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Systematic Reviews in the Social Sciences

Citations and Plagiarism

Proper citation is crucial to successful scholarship. By using citations, your reader or audience and find and identify the resources you have used. Most importantly, citations give credit to the authors of quotes or ideas you have used in your writing.

Failure to acknowledge sources of information properly may constitute plagiarism and can result in disciplinary action. For an explicit definition of plagiarism, see the Boston University Academic Conduct Code.

APA Citations

In social work, we often use American Psychological Association (APA) style citations. Visit the guide for APA citations here. It covers:

Why Do We Cite Sources?

Proper citation is an essential aspect of scholarship. Citing properly allows your reader or audience to locate the materials you have used. Most importantly, citations give credit to the authors of quoted or consulted information. It also allows us to ensure we do not plagiarize other author's writing, ideas, quotes, or findings without credit or attribution. 

Citing Your Sources

All citation styles include the basic elements necessary to identify your sources. The order they go in and the level of detail you need may vary by citation style and the type of material you are citing.

  • author
  • title
  • date of publication
  • page numbers
  • volume and issue numbers (for journal articles)
  • doi (Digital Object Identifier)  

If all you're looking for is a tool to format citations without all the storage, sharing, or advanced features, these resources may suit your needs:

If you want a digital tool to help you store and share your citations, a subject guide to citation managers is available here. BU Librarians often recommend refworks RefWorks as the best tool to manage citations. Accounts are free for the BU community, and most importantly RefWorks can automatically create a bibliography in hundreds of styles.

Other Citation Styles

There are many different citation styles. Some additional common styles include Chicago style and Modern Language Association (MLA) style.

A Boston University guide to different citations is available here. 

Other online resources include:

Librarian