Court Case Elements of a case citation. A case citation includes names of the parties, the volume number of the case reporter, the abbreviated name of the case reporter, the series number, if there is one, and the number of the first page of the case. Abbreviated form of the citation: Roe, 410 U.S. 113, at 114.
Country, Institution that passed the law, Law Title, Law type Law number, adopted date adopted, number of article / paragraph / etc., URL. Short note: Law Title, number of article.
The format is as follows: x. Author's First name Last name, “Chapter Title,” in Book Title, ed. Editor's name (City: Publisher, Year), page number if relevant.
For laws (statutes), the preferred form includes the name of the law and the year – e.g. (Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act of 1974). The APA style manual indicates anything cited in the text should also have a complete listing in the References list. For court cases, in the text include party name v.
Formatting the Chicago Style Bibliography Include a 1-inch top and left margin. Center the title at the top of the page. Leave two blank lines between the title and first entry. Use a 1/2 inch hanging indent if the citation entry is more than one line. Single space the entries. Leave one blank line between entries.
Use only the name of the case or title of the work in the main text and then give the full citation in the footnote. The first time a case is cited give the full citation in the footnote. Even if the name of the case is referred to in the main text, include it in the footnote.
Country, Institution that passed the law, Law Title, Law type Law number, adopted date adopted, number of article / paragraph / etc., URL. Short note: Law Title, number of article.
Chicago Citation Style (17th Edition): Government Publication General Format. Full Note: Name of Government Body/Division, Publication Title, (Place of. Publication: Publisher, Year), URL. Concise Note: Name of Government Body/Division, Publication Title. Bibliography: Name of Government Body/Division. Example.
The OCC charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks and federal savings associations as well as federal branches and agencies of foreign banks. The OCC is an independent bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
To open a bank account for an individual, their identity and legal name can be established by providing any of the following documents: Passport; PAN (Permanent Account Number) card; Voter's Identity Card; Driving License; Job Card issued by NREGA duly signed by an officer of the State Government;