arrest rate of between 3% and 6% of users is not enough to represent a meaningful deterrent.
2) There are wide disparities between states in both marijuana arrest rates and the severity of penalties. These differences bear little relationship to rates of use, while the penalty structure actually serves as a price support for the illicit market.

Thirteen states have decriminalized possession of small amounts of marijuana, and Georgia mandates probation for such offenses.
However, 30 states, plus the District of Columbia, have maximum penalties of six months to a year in jail for possession of about one ounce of marijuana. State law in Florida provides for a maximum penalty of five years. For possession of two ounces of marijuana, 18 states have maximum penalties of one year, and 16 have maximum penalties of more than one year, including maximum sentences of 10 years in Arkansas, Georgia, and Oregon and seven years in Missouri.
This penalty structure effectively demands that marijuana consumers make multiple small purchases of marijuana over time. This works to prop up the price of marijuana and benefits the illegal market.
These laws, by making marijuana an attractive commodity for small-scale sales, have created a substantial market in which teenagers sell marijuana to other teenagers, making marijuana easily accessible to young people. According to the 2007 NSDUH, 742,932 youths aged 12 to 17 sold illegal drugs in the preceding 12 months.
The national marijuana arrest rate is 290 per 100,000. The jurisdictions with the highest marijuana arrest rates are the District of Columbia (677), New York (481), and Kentucky (479). The states with the lowest are Vermont (149), Montana (145), and Hawaii (119).
While some decriminalized states, such as Maine and Colorado, have high rates of marijuana use, others, including Mississippi and Nebraska, have below-average rates of use.
Some states, including South Carolina and Missouri, have among the highest arrest rates of marijuana users but low levels of marijuana use, while Washington, D.C. has both a high arrest rate and a high rate of use. Utah and North Dakota have low levels of use and below-average arrest rates, while states such as Alaska, Massachusetts and Montana have low arrest rates and high levels of use.
3) Young people and African-Americans are disproportionately affected by marijuana arrests.

Males aged 15 to 24 account for 52% of all marijuana arrests. While the national rate of marijuana possession arrests is 248 per 100,000, the arrest rate for males aged 15 to 19 is 1,911 per 100,000.
While the marijuana-use rate for African-Americans is only about 25% greater than for whites, the marijuana possession arrest rate for blacks is three times greater. This is not a regional disparity, but is seen in every state and most counties.
4) The costs of arresting marijuana users are substantial, and raise serious questions about the cost effectiveness of marijuana prohibition.

Using the same method of calculation used by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, marijuana arrests cost state and local governments $10.3 billion in 2006.
Marijuana arrests represent 6% of all arrests. In many states, they represent the fifth, sixth, or seventh largest category of arrests.
The clearance rate (i.e. the percentage of crimes solved by arrest) for murder, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft was 26% in 2007, meaning that no one is arrested for three quarters of these serious crimes. In this environment, time and resources spent on roughly 850,000 marijuana arrests per year represent a significant opportunity cost.
In California, decriminalization of marijuana possession saved taxpayers $857 million in 2006 (details in the California state report (PDF)). (Gettman, 2009)


How to cite a Court case in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a court case using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Anon. (Year Published) Title, Volume number Document Title/Name Pages Used. Location.

Example:

Nave, R (2015) Newton's Laws. Hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu. Available at http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/newt.html, accessed 24 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Anon., Year Published)

Example:

This website helped me confirm Newtons laws. (Nave, 2015)


How to cite a Dictionary entry in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a dictionary entry using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Publication Title. (City: Publisher). Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Wroe, Nicholas (2002) The Guardian Profile: Bernhard Schlink. the Guardian. Available at http://www.theguardian.com/books/2002/feb/09/fiction.books, accessed 15 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

""moral illiteracy"" (Wroe, 2002)


How to cite an E-book or PDF in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an e-book or pdf using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Ebook. (City: Publisher). Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Brown, Brene (2015) Shame and empathy. Image. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQiFfA7KfF0, accessed 30 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

""If we want to understand what really fills our human spirit, we have to understand the continuum of connection, the essence of the human experience. Connection gives meaning to our lives. If you think about connection on a continuum, anchoring one end of the continuum is empathy, it is what moves us towards our ability to forge meaningful authentic relationships with other people. One the other side of the continuum connection is shame that absolutely unravels our relationships and connections with other people."" 

""In empathy, we share our vulnerability with the vulnerability of the other. In shame, we hide our vulnerabilities because we fear that our vulnerability will forge disconnection."" (Brown, 2015)


How to cite an Edited book in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an edited book using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename, ed. (Year Published) Title. (City: Publisher).

Example:

Iyer, Pico (2000) Why We Travel.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

http://www.salon.com/2000/03/18/why/ (Iyer, 2000)


How to cite an Email in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an email using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author ForenameLetter (Year Published) Title. Email.

Example:

Chang, Bee-Shyuan (2011) Phillip Lim: ""We Live By The Dress, We Die By The Dress"". Fast Company. Available at http://www.fastcompany.com/1777619/phillip-lim-we-live-dress-we-die-dress, accessed 28 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

Holli Rogers, Net-a-Porter's buying director, praises the way in which Lim has built a relationship with his customers. ""It's this same sensibility in ready-to-wear, accessories, and intimates,"" she says. ""Understated and sophisticated."" (Chang, 2011)


How to cite an Encyclopedia article in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an encyclopedia article using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Publication Title. (City: Publisher).

Example:

Encyclopedia Britannica, (2014) centre of gravity | physics. Available at http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/242556/centre-of-gravity, accessed 27 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

In a uniform gravitational field the centre of gravity is identical to the centre of mass, a term preferred by physicists. The two do not always coincide, however. For example, the Moon’s centre of mass is very close to its geometric centre (it is not exact because the Moon is not a perfect uniform sphere), but its centre of gravity is slightly displaced toward the Earth because of the stronger gravitational force on the Moon’s near side. (Encyclopedia Britannica, 2014)


How to cite an Interview in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite an interview using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) TitleFormat. (Location).

Example:

Loranger, Hoa (2015) Infinite Scrolling is Not for Every Website. Nngroup.com. Available at http://www.nngroup.com/articles/infinite-scrolling/, accessed 19 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

Long, endless pages are good for time-killing activities because users are in the mindset for serendipitous exploration and discovery. The advantage of not having to acquire and click “next page” keeps audiences engaged with the content and less focused on the mechanics of navigating to the next page. (Loranger, 2015)


How to cite a Magazine in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a magazine using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Publication Title. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Winchester School of Art Library Blog, (2015) Louise Bourgeois: Works On Paper at Tate Modern. Available at https://wsalibrary.wordpress.com/2015/03/23/louise-bourgeois-works-on-paper-at-tate-modern/, accessed 24 March 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

The Tate Modern in London are currently exhibiting Louise Bourgeois’ ‘Works on Paper’… and it’s free to enter! There are four rooms displaying a selection of her prints, books, fabric and paint drawings. (Winchester School of Art Library Blog, 2015)


How to cite a Newspaper in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a newspaper using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Publication Title. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, (2015) How to Feed the World in 2050. Available at http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/wsfs/docs/expert_paper/How_to_Feed_the_World_in_2050.pdf, accessed 14 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

‘By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion’ (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2015)


How to cite a Podcast in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a podcast using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Podcast. Publication Title. Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

Jaffe, David (2010) Metro's terminal-based wayfinding confusing for visitors. Greater Greater Washington. Available at http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post/5779/metros-terminal-based-wayfinding-confusing-for-visitors/, accessed 27 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

""Any proposal will fail without more readable directional signage and, more importantly, an increased number of signs signs. Compare the images in the original post - the minimalist approach to signage is all very pretty, but it doesn't place information in the places where travelers need it."" (Jaffe, 2010)


How to cite a Song in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a song using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Author Surname, Author Forename (Year Published) Title. Format. (City: Publisher). Available at http://Website-Url, accessed 10 October 2013.

Example:

connectcompute, (2014) Inspiring examples: Watty - like Shazam for electricity. Available at http://connectcompute.com/2014/07/04/inspiring-examples-watty-like-shazam-for-electricity/, accessed 28 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Author Surname, Year Published)

Example:

electricicity picture (connectcompute, 2014)


How to cite The Bible in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite The Bible using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Title, (Year Published) . (City: Publisher).

Example:

Muther, Christopher (2013) ‘Gatsby’ an unmistakable influence on the runway. The Boston Globe. Available at http://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/style/2013/05/01/gatsby-unmistakable-influence-runway/R1WYZk1lfjRSl8AcvtpcCI/story.html, accessed 27 April 2015.

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Title, Year Published)

Example:

the biggest names in fashion were drunk on bathtub gin and 1920's fashion (Muther, 2013)


How to cite a TV Show in Asian Studies Review style


Use the following template to cite a TV Show using the Asian Studies Review citation style.

Reference List

Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.

Template:

Anon. (Year Published) Title. TV programme. (Channel number: Broadcaster).

Example:

Hallam, Julia, and Margaret Marshment (2000) Realism and popular cinema. (Manchester: Manchester University Press).

In-text citation

Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.

Template:

(Anon., Year Published)

Example:

The codes and conventions in play are strictly those of fiction, heretically sealed from any direct reference to external events, yet operating within a classical paradigm that constructs plausible, self-contained, fictional worlds through character-centrered action and events. Alternatively, as in horror films of the 1950s, the fantasy may be grounded in contemporary diegetic reality. Jurassic park (1994) enacts a known/unknown oppositional structure by associating contemporary fears of genetic engineering with a fantasy if entrepreneurial excess through the plot device which is based on a scientific theme park. (Hallam and Marshment, 2000)