Hi Emma,
In that case you would order them chronologically, so 2021 first and then 2022. You can read more about ordering your references here.
]]>e.g.
1) World Health Organisation. (2022). Novelty….
2) Word Health Organisation. (2021). Adventures…..
Many thanks
]]>Hi Emma,
Usually you should cite the full book, unless the individual chapters are written by separate authors (e.g. the book is by Smith but chapter 1 is by Jones, chapter 2 is by Turney, and so on). If that’s the case, you can cite the chapters individually, as described here. Otherwise, you should just include one reference entry for the whole book, and identify which part you’re citing in each case by including the relevant page number in your in-text citations. Hope that helps!
]]>Hi Kevin,
Ideally, you should find the source that the author is quoting and cite that source—it’s always best to track down the original source. However, if for any reason you can’t access the original source, you can follow the advice here to clarify in your in-text citation that you’re citing the source indirectly.
]]>Hi James,
APA recommends this format to cite a song—similar to your suggestion, but with the label “Song” added in square brackets and the word “On” before the album title:
Bowie, D. (1971). Changes [Song]. On Hunky Dory. RCA.
]]>Bowie, D. (1971). Changes. [italics:]Hunky Dory. RCA.
]]>Hi Elle,
You can read more about what to do in case of missing information here. When no author is listed, you’d usually use the title in place of the author.
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