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Citing primary sources using the Legal Footnotes style

Cases in England and Wales:

1 Corr v IBC Vehicles Ltd [2008] UKHL 13, [2008] 1 AC 884

Case citations are usually made up of three elements: the case name, the neutral citation and the law report. This case citation tells us that the judgment in Corr v IBC Vehicles Ltd was issued in 2008 by the House of Lords. It was the 13th judgment issued by the House of Lords that year. The second half of the citation tells us that a report of this judgment is located in volume 1 of the 2008 edition of the series of the Law Reports called the Appeal Cases, starting on page 884.

Neutral citations were only introduced in the UK in the early 2000s so many older cases (and those from some lower courts) may not have a neutral citation. This is how to reference cases without a neutral citation:

1 Page v Smith [1996] AC 155 (HL)

This case citation tells us that the judgment in Page v Smith was reported in the 1996 edition of the series of the Law Reports called the Appeal Cases, starting on page 155.

 

UK Primary legislation:

1 Human Rights Act 1998

Citing secondary sources using the Legal Footnotes style

A book:

Footnote

1 Howard Davis Human Rights Law (Oxford University Press 2016) 217

In the footnote include page numbers identifying the specific pages the ideas you are referencing come from at the end. In this example, the page number is 217. 

Bibliography 

Davis H Human Rights Law (Oxford University Press 2016)

 

A chapter from an edited book:

Footnote

1 Tullio Treves and Cesare Pitea 'Piracy, International Law and Human Rights' in Nihal Bhuta (ed) The Frontiers of Human Rights: Extraterritoriality and its Challenges (Oxford University Press 2016)

Bibliography

Bhuta N (ed) The Frontiers of Human Rights: Extraterritoriality and its Challenges (Oxford University Press 2016)

 

A journal article:

Footnote

1 Aoife Daly, "Climate Competence: Youth Climate Activism and Its Impact on International Human Rights Law" (2022) 22(2) H.R.L.Rev. 1

Bibliography

Daly A "Climate Competence: Youth Climate Activism and Its Impact on International Human Rights Law" (2022) 22(2) H.R.L.Rev. 

In the footnote include page numbers identifying the specific pages the ideas you are referencing come from at the end. In this example, the page number is 1. 

 

OSCOLA Style Manual

Legal Footnotes style is in practice the OSCOLA style. This means citations are placed in numbered footnotes.You will still need to create a bibliography or reference list in alphabetical order at the end of your document when using this style.

Building your bibliography in the Legal Footnotes style

You need to provide a list of the sources you have used. In the OSCOLA style this is called a Bibliography. It is arranged in alphabetical order of author's surname:

 

Bibliography:

Bailey J, Construction Law (Routledge 2016)

Finch E and Fafinski S Legal Skills (4th edn, Oxford University Press 2021)

Fisher E, Risk Regulation and Administrative Constitutionalism (Hart Publishing 2007)

 

How to create a footnote in MS Word

To create a footnote citation in Word, click on References and Insert Footnote:

References ribbon in Microsoft Word

Want to know more about the Author-Date, Footnotes, or Numbered style?

Need to know more about the Author-Date, Footnotes, or Numbered styles?

You can find videos to learn more about the styles in use and some quizzes you can take to make sure you know what you need to do, on KLaSS: