Project Guidelines: Example of Chicago Notes and Bibliography

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Project Guidelines

The following points must be taken into consideration while writing the project:

1. The main issue or problem the author is talking about.


2. Arguments the author has provided to develop the idea or address the issue
3. Critical analysis of your own. Do you agree with the author? If so, why and if not,
why not? In this section you may include either case laws or case studies to
substantiate your position.
4. Include a short abstract within 150 words in the project.
5. Within 2000 to 2500 words
6. Times New Roman, 1.5 spacing
7. Citation style-Chicago
Example of Chicago book citation

Chicago Notes and Bibliography

Footnote or endnote Author first name last name, Title of Book (Place of


format publication: publisher, year), page number(s).

Full note (first Albert Einstein, The Meaning of Relativity (Princeton:


mention) Princeton University Press, 1923), 44–45.

Short note Einstein, The Meaning of Relativity, 89.


(subsequent mentions)

Author last name, first name. Title of Book. Place of


Bibliography format
publication: publisher, year.

Einstein, Albert. The Meaning of Relativity. Princeton:


Bibliography example
Princeton University Press, 1923.

Chicago Author-Date
In-text citation format (Author last name year, page number(s))

In-text citation (Einstein 1923, 44–45)


example

Author last name, first name. Year. Title of Book. Place


Reference list format
of publication: publisher.

Reference list Einstein, Albert. 1923. The Meaning of Relativity.


example Princeton: Princeton University Press.

9. Chicago journal article citation

Chicago Notes and Bibliography

Author first name last name, “Title of Article,” Name of


Footnote or endnote
Journal volume, no. issue (month and year): page
format
number(s). DOI if applicable.

Morris Dickstein, “A Literature of One’s Own: The


Question of Jewish Book Awards.” Princeton
Full note (first
University Library Chronicle 63, no. 1–2 (Winter
mention)
2002): 71.
https://doi.org/10.25290/prinunivlibrchro.63.1-2.0070.

Short note Dickstein, “A Literature of One’s Own,” 73.


(subsequent mentions)
Author last name, first name. “Title of Article.” Name
Bibliography format of Journal volume, no. issue (month/season year): page
range of article. DOI if applicable.

Dickstein, Morris. “A Literature of One’s Own: The


Question of Jewish Book Awards.” Princeton
Bibliography example University Library Chronicle 63, no. 1–2 (Winter
2002): 70–74.
https://doi.org/10.25290/prinunivlibrchro.63.1-2.0070.

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