how to cite a phd thesis in harvard
Harvard is an author-date referencing style.
The Library supports the Cite Them Right version for Harvard referencing.
If you are a recent MIT graduate and would like to add your thesis to the theses in DSpace, see Add Your Thesis to MIT’s DSpace for instructions.
This collection of MIT Theses in DSpace contains selected theses and dissertations from all MIT departments. Please note that this is NOT a complete collection of MIT theses. To search all MIT theses, use Barton, MIT Libraries’ catalog.
Guidance for the 2020/21 academic year update:
This Guide is not for BU students who study our Psychology course (Faculty of Science and Technology), History, or Law courses (both in Faculty of Media and Communications). Check the ‘Who should use this guide’ section below for more details.
Still unsure what in-text citation and referencing mean? Check here.
1. Thomas Feeney, “Seán MacEntee and the Development of Public Policy in Independent Ireland” (PhD thesis, University College Dublin, 2005), 30.
Refences:
http://libraries.mit.edu/mit-theses
http://libguides.bournemouth.ac.uk/bu-referencing-harvard-style
http://libguides.ucd.ie/academicintegrity/chicagotheses
http://writingcenter.ashford.edu/writing-a-thesis