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Citation Help

Provides information to help you cite sources correctly in different citation styles.

Library Contact

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Karen A. Reiman-Sendi
she/hers
Contact:
The University of Michigan
2178 Shapiro Library
919 S. University Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1185
Website

Why Cite?

Webpages expire, books and articles get lost, photographs and films degrade. Citations are necessary to assure that the next researcher can find the same information through different means.

Citing is important for your scholarly credibility, and for building on previous research. You may have a good idea, but simply stating it does not make it true or believable. Give your ideas validity and support by citing established authors.

Avoiding plagiarism is key to academic honesty. Claiming someone's original work as your own is fraud. Citations give authors their due credit.

Why Cite Diverse Voices?

Citation is widely used as a metric for evaluating performance in Western academia. Like other cultural practices, citation is susceptible to biases that reflect and reinforce dominant historical power structures of race, gender, and class. Citation justice is the practice of maintaining an awareness of these biases and actively working to build more inclusive and equitable citation networks. By choosing to cite scholars with varied backgrounds and identities, we intentionally expand the academic conversation, and increase equity and inclusion in our field.

Some suggestions for inclusive citation include:

  • Experiment with search terms and sources, and broaden your reading: reading from a range of cultures, races, and other identities can help diversify citations. 
  • Audit your citation list. Does it include racialized, female-identified, early-career, or non-academic authors?
  • Include a citation diversity statement to increase the transparency of your practice and encourage other scholars to do likewise.

Interested in learning more about citation justice?

Additional Help

Good writing is expected of students at the University of Michigan. Writing helps you make your points, clarify and extend your research with evidence, and demonstrate your understanding of a topic. Because most academic disciplines have different writing conventions and styles, we recommend that you refer to handbooks, usage and style guides, manuals, grammars, etc. found in our collections. Also consider reaching out to the Sweetland Writing Center.

  • Sweetland Writing Support: Sweetland provides peer tutoring in a variety of locations across campus. Set up an appointment to go over your paper with a peer tutor.
  • Sweetland Undergraduate Writing Guides: Short guides from the Sweetland Writing Center on incorporating quotes, making a stronger analysis, deciding what to argue, and more.

Some other helpful sources include: