The full name of any editors and translators is included in a parenthetical. This differs from the rule prohibiting the abbreviation of United States as part of a case name, discussed here in this guide. NOTE: Use the abbreviation "U.S." when "United States" is part of an institutional name. If this is the case, provide the individual's name, followed by the institutional name separated by a comma.Ĭonsult rule 15.1(d)for guidance on the proper abbreviation of institutional author names. NOTE: In some circumstances, a particular individual within an institution will be given authorial credit. If the author of a work is an institution, provide the complete name.Ĥ Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation, The American Law of Mining 98 (2d ed. NOTE: If there is particular relevance in listing all author names, list them in them in the order they appear in the original source, separated by commas except for the final name, which is separated only by an ampersand without a comma. Weaver, et al., Inside Constitutional Law: What Matters and Why (2009). Neal Feigenson & Christina Spiesel, Law on Display: The Digital Transformation of Legal Persuasion and Judgment (2010).įor more than two authors, provide the first name followed by "et al." If a cited work has two authors, include both names in the same order as they appear in the original separated by an ampersand.
O'Neill, Jr., Verification in an Age of Insecurity: The Future of Arms Control Compliance (2010).
Offset "Jr." or "III" with a comma only if that is how it appears in the original. Include such designations as "Jr." or "III" but not titles such as "Dr.," even if included in the original work. No online codes or access is included.Author names should be included in full just as they appear in the original publication.
NOTE: Only the Sabiston Textbook of Surgery 20th edition PDF comes in this purchase. Subsequent sections review the management of injury, oncology, transplantation, endocrine, breast, and abdominal procedures.