Guide: How to cite a E-book or PDF in MST style
Cite A E-book or PDF in MST style
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Use the following template to cite a e-book or pdf using the MST citation style. For help with other source types, like books, PDFs, or websites, check out our other guides. To have your reference list or bibliography automatically made for you, try our free citation generator.
Key:
Pink text = information that you will need to find from the source.
Black text = text required by the MST style.
Reference list
Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.
Template:
Author Surname, Author Forename. Title. ebook ( ed.; City: Publisher, Year Published), http://Website-Url, (10 October 2013).
Example:
O'Hara, Mary Emily. 'Legal Pot in the US Is Crippling Mexican Cartels | VICE News'. in VICE News, 2014, https://news.vice.com/article/legal-pot-in-the-us-is-crippling-mexican-cartels, (1 May 2015).
In-text citation
Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.
Template
Author Forename Author Surname, Title, ebook ( ed.; City: Publisher, Year Published), http://Website-Url, (10 October 2013).
Example
Marijuana has accounted for nearly half of all total drug arrests in the US for the past 20 years, according to the FBI’s crime statistics. And according to the Department of Justice (DOJ), a large portion of the US illegal drug market is controlled directly by Mexican cartels. The DOJ’s National Drug Intelligence Center, which has since been shut down, found in 2011 that the top cartels controlled the majority of drug trade in marijuana, heroin, and methamphetamine in over 1,000 US cities. Now, those cartels and their farmers complain that marijuana legalization is hurting their business. And some reports could suggest that the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) is more interested in helping to protect the Mexican cartels’ hold on the pot trade than in letting it dissipate. Seven Mexican cartels have long battled for dominance of the US illegal drug market: Sinaloa, Los Zetas, Gulf, Juarez, Knights Templar, La Familia, and Tijuana. While some smaller cartels operate only along border regions in the Southwest and Southeast, giant cartels like Sinaloa have a presence on the streets of every single region. Mary Emily O'Hara, 'Legal Pot in the US Is Crippling Mexican Cartels | VICE News', in VICE News, 2014, https://news.vice.com/article/legal-pot-in-the-us-is-crippling-mexican-cartels, (1 May 2015).
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