How do you reference public law?

For each citation, include:

  1. Public law number (P.L.) and title, if provided.
  2. Statutes at Large (Stat.) volume and page, date, and enacted bill number, if known.
  3. Database name (Text from: United States Public Laws)
  4. Web service name (Available from: LexisNexis® Congressional)
  5. Date accessed by the user (Accessed: date)

How do you reference a report?

To cite a report in a reference entry, include the author, year, title of the report, the report number (if there is one), and the publisher. In-text citations would follow the typical format of including the author (or authoring organization) and year of publication.

How do you in-text cite a bill in APA?

Citing a Federal Bill Include the bill title (if relevant), the abbreviated name of the house (H.R. or S.) and number of the bill, the number of the Congress, and the year of publication. When the URL is available, include it at the end of the reference list entry.

How do you reference a section?

Include the following information:

  1. Author or authors’ names.
  2. Publication year.
  3. Article title (in sentence case, without quotation marks or italics)
  4. Journal title (in title case and in italics)
  5. Volume number (in italics)
  6. Issue number (in parentheses)
  7. Page number(s) where the article appears.

How do you in-text cite a case law?

To cite a court case or decision, list the name of the case, the volume and abbreviated name of the reporter, the page number, the name of the court, the year, and optionally the URL. The case name is italicized in the in-text citation, but not in the reference list.

How do you reference a section in LaTeX?

In LaTeX you can easily reference a section by using \label{} next to a section and then \ref{} to create the reference. However, the reference only includes the number of the section, or the page with \pageref{} .