JEH Instructions for Authors
Example: Washington State Department of Ecology. (1998). Chemical testing methods for designating dangerous waste (Publication No. 97-407). http://www.ecy.wa.gov/biblio/97407.html Retrieval dates (i.e., the date in which you accessed the material) are no longer necessary to include in references. Include a retrieval date if the contents of the page are designed to change over time and the page itself is not archived. In-Text Citations Citing the work of others in your text is done by providing appropriate in-text callouts (i.e., author- date information) in parentheses. Please note that each entry in the reference list must be cited in the text, and that each citation should have an entry in the reference list. Example: The study showed a positive correlation (Tinker et al., 1999), suggesting that poor indoor air quality was associated with increased asthma rates. Basic In-Text Citation Styles Author type Parenthetical Citation Narrative Citation One author (Ross, 2026) Ross (2026) Two authors (Ross & Williams, 2026) Ross and Williams (2026) Three or more authors (Ross et al., 2026) Ross et al. (2026) Group author with abbreviation First citation
(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2024)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, 2024)
Subsequent citations
(CDC, 2024)
CDC (2024)
Group author without abbreviation
(Stanford University, 2021)
Stanford University (2021)
Please also note that when multiple sources are cited within one set of parentheses, those sources should be arranged alphabetically by the first author’s last name. Example: (Kramer & Kramer, 2024; Tinker et al., 2022).
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