FOR AUTHORS
Footnotes
Footnotes rather than endnotes should be used.
Footnote numbers should be written after quotation marks, parentheses, and punctuation.
Citations should conform to the following examples:
- Journal article
- Essays in collective works and acts of meetings
- Monographs
- Web pages
Work accepted for publication but not yet published should be referred to as "forthcoming"
To refer to an undetermined number of pages instead than exact page numbers, the first page should be indicated, followed by “ff.” pp. 15 ff.
If the text cited is a working paper, this should be written out in full and followed by its sequential number: S. Bartoletto, Energy and Environment, working paper n. 225.
Previously cited work, the author’s last name should be used along with the first three or four words of the title with no suspension marks or comma, followed by “cit.” (and page numbers) Bender, Mill from the Beginning cit., p. 213.
To refer to the last cited work, ibid.should be used.
11Faulkner, Big Woods cit., p. 20.
12 Ibid., pp. 22-6.
When citing another work by the last author cited, use “id.” Beinart, “Environmental Destruction” cit.; id., The Rise of Conservation in South Africa, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2003, pp. 37-45.
For cited publications in any language other than English, the original title is to be retained. However, the titles of publications in non-Latin alphabets should be transliterated, and a notation such as "(in Russian)" or "(in Greek, with English abstract)" should be added.

