%% This is a file from Peter Williams' %% Harvard family of bibliographic styles \def\BibTeX{{\rm B\kern-.05em{\sc i\kern-.025em b}\kern-.08em T\kern-.1667em\lower.7ex\hbox{E}\kern-.125emX}} \documentstyle[A4,harvard]{article} \title{The {\em Harvard} Family of Bibliography Styles} \author{Peter Williams} \begin{document} \bibliographystyle{agsm} %\citationstyle{agsm} \maketitle \section{Introduction} This document describes the {\em harvard} family of bibliographic styles which are provided in addition to those described in \citeasnoun{latex} and \citeasnoun{btxdoc}. This style is primarily intended for use with the \BibTeX\ bibliographic database management system. However, provision is also made for hand coding of bibliographies. \section{Citations} There are two primary forms of citation in the {\em harvard} style dependent upon whether the reference is used as a noun or parenthetically. Additionally, where there are more than two authors, all authors are listed in the first citation and in subsequent citations just the first author's name followed by `et al.' is used. The following example from \citeasnoun{agsm}\ illustrates these points. \begin{quote} The major improvement concerns the structure of the interview (Ulrich~\& Trumbo~1965, p.~112) \ldots . Later reports (Carlson, Thayer, Mayfield~\& Peterson 1971) record greatly increased interviewer reliability for structured interviews. Wright (1969, p.~408) comments that `undoubtedly interviewer skill is directly related to the validity, quantity and quality of the interview output', and this would suggest some sort of interviewer training is called for. Rowe (1960), for example, found that trained interviewers are better able to evaluate applicants with some measure of reliability. In addition Wexley, Sanders~\& Yukl (1973) showed that by extensive interviewer training all significant contrast effects could be eliminated. The results of the 1971 study (Carlson et al. 1971) are still relevant, but efforts to~\ldots. \end{quote} To facilitate using a citation as a noun a new command {\bf $\backslash$citeasnoun} has been created which has the same syntax as the {\bf $\backslash$cite} command except that multiple citations are {\em not} permitted. The effect of this command is that \begin{verbatim} As \citeasnoun{btxdoc} and \citeasnoun[Annex~B]{latex} describe \ldots \end{verbatim} produces \begin{quote} As \citeasnoun{btxdoc} and \citeasnoun[Annex~B]{latex} describe \ldots \end{quote} whereas \begin{verbatim} The \BibTeX\ \cite{btxdoc} and \LaTeX\ \cite[Annex~B]{latex} manuals \ldots \end{verbatim} produces \begin{quote} The \BibTeX\ \cite{btxdoc} and \LaTeX\ \cite[Annex~B]{latex} manuals \ldots \end{quote} Where appropriate, citations are abbreviated automatically after the first reference when bibliographies are produced by \BibTeX. Provision is also made for this feature to be accessed during manual coding. \section{Styles} \subsection{Bibliography Styles} There are three bibliography styles currently available within the {\em harvard} family, {\bf agsm} (used in this document) which is based on \citeasnoun[pp.~95--98]{agsm}, {\bf dcu} which is based upon the conventions in use in the Design Computing Unit, Department of Architectural and Design Science, University of Sydney and {\bf kluwer} which aspires to conform to the requirements of Kluwer Academic Publishers. They are invoked by the {\bf $\backslash$bibliographystyle} as described in \citeasnoun[p.~74]{latex} and effect the layout of the entries in the bibliography. \subsection{Citation Styles} There are two citation styles currently available within the {\em harvard} family, {\bf agsm} (used in this document) and {\bf dcu} which for the previous example would produce: \begin{quote}\citationstyle{dcu} The \BibTeX\ \cite{btxdoc} and \LaTeX\ \cite[Annex~B]{latex} manuals \ldots \end{quote} and for multiple citations such as \begin{verbatim} The original documentation \cite{btxdoc,latex} say \ldots \end{verbatim} the {\bf agsm} citation style produces \begin{quote}\citationstyle{agsm} The original documentation \cite{btxdoc,latex} say \ldots \end{quote} and the {\bf dcu} citation style produces \begin{quote}\citationstyle{dcu} The original documentation \cite{btxdoc,latex} say \ldots \end{quote} The default citation style is {\bf agsm} and both styles have no effect on the appearance of the {\bf $\backslash$citeasnoun} citation format. These styles are invoked by the {\bf $\backslash$citationstyle} command, for example: \begin{verbatim} \citationstyle{agsm}. \end{verbatim} Because these styles affect the format of parenthetical citations, this command should appear before any {\bf $\backslash$cite} commands. \section{Doing It By Hand} Hand coding is accomplished much the same as described in \citeasnoun[p.~73]{latex} except that the new command {\bf $\backslash$harvarditem} is used in place of {\bf $\backslash$bibitem}. The syntax of this command is \begin{quote} {\bf $\backslash$harvarditem} [{\em abbr-citation}]\{{\em full-citation}\}\{{\em citation-year}\}\{{\em cite-key}\} \end{quote} where \begin{description} \item[{\em abbr-citation}] is the (optional) abbreviated citation (minus the year) to be used in the text subsequent to the first mention of a particular reference, \item[{\em full-citation}] is the full citation (minus the year) to be used in the text on the first mention of a particular reference, \item[{\em citation-year}] the year portion of the citation including any suffices required to disambiguate citations, and \item[{\em cite-key}] is the key used in the {\bf $\backslash$cite} and {\bf $\backslash$citeasnoun} commands. \end{description} \section{Acknowledgement} The motivation for this style came from Fay Sudweeks of the Design Computing Unit who also originated the formats for the {\bf dcu} style and proofread their implementation. \bibliography{harvard} \end{document}