Guidelines to Remember While Citing Journal Article in Chicago Manual of Style
Journal Articles
Footnote
Basic format:
- Author’s First name Last name, “Article Title,” Journal Title Volume, Issue No. (Year): page number
Subsequent references to same text:
- Last name, “Article Title,” page number.
Examples:
- Keith Dowding, “Explaining Urban Regimes,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 25, no. 1 (2001): 12.
- Marina Alberti, “Measuring Urban Sustainability,” Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 1996, no. 16: 390.
- Roger Keil, “Globalization Makes States: Perspectives of Local Governance in the Age of the World City,” Review of International Political Economy 5, no. 4 (1998): 617.
- Alberti, “Measuring Urban Sustainability,” 391.
The structure of Chicago style journal citation is as follows:
Last name, First name. “Article Title.” Journal Title volume, no. issue (year of publication). Page-page
Example of Chicago style journal reference:
Lin, Meng-Fen Grace, Ellen S. Hoffman, and Claire Borengasser. “Is Social Media Too Social for Class? A Case Study of Twitter Use.” TechTrends 57, no. 2 (2013). 39-40.
Some main things that are required to be taken care of when citing journals is page numbers and Digital Object Identifier (DOIs). When referencing any source one needs to write in the footnote specific page number consulted. DOI refers to a combination of numbers as well as letters that are assigned to identify the content and provide a persistent link to the same on the internet.
Footnote:
First name Surname, "Title of journal article: Subtitle," Title of journal Volume number, Issue number (Year): page number(s).
Peter King, “The Inner Cathedral: Mental Architecture in High Scholasticism,” Vivarium 46, no.3 (2008): 266.
Subsequent citations
Surname, "Shortened title of journal article," page number(s).
King, “The Inner Cathedral," 268.
Along with footnotes, the other thing that is important is bibliography. Chicago referencing consists of both footnotes and then bibliography. For the bibliography part:
Bibliography
Surname, First name. "Title of journal article: Subtitle." Title of journal Volume number, Issue number (Year): page range of entire article.
King, Peter. “The Inner Cathedral: Mental Architecture in High Scholasticism.” Vivarium 46, no.3 (2008): 253-274.
Other examples of Chicago style references
One Author
Colby, Bonnie G. 1988. “Economic Impacts of Water Law—State Law and Water Market Development in the Southwest.” Natural Resources Journal 28, no. 4: 721-749.
Two Authors
Rosegrant, Mark W., and Renato Gazmuri S. 1995. “Reforming Water Allocation Policy Through Markets in Tradable Water Rights: Lessons from Chile, Mexico, and California.” Cuadernos de Economía 32, no. 97 (December): 291-315.
Three Authors
Schlenker, Wolfram, W. Michael Hanemann, and Anthony C. Fisher. 2007. “Water Availability, Degree Days, and the Potential Impact of Climate Change on Irrigated Agriculture in California.” Climatic Change 81, no. 1:19-38.
Four Authors
Seung, Chang K., Thomas R. Harris, Thomas R. MacDiarmid, and W. Douglass Shaw. 1998. “Economic Impacts of Water Reallocation: A CGE analysis for Walker River Basin of Nevada and California.” Journal of Regional Analysis and Policy 28, no.1: 13-34.
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