Urban Studies?

Hi: does anyone have an output style for Urban Studies and willing to share it?

Best,

Are Knudsen

CMi, Bergen

www.cmi.no

Hi: does anyone have an output style for Urban Studies and willing to share it?

Best,

Are Knudsen

CMi, Bergen

www.cmi.no

Here (http://www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp) there is a suggest a style link.  It isn’t too different from other (Author, Year) styles and should be easily adapted from an existing style, or check the sticky topic in this forum “Style Templates Collection” which has a whole collection, as long as you have an idea what format you are looking for.  I made the effort of looking it up for you.  It isn’t in the Endnote collection yet, but looks very much like the attached. This will need some tweaking but it is close.  The power of endnote is that you can adapt any style to your needs.  Have a go!

Oh and the journal is quite unusual in that it appears to keep each publication citation in separate parentheses rather than combining them (and kept in parentheses even when used as the noun in a sentence!).  You will need to enter each one and separate them with a comma space to ensure Endnote doesn’t combine them into one.  

If you are asking for help, it is really nice if you include the author instructions link and some examples, so we don’t have to do that work for you too.  (Especially in a second posting of the same request.)

 For Urban Studies the link is http://www.sagepub.com/journalsProdDesc.nav?ct_p=manuscriptSubmission&prodId=Journal201866 

and the author instructions are:

References

References should be indicated in the text by the surname of the author(s) with the year of publication as shown below. References to more than one publication by the same author in the same year should be distinguished alphabetically with a, b, c, etc. The abbreviated author and the date references should be placed in parentheses unless the name forms part of the text. The relevant page(s) may be given if necessary. Examples:

(Ball, 1998), (Edwards, 2002a), (Haughton and Hunter, 1994, p. 130) demonstrated that………

If no person is named as author, the name of the appropriate body should be used: e.g. (US Bureau of the Census, 1996).

In the case of multi-authored articles, all authors should be named in the list of References.

The full list of references should be typed in alphabetical order, double-spaced, on a separate sheet at the end of the article, in form of the following examples.

Yeoh, B. S. A. (2004) Cosmopolitanism and its Exclusions in Singapore, Urban Studies, 41, pp. 2431-2445.

Jargowsky, P. (2002) Sprawl, concentration of poverty, and urban inequality, in: G. Squires (Ed.) Urban Sprawl: Causes, Consequences and Policy Responses, pp. 39-72. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute.

Riddell, R. (2004) Sustainable Urban Planning: Tipping the Balance. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
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