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Management: Citations: APA Style

APA Style is published by the American Psychological Association (APA).

The American Psychological Association states that the style guidelines were developed "to advance scholarship by setting sound and rigorous standards for scientific communication.  They sought to establish a simple set of procedures, or style rules, that would codify the many components of scientific writing to increase the ease of reading comprehension" (Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 2010).

APA In-text Citations Basics

In-text citations are citations that appear in the text of your essay and refer to a specific idea, quote, or page. APA uses parenthetical citations -- this means APA in-text citations put the relevant citation information in parentheses before the end of the sentence but before the period (i.e. like this).

For APA style, if you are referring to an idea from another work but NOT directly quoting the material, you only have to make reference to the author and year of publication and not the page number in your in-text reference.

  • Example: Dreams may be manifested due to two mental processes: an unconscious desire being expressed through dreams, or an unconscious censorship of desires (Freud, 1900).

If, however, you are directly quoting the material, you will need to reference the author, the publication year, and the page number in your in-text reference. Singular pages should be indicated by p. and multiple pages should be indicated by pp.

  • Example: The beginning of The Interpretation of Dreams asserts that, "every dream reveals itself as a psychical structure which has a meaning and which can be inserted at an assignable point in the mental activities of waking life" (Freud, 1900, p. 35). 

APA Citation Books

APA Bibliography Citation Basic

Bibliographic citations appear at the end of an essay -- APA style calls this the Reference List and should be formatted as its own separate page at the of the essay simply titled, References. Bibliography entries should all contain these basic elements:

  • Author(s) name
  • Title of work
  • Date of work
  • Location of work (page numbers for physical items, DOI or URL for electronic items).

Reference Lists should also follow specific formatting requirements. References should be: double spaced; use the hanging indent (the first line is not indented but the following lines are); authors' names should be listed by last name, and authors' first and middle names should be written as initials. Here are examples for a book and an article citation:

Freud, S. (1899). The Interpretation of dreams: The Complete and definitive

     text. Franz Deuticke, Leipzig & Vienna.

Surbeck, K. (2018). Sigmund Freud—early network theories of the brain. Acta

     Neurochirurgica, 160(6), 1235–1242. https://doi.org/10.1007

     /s00701-018-3519-7

Further APA Resources

You can find more information about the APA format and citation style at the links below.