ASA Format
American Sociological Association
Overview:
The American Sociological Association Style Guide is
intended for authors who are preparing manuscripts
for publication in ASA journals. This handout is
intended for students who are instructed to use "ASA
style" when writing research papers. Consult the
ASA Style Guide for additional or more detailed
information (Our copy is missing).
Manuscript Format:
- All text (including footnotes & references)
must be doubled spaced and in a 12 point type.
- Margins must be at least 1 ¼ inches on all
four sides
- A separate title page including title of
paper, name(s) & institution(s) of authors, word
count for the manuscript (including footnotes
and references), title footnote (includes names,
addresses of authors, acknowledgements, credits,
and grants)
- If required, on a separate page provide a
short (150-200 word) abstract headed with the
title.
- Begin the text of the paper on a separate
page headed with the title of the paper.
Citations in Text:
Basic form for citations in
the text include the last name of the author(s) and
year of publication. Include page number when you
quote directly from the work or refer to specific
passages.
- If author’s name is in the text, follow it
with the publication year in parentheses
When Chu (1977) studied…
- If the author’s name is not in the text,
enclose the last name and year in parentheses:
When the study was completed…(Jones
1994)
- If the page number is to be included it
follows the year of publication after a colon:
…Chavez (1966:16)
- For three authors, give all last names in
the first citation in the text; afterwards use
the first name and et al.; for more than three
names, use the first author’s last name plus et
al.:
(Smith, Garcia and Lee 1954) (Snow et
al. 1989)
- Quotations in the text must begin and end
with quotation marks; the citation follows the
end quote mark and precedes the period.
"In 1999, however, the data were
reported by more specific job types
which showed that technologically
oriented jobs paid better" (Hildenbrand
1999:47).
Footnotes & Endnotes:
- Try to avoid footnotes, but if necessary,
use footnotes to cite material of limited
availability or to add information presented in
a table.
- Footnotes should be numbered consecutively
throughout the essay with superscript Arabic
numerals and included at the bottom of the paper
or in a separate section headed "Endnotes."
Reference List
(Bibliography):
- References follow the text and footnotes in
a separate section headed "References."
- All references cited in the text must be
listed and vice-versa.
- Remember references should be double-spaced.
- List references in alphabetical order by
author’s last names.
- Use hanging indention (see examples)
- Invert the authors’ name; if there are two
or more authors, invert only the first author’s
name.
- Arrange multiple items by the same author in
order by year of publication, earliest year
first.
- Use six hyphens and a period(------.) in
place of the name(s) for repeated authorship.
- Distinguish works by the same author in the
same year by adding letters (e.g. 1993a, 1993b,
1993c).
- Use italics for book and periodical titles
(underline if italics are not available).
- If no date is available use "N.d." in place
of the date.
- Include both city and state for place of
publication except for New York using
U.S. Postal Code abbreviations. For foreign
cities provide the name of the country.
Examples of References:
Books: Basic form
for a book entry is 1-Author’s last name, followed
by a comma and the first name and middle initial,
ending with a period. 2- Year of publication
followed by a period. 3- Title of book italicized
ending with a period. 4- Place of publication,
followed by a colon and name of publisher ending
with a period.
-One Author
De Anda, Roberto M. 1995. Chicanas and
Chicanos in Contemporary
Society. Boston, MA: Allyn and
Bacon.
-Two Authors
Herrera-Sobek, María and Helena María
Viramontes. 1995. Chicana (W)rites
: On Word and Film. Berkeley, CA:
Third Woman Press.
-Chapter in Book
Nathan, Peter E. and Raymond S. Niaura. 1987.
"Prevention of Alcohol
Problems." Pp. 333-354 in Treatment
and Prevention of
Alcohol Problems: A Resource Manual,
edited by W.M. Cox.
Orlando, FL: Academic Press, Inc.
-No Author
Manual of Style. 1993. 14th
ed. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
List books with no author alphabetically by
the first significant word in the title.
Journal Articles in Print: Basic
form for a journal article is 1- Author’s last name,
followed by a comma and the first name and middle
initial ending with a period. 2- Year of publication
followed by a period. 3-Title of article in
quotations and ending with a period inside the
closing quotation mark. 4-Name of journal in italics
5- volume number followed by colon, page number(s)
and period. Use the issue number following the
volume number in parenthesis or exact date for
journal article prior to the volume number for
journals that do not number pages consecutively
within a volume.
-One Author
Garcia, Alma M. 1998. "An Intellectual
Odyssey: Chicana/Chicano Studies
Moving into the Twenty-first Century."
Journal of American
Ethnic History 18:109.
-Two or More Authors
Exum, William H., Robert J. Menges, Bari
Watkins, and Patricia Berglund.
1984. "Making it at the top: Women and
minority faculty in the
academic labor market." American
Behavioral Scientist
27:301-324.
Newspaper & Magazine Articles
in Print: Basic form for a newspaper or
magazine entry is 1- Author’s last name, followed by
a comma and the first name and middle initial,
ending with a period. 2- Year of publication
followed by a period. 3-Title of article in
quotations and ending with a period inside the
closing quotation mark. 4-Name of newspaper/magazine
in italics 5-date of publication followed by a comma
6- page number of article within the publication
ending with a period.
-Magazine
Jana, Reena. 2000. "Preventing culture
clashes - As the IT workforce grows
more diverse, managers must improve
awareness without creating
inconsistency." InfoWorld, April
24, pp. 95.
-Newspaper
Rimland, Bernard. 2000. "Do children's shots
invite autism?" Los Angeles
Times, April 26, A13.
Articles Retrieved in Electronic Format
-From Commercial Databases
Graham, Lorie M. 1998. "The Past Never
Vanishes: A Contextual Critique of
the Existing Indian Family Doctrine"
American Indian Law
Review, 23:1. Retrieved May 25,
1999 Available:
LEXIS-NEXIS Academic Universe, Law
Reviews.
-Web Version of Newspapers
Clary, Mike. 2000. "Vieques Protesters
Removed Without Incident." Los
Angeles Times, May 5. Retrieved
May 5, 2000
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/updates/lat_vieques000505.htm).
-Web Base Journals
Smith, Herman W. and Takako Nomi. 2000. "Is
Amae the Key to
Understanding Japanese Culture?."
Electronic Journal of
Sociology 5:1. Retrieved May 5,
2000
(http://www.sociology.org/content/vol005.001/smith-nomi.html).
-Information Posted on a Web Site
American Sociological Association. 2000.
"Scholarship of Teaching and
Learning Workshop." Washington, DC:
American Sociological
Association, Retrieved May 5, 2000
(http://www.asanet.org/members/socwkshp.html).
Other
-Government Documents: Since the nature of
public documents is so varied, the form of entry for
documents cannot be standardized. The essential rule
is to provide sufficient information so that the
reader can locate the reference easily. For example
see the following:
United States. Dept. of Housing and Urban
Development. 1999. Rehab a home
with HUD's 203(k) : HUD and FHA are on
your side.
Washington, DC: U.S. Dept. of Housing and
Urban Development.
-Dissertations & Theses
Valencia, Albert. 1995. "An examination of
selected characteristics of
Mexican-American battered women and
implications for service
providers." Ph.D. dissertation,
Department of Education,
University of the Pacific, Stockton, CA.
|