Aboriginal Studies Press
style guide for authors
and editors
© AIATSIS Aboriginal Studies Press 2021
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by
any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information
storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian
Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this publication,
whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its education purposes
provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration
notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.
Aboriginal Studies Press is the publishing arm of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Studies.
GPO Box 553, Canberra, ACT 2601
Phone 02 6246 1183
Email
xxx@xxxxxxx.xxx.xx
aiatsis.gov.au/asp
Aboriginal Studies Press welcomes feedback and ideas from editors and authors for future editions.
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Contents
About Aboriginal Studies Press
3
Using this style guide
4
Information for authors
5
Defamation
5
Permissions
5
Cultural appropriateness and responsibilities
6
Referring to Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander Australians
6
Plain English
7
Information for editors
8
Types of editing
8
Copyediting
8
Proofreading
8
Editing brief
9
Someeditingspecifics
9
File names
9
Using track changes
9
Using comments
9
Global changes
9
Checking facts
10
Preparingfilesfortypesetting
10
Formatting manuscripts for ASP
11
Structure of the document
11
Preliminary pages
11
Text
12
End matter
12
Format of the text
13
Copyediting styles
15
Spelling
15
Foreign words
15
Italic and bold type
15
Capitalisation
15
Headings
15
Abbreviations, acronyms and initialisms
16
Block quotes
16
Quoted material
16
Bullet lists
17
Tablesandfigures
17
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Numbers
17
Cross-references
18
Endnotes
19
Referring to web pages
19
Court cases and other legal material
19
Punctuation styles
19
Full stops
19
Commas
20
Hyphens
20
Dashes
20
Ellipses
21
Quotation marks
21
Citations and references
22
Citations
22
The reference list
22
Book
23
Book chapter
23
Journal article
23
Journal article with doi
24
Publication with an organisation as the author
24
Two or more works by the same author
24
More than six authors
24
Edition no.
24
No publication date
25
Original date of publication
25
Conference paper
25
Discussion paper
25
Newspaper article
25
Theses and other unpublished works
25
Web page
26
Web pdf
26
Film
26
TV show
26
Online video
26
Social media
26
Quick style guide
28
Commonly used words
31
References
34
About Aboriginal Studies Press
Aboriginal Studies Press (ASP) is the publishing arm of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS). ASP develops and publishes works that tell the story of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australia; that create opportunities for people to encounter,
engage with and be transformed by that story; and that support and facilitate Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander cultural maintenance and resurgence.
Our goals are to encourage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors and to produce diverse
lists of quality books. Our main lists are:
• trade titles (books with a general readership, published under the Aboriginal Studies Press imprint)
• children’s titles (our emerging children’s list with a general readership, published under the
Aboriginal Studies Press imprint)
• academic or scholarly works (research books and publications with an academic or specialist
readership).
We foster relationships with distributors, marketers, booksellers, media outlets, and festival
and conference organisers. We constantly explore new ways to publish our titles, as print books,
ebooks or other emerging digital technologies.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
3
Using this style guide
Use this style guide for all ASP publications, which are published as books, ebooks or pdf documents.
This style guide should be used in conjunction with:
• ASP’s
Guidelines for the ethical publishing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors
and research from those communities, which provides advice on how to create new works in
ways that are culturally respectful and appreciative of the diversity and richness of Australia’s
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and their histories and cultures. The guidelines
include information about editing and language, including how people prefer to be named.
• AIATSIS’
s Code of ethics, which has information about ethical research, including how to
communicate the results of research.
ThisstyleguidepresentsASP’spreferredstylesbutisnotdefinitive.Ifyoucan’tfindtheinformation
you need in this guide, refer to the Australian Government’
s Style manual, which is a free online
resourceandiscontinuallyupdated.Althoughitisextensiveanduseful,itisintendedspecifically
forgovernmentcontent(e.g.webpages,forms,policydocumentsetc.)andtakesa‘digitalfirst’
approach, so some styles are less suitable for books, research reports and other publications such
as those published by ASP. It replaces the sixth edition of the
Style manual for authors, editors
and printers, which remains useful and is particularly relevant for the types of books and documents
that ASP publishes.
ASPpreferssomespecificdifferencestotheonline
Style manual:
• we spell out numbers one to ninety-nine in text for our trade books (general readership books)
and one to nine in text for our academic titles
• we do not use commas in numbers 1000 to 9999 in text
• we use spaced em dashes for parenthetical dashes.
Ifyouareunsureaboutspecificstyles,contact
xxx@xxxxxxx.xxx.xxforclarification.
We welcome feedback and suggestions from editors and authors for future editions of this
style guide.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
4
Information for authors
The
ASP section of the AIATSIS website provides further information for authors such as:
• how to submit a manuscript or a proposal
• our assessment process
• information for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors
• information about reworking theses for book publication.
Defamation
For defamation to occur, one person has to communicate something to another person that lowers
thereputationofathirdperson.Foraclaimtosucceed,thethirdpersonhastobeidentifiableand
thefirstpersonhastohavenolegaldefenceasdefinedunderthelawsofdefamation(examplesof
legaldefencesaretruthandjustification,qualifiedprivilegeandhonestopinion).Defamationlaws
protect the reputations of individuals and balance those against the right to speak freely.
Damages payouts can be very expensive, and both the publisher and the author can be sued.
Authors are contractually bound to bring to ASP’s attention any section of the text written about
someone who is alive (whether using their real name or not) or where there is a reasonable concern
that what is written might be damaging.
ASP will decide whether to seek a legal reading of manuscripts. ASP carries insurance, through AIATSIS,
but is required to take every step possible to avoid a claim being made against it. We need to be
certain for the sake of our authors, as well as ASP, that we’ve done everything we can to avoid this.
Further inf
ormation: Arts Law Centre of Australia.
Permissions
ASP expects authors to correctly credit all copyright material, including:
• extracts of text, including poems
• graphs, diagrams, charts and tables
• music (scores and lyrics)
• illustrations, paintings, photographs and advertisements.
Authors must obtain permission to reproduce a ‘substantial part’ of any written work protected
by copyright. This can mean 200 words from a medium-length book, part or whole of an article
or essay, and even very short quotations from poems or songs. Permission should also be sought
for a shorter extract that summarises the crux of the creator’s argument or research. If in doubt,
seek permission or discuss with ASP.
Gaining copyright permissions can take weeks or even months, especially from overseas publishers.
If the person or organisation you’re seeking permission from asks you to supply information you
don’t have — like format, page extent or retail price — contact ASP.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
5
Ensure you gain permissions for text, photographs and images for both print and ebook editions
simultaneously.
Further inf
ormation: Australian Copyright Council.
Cultural appropriateness and responsibilities
We take Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander intellectual property and cultural rights seriously.
Intellectual property here means copyright. Cultural rights means peoples’ rights to their heritage.
Heritage includes objects, sites and knowledge. Knowledge includes languages, spiritual knowledge,
myths, legends or other similar material, illustrations, music, song, poetry and the like.
ASP contracts include a set of warranties or promises. One of these is that you have the right to
tell a story (and that someone else doesn’t have rights that prevent that) and that you have gained
the express permission of any relevant owner or custodian of traditional material and that you will
supply the permission prior to publication. This means you take responsibility for checking with
relevant communities and individuals that you have permission to use the material from those
who are entitled to give that permission. If your work derives from a PhD thesis for which you
sought the appropriate cultural approvals, ASP will still require an up-to-date written document
from the relevant people or communities, approving publication in book form.
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Board of the Australia Council for the Arts has
published
Protocols for using First Nations cultural and intellectual property in the arts, a booklet
detailing protocols when dealing with cultural heritage, including writing and literature.
Further inf
ormation: Arts Law Centre of Australia, Australian Copyright Council,
Australia Council for the Arts.
Referring to Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander
Australians
All ASP’s publications respect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and the wide range
of mainland and Torres Strait nations, languages and cultures.
When speaking generally, we use ‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’ to refer to individuals,
and ‘Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ when referring to a number of groups. If necessary,
the word ‘Indigenous’ can be used when describing all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples,
but ASP preference is to use the full term. Some writers choose to use the term ‘First Nations’.
Be careful not to use ‘Aboriginal’ on its own if the intended meaning includes Torres Strait Islander
people/s.Whenweworkwithspecificcommunitiesorlanguagegroups,weseekguidancefrom
those in authority about the respectful and appropriate language protocols.
It is preferable to use the term Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples rather than Indigenous.
If using the term ‘Indigenous’ or ‘Aboriginal’ ensure that it is only ever used as an adjective, not a
noun (for example an Indigenous person or an Aboriginal woman). Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander peoples can be used to encompass both Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islander
people, though not for one or the other when it is known which group is being spoken about.
When used to refer to the peoples of Australia, ‘Aboriginal’, ‘Torres Strait Islander’ and ‘Indigenous’
should be capitalised, as would be the name of any other group of people. Use a capital ‘I’ for
Indigenous when talking about Indigenous Australians but not for other indigenous peoples.
Do
not use the acronym ATSI or TSI.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
6
Whenspeakingaboutspecificpeopleorgroupswetrytousethenameforthespecificgroupor
languagegroupthatthatpersonidentifieswithoras;forexample,JaneSmithisaWorimiwoman;
Uluru is on Pitjantjatjara land.
Nodefinitivelistexistsforhowtospellnations,languagesorspecificwords.Ifauthorsarewriting
about their own communities, they may wish to use the community’s preferred spellings. AIATSIS
maintains the Austlang languages database, a comprehensive database of languages across
Australia, which may help. As well as locations, alternative spellings and linguistic information,
it also lists published dictionaries and wordlists.
You might choose to capitalise ‘Elder’ when speaking about an individual to appropriately
acknowledge their standing and their knowledge within their community, but use ‘elders’
when speaking more generically. The same goes for ‘traditional owner’.
If necessary, include a note on terminology to explain the reasons for your choice of words or
spellings, or your use of capitals or italics. This explanation could go in the preface or introduction,
oryoucouldaddanotetospecificwords.
Refer to the ‘Language’ section of the
Guidelines for the ethical publishing of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander authors and research from those communities for further information.
The
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples page of the Australian Government’
s Style manual
also provides useful information when writing about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
Plain English
Plain English makes writing accessible to a wide audience. This doesn’t mean dumbing-down
the writing, making it spartan or inelegant, or that the writing won’t have authority.
Using plain English means:
• applying a logical structure to the material
• using an
active voice, and not a
passive voice (e.g. passive voice, ‘we participated in a meeting
last Friday’; active voice, ‘we met last Friday’) (note: sometimes a passive voice may be more
appropriate)
• beingspecific(e.g.‘inNovember2020’,not‘recently’)
• avoiding wordiness (e.g. ‘Figure 1 shows’, not ‘Figure 1 is a diagrammatic representation of’;
‘because’, not ‘as a result of’)
• choosing simple words (compare within/in, upon/on, amongst/among, utilised/used)
• avoidingclichésandjargon(e.g.movingforward,speakto,levelplayingfield)
• using shorter rather than long sentences and paragraphs
• choosing the clearest language to carry your meaning.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
7
link to page 30
Information for editors
Go str
aight to the Quick style guide for examples of common styles.
Types of editing
Usually, ASP undertakes two editorial checks on manuscripts:
• copyediting, which focuses on grammar, spelling and punctuation to produce text that is
consistent in style and is free from errors and ready for the design process
• proofreading, to correct any typesetting errors and ensure the document is complete and ready
for publication.
In some cases, ASP also undertakes a substantive edit, which looks at the content and structure
of a document. If a substantive edit is required, ASP will discuss the work on a case-by-case basis.
Copyediting
If possible, an author’s preference should be respected even if it is contrary to advice provided
inthisguide.Ifyouortheauthorhaveareasontouseadifferentstyle,checkfirstwithASP
and be consistent.
Prepare a short report
tosendtoASPwhenyoureturntheeditedfiles.Include:
• your name and contact details
• title of manuscript/report etc. and author name/s
• filenamesforallfilesyouarereturning
• details about anything that is incomplete or still to come (e.g. dedication, foreword,
acknowledgments etc.)
• any content or legal issues about which ASP needs to be aware
• any information about which the designer needs to be aware
• a list of running headers and footers
• any information about which the proofreader needs to be aware.
Proofreading
Proofreading is the process of checking the design and layout of a document to ensure that
it is complete and free from errors. It does not provide an opportunity to make further changes
to the content.
All ASP proofreading is marked up in pdfs. Ensure:
• all instructions are clear and concise
• instructions are differentiated from text that is to be inserted or changed (e.g. by enclosing
instructions in square brackets).
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
8
Editing brief
ASP briefs copyeditors and proofreaders on the scope of work we’d like them to undertake.
The ASP editing brief will include information such as:
• whether the work will be published as a trade book or an academic title
• the extent of work required
• the format of the published work (page size and production quality, colour elements,
print and/or ebook)
• the intended readership
• whether we require the editor to liaise with ASP or directly with an author
• the publishing schedule.
Ifanythingisunclear,askASP.Letusknowassoonaspossibleifyoufindanyproblems
(e.g. incomplete material, legal issues etc.).
Some editing specifics
File names
Whensavingfiles,addyourinitialsanddatesenttotheendoffilename.
Using track changes
ASP uses Microsoft Word for all editing work.
Unless advised otherwise by ASP, use track changes for all edits except for basic edits such
as changing:
• punctuation (e.g. double spaces to single spaces, double quotes to single quotes,
hyphens to en dashes or em dashes)
• spelling corrections (for English words)
• presentation of citations
• paragraph spacing
• indents.
Using comments
Use Microsoft Word comments for author queries. Ensure all comments are clearly expressed.
Global changes
Be careful when using global changes. In particular, be careful not to change quotes, URLS etc.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
9
Checking facts
Spot check samples of text and any other material that may contain errors, referring anything to the
authorthatyoucannotconfirm,oranyworryingpatternofinaccuracyorinconsistency.Ifaninternet
source is cited, determine whether the source is reputable.
Preparing files for typesetting
Ifpreparingafileforthetypesetter,thefollowingisveryhelpfulforASP:
• create pages for any missing sections in the Word document (e.g. half title, reverse half-title,
full title, imprint, contents, acknowledgments, etc.). If there is no content available for these
pages, indicate the section with the title of the page in square brackets (e.g. [Half title])
• insert a section break at the end of the preliminary pages, between each chapter and before
the end matter
• insert page breaks between title page, imprint page, contents page etc.
• use inbuilt Word paragraph styles as much as possible
• generate an automatic table of contents to check that headings are all styled correctly
• make sure any editorial remarks in the text are in square brackets and highlighted in yellow
• don’textracttables,figuresorphotostoseparatefilesunlesstherearesomanythatitmakes
editingdifficult
• convert all automatic numbering on headings and lists to text
• highlight any non-standard characters or digraphs
• at completion of the editing, as well as supplying the Word document, please send a pdf copy.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
10
Formatting manuscripts for ASP
We prefer that our books adhere to the ASP style guide; however, occasionally, authors may have
aspecificreasonforvaryingthesestyles,perhapsforculturalorotherreasons.PleasecontactASP
as early as possible to discuss any exceptions before we brief our editors.
Structure of the document
The parts of the document, where included, should be in the order shown here.
Preliminary pages
(Usually numbered with Roman numerals in books.)
Half-title
Titleofthebook(subtitleisnotincluded).Sometimesthisfirstpage
of a book is used instead for endorsements.
Reverse half-title
Often blank but can contain a dedication or list of the author’s other books.
Title page
Title, subtitle, author(s) and publisher’s name and logo.
Reverse title-page/
This page lists copyright and bibliographic information and data.
Imprint page
ASP has a standard format for the imprint page and we will insert this.
However, do use this page to list funding partners who need to have
logos inserted (and insert their logos), photo and/or image credits,
cover image acknowledgments and any necessary captions for cover
images.Youwillhaveanopportunitytocheckthefinalassembledpage.
Foreword
Optional, and usually written by someone other than the author.
The author may recommend to ASP a suitable person to write a
foreword and ASP will then make a formal request.
Contents
• Include preliminary material, chapter titles, subheadings if
appropriate and end matter.
• In multi-authored works, add the relevant author’s name beside
the chapter title.
• If you can generate an automatic table of contents, it will make
your job and ASP’s job easier. You will need to apply Word’s inbuilt
‘Heading’ paragraph styles to do this (see ‘Typeface and text styles’
under ‘Format of the text’).
Lists
Listsofillustrations,figures,diagrams,tablesandmaps,asneeded
and in this order.
Preface
Author/editor’s rationale for undertaking the work. Acknowledgments
can be included here, or under a separate heading. Permissions can
be listed here, or on a separate page at the end of the manuscript.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
11
Acknowledgments
This is the author’s opportunity to acknowledge the help of any
research or editorial assistance, help with funding (sometimes
acknowledged on the imprint page), copyright organisations etc.
Contributors [in
Analphabeticallistofnames,affiliations,previousmajorpublications,
multi-authored works]
current work being undertaken and relevant biographical information.
Shortened forms/
If an abbreviations list is short and vital to an understanding of the
Abbreviations
work, include it here.
Introduction
Include the introduction as part of the preliminary pages only if it is
not vital to an understanding of the text as a whole.
Text
(Usually numbered with Arabic numerals and starting at page 1.)
Introduction
This can be Chapter 1 (or can simply be called ‘Introduction’ and can
be followed by Chapter 1).
Chapter 1,
You can gather chapters together into parts I, II, III or A, B, C etc.
Chapter 2 etc.
if helpful.
End matter
Appendix A,
Number each appendix separately and use a numbering system that
Appendix B etc.
differs from chapter numbers (i.e. not Chapter 1, Appendix 1; rather,
Chapter 1, Appendix A).
Shortened forms/
If an abbreviations list is too long to include in the preliminary pages,
Abbreviations
include it here.
Glossary
Alphabeticallistofshortdefinitionsoftermsusedinthetext.
Alternatively, this could appear in the preliminary pages.
Notes
Use endnotes only for material that cannot be incorporated in the
referencing system.
Number notes within each chapter (that is, restart numbering at ‘1’ for
each new chapter). The usual style is for endnotes to be at the end of
the book, but with multi-authored works they fall at the end of each
chapter. Check with ASP for further information.
References/
A reference list includes only works cited in the text. A bibliography
Bibliography
includes all cited texts plus other sources used in the writing of
the book.
Credits/Sources
The acknowledgment of sources for illustrations, quoted material etc.
(if not included in the preface). If this is not long, it can be included on
the imprint page.
Index
This is compiled after the manuscript has been typeset and paged,
and proofread.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
12
Format of the text
Typeface and
• Use an easy-to-read font, such as 12 point Times New Roman,
text styles
for all text, including indented quotes, notes and references.
(Note: change the ‘Normal’ style in Word’s inbuilt paragraph
styles to your preferred font.)
• Use Word’s inbuilt paragraph and character styles as much as
possible. (Note: you can change the font, size etc. of these inbuilt
styles by double-clicking on the style’s name on the Styles Pane
(found on the home menu bar). You can also create your own new
styles. Label them clearly and logically, e.g. ‘Normal-no indent’.)
• Use Word’s inbuilt heading paragraph styles (Heading 1, Heading 2
etc.) and you will be able to generate an automatic table of contents.
(Note:anymorethanfourorfiveheadinglevelscanbehardto
differentiateinafinaltypesetdocumentandmaybeanindication
that the text needs reorganising.)
Bold and italics
Don’t overuse bold and italic, and use them consistently.
Spacing of lines
• Double-space everything, including quotations, notes and captions.
and paragraphs
• Delete spacing between paragraphs. Instead, indent paragraphs
oneachparagraph’sfirstline,exceptafterheadings,subheadings
and block quotes. (Note: change ‘Normal’ paragraph style to be
indented, and create a new style with no indent based on ‘Normal’
and called ‘Normal-no indent’.)
Word and sentence
Use only one space between words and after all punctuation, including
spacing
full stops and colons.
Text alignment
Left align text and headings.
Hyphenation
Turn off the automatic hyphenation. You can do this by changing in the
‘Normal’ and other paragraph styles.
Global changes
Be careful not to change material unintentionally (e.g. spelling in direct
quotes, ‘Indigenous’ with a capital where the correct usage is lower case).
Headings
• Soyourheadingsareclear,consistentandeasytofind,useWord’s
inbuilt styles: Heading 1, Heading 2, Heading 3 etc. You can change
the font, size etc. of these styles by double-clicking on the style’s
name in the Styles Pane (found on the home menu bar). You can
also create your own new styles.
• Use minimal capitalisation for all headings.
• Check with ASP before using numbered headings.
Contents page
If you have used Word’s inbuilt paragraph styles for your headings,
you will be able to generate an automatic table of contents. Under
‘References’, go to ‘Table of Contents’ and use one of the built-in
automatic styles to generate the TOC. (Note: the Classic inbuilt style
is usually adequate.)
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
13
Figures, tables
ASP works with the author, copyeditor and designer to choose which
and Illustrations
images will reproduce well. The editor and/or ASP is responsible for
(photographs, line
editing captions and ensuring that captions match the images.
drawings, graphs,
maps etc.)
Tables
• Number tables consecutively.
• Include tables created in Word in the document at the spot you
would like them to fall. Include instructions about placement in
square brackets. Note that they may not end up in that exact spot,
but we will place them as closely as possible.
• Ifyourtableisajpeg,pdffileetc.,followtheinstructionsforfigure
placement.
• Include the table’s title above the table in the Word document.
Figures, maps etc.
• Numberfiguresandmapsseparatelyandconsecutively
(i.e. Figure 1, Map 1).
• Placeinstructionsforthetypesetteraboutfigureplacementin
square brackets near the spot you would like them to fall. Note that
they may not end up in that exact spot, but we will place them as
closely as possible.
• Includeintheinstructionstheexactnameoftheactualfile
(i.e.jpg,tif,eps,pdfetc.)ofthefigure,aswellasthefigurenumber
and highlight (e.g. [Figure 2 about here. File:
Figure 2-map.jpg]).
• Includethefigure’scaption(withcreditsinbrackets)underthe
above instruction clearly labelled as ‘caption’ and highlight
(e.g. [Caption:]
Map of the Brewarrina area showing major rivers.
(Map: Brenda Thornley)).
Photos/images
• Don’t number photographs unless you refer to them regularly
in the text.
• Place instructions for the typesetter about photo placement in
squarebrackets,usingtheactualnameofthefileandhighlight
(e.g. [
Photo 12-Jane and family.tif about here]).
• Include any captions (with credits in brackets) under the above
instructions clearly labelled as ‘caption’ and highlight (e.g. [Caption:]
Jane and family at Brewarrina, 1960. (Photo: Greg Smith,
State Library NSW)).
Hyperlinks
Leave any hyperlinks as ‘live links’ styled with Word’s inbuilt hyperlink
styles. Please check all hyperlinks just before submitting to ASP to
check they all still work properly.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
14
Copyediting styles
Spelling
Use Australian English. Refer to the
Macquarie dictionary online for the correct spelling and
presentation of English words and foreign words that have been adopted into Australian English.
Set your computer to Australian English.
Foreign words
Italicise foreign words, other than those in common use in Australian English (as per the
Macquarie dictionary) but replace foreign words with English where appropriate.
Note:
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander words are Australian words, so do not italicise them,
unless as part of a dictionary or language learning materials where it is useful to differentiate words.
Italic and bold type
Use italics for emphasis but remember that italics often look lighter on the page than normal type,
so are not always effective. Don’t over-use italics.
Use bold only for headings.
Capitalisation
ASP follows the contemporary style of punctuation that uses minimal capital letters.
• Use lower case for generic uses of words:
CanberraUniversity...theuniversity[specific/generic]
In the book
Disciplining the savages: savaging the disciplines . . .
Note that periodical titles retain maximal capitals.
Australian Aboriginal Studies
Rabbit-proof fence
Headings
Use minimal capitalisation for all headings:
Style guide: rules and conventions
How to make headings consistent
Checkthatheadingsrelatetoallthecopythatfollowsthem,notjusttothefirstsentenceor
paragraph. Keep them short and informative. Avoid using humour or irony as readers may
miss your point.
ASP prefers to avoid numbered headings. If you have a reason to number headings, check with
usfirst.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
15
Abbreviations, acronyms and initialisms
Spelloutshortenedformsatfirstuseandincludealisteitherinthepreliminarypagesor
intheendmatter.Youmaychoosetospelloutshortenedformsatfirstuseineachchapter.
In text, spell out names of states and territories throughout, unless used repeatedly. In tables
andfigures,abbreviationsmaybemoreappropriate.
Avoid abbreviating words in text. If you need to use abbreviations, ASP follows the
Style manual
recommendation to omit the full stop.
Mon, Tues, Wed, Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sun
ACT, NSW, NT, Qld, SA, Tas, WA, Vic
p 1, pp 1–5
no [number]
nd [no date: Smith nd, Clark nda, Clark ndb]
Dr, Mr, Cth
Latin abbreviations are the exception and retain full stops.
c., e.g., et al., etc., i.e.
Spell out Latin abbreviations in text, although you may choose to use them in brackets.
Variations of the term — for example, ‘native time’ — are common.
Variations of the term (e.g. ‘native time’) are common.
Block quotes
Use block quotes for quotes of 30 words of more.
Do not include the citation within the punctuation of a block quote. Place the citation after
thefinalpunctuationmark:
There is no incentive for public servants to take initiative because they are often protected in their
inefficiencyorotherwisebyavastoverpoweringbureaucracy.Thesystemdemandsconformity
and no ‘boat-rocking’. (Perkins 1975:157–60)
Do not insert a paragraph space above or below the block quote.
Quoted material
Reproduce copyright material exactly as in the original; do not change spelling or punctuation.
Ifthere’sasignificanterrorintheoriginal,insert[sic]immediatelyafterwardstoalertreaders.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
16
Bullet lists
Ensure each bullet point is grammatically consistent with others in the list.
Where the bullet points do not form whole sentences, use the following punctuation:
Use a selection of the following:
• bulleted points
• short paragraphs
• simple sentences.
If any of the bullet points are full sentences, convert all bullet points to full sentences.
Tables and figures
Copyeditalltablesandfiguresforconsistencyofstyle,andensureinformationcorresponds
with the text.
Spot check numbers in tables for accuracy.
Number consecutively in chapter order.
Table 1.1, Table 1.2, Table 2.1, Table 2.2
Figure 1.1, Figure 1.2, Figure 2.1, Figure 2.2
Check that notes and sources are included, if appropriate.
Includelistsoftablesandfiguresinthepreliminarypages,ifappropriate.
Numbers
In books for a general readership (trade books), spell out numbers zero to ninety-nine and use
digits for numbers 100 and above. Spell out zero to ninety-nine in text even when used with
measurements(e.g.fivekilometres)
In books for an academic or specialist readership, spell out numbers zero to nine and use digits
for numbers 10 and above. Use digits in measurements (e.g. 5 kilometres).
In tables use abbreviated measurements (e.g. 5 km).
If a number is used to begin a sentence, spell it out (or recast the sentence).
Adjacent numbers
In 2002, twenty extra people will be required. [trade books]
In 2002, 20 extra people will be required. / In 2002 the team will require
an extra 20 people. [in academic titles, separate sets of numbers with
a comma or rewrite]
Compounds
afifty-fouryearoldman;themanwasfifty-fouryearsold[tradebooks]
a 54-year-old man; the man was 54 years old [academic titles]
Dates
20 June 2005
1990s [no apostrophe]
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
17
Large numbers
1000 [in text], 1,000 [in tables]
170,000
one million [spell out large round numbers in text]
Ordinals
fiftiethanniversary,twentiethcentury[tradebooks]
50th anniversary, 20th century [academic titles]
Percentages
10 per cent [in text], 10% [in tables]
Spans of figures
pp 101–4, 210–16, 321–39, 397–424
[note the treatment of numbers between 10 and 19 in each hundred]
Decimal points
0.1 or 0.10
[present consistently as appropriate for the text]
Equations
1 + 1 = 2
2 – 1 = 1
[Use a space either side of mathematical signs. Use a spaced en dash,
not a hyphen, for the minus sign. If authors are unable to do this, the
copyeditor will replace hyphens with en dashes at the editing stage]
Fractions
one-sixth, three-quarters
Negative numbers
–55
[use an unspaced en dash, not a hyphen]
Ratios
1:100 [no space either side of the colon]
Money
$10.50, A$10.50
Time
1.30 pm
one-thirty, one o’clock [provides a more general sense]
Cross-references
All internal references to other sections in the document should be clearly described.
See ‘Fresh water’ in Chapter 6
Keep the number of cross-references using page numbers to a minimum as these have to be
updatedandcheckedduringthefinalproofing.Ifyoudousethem,typeasearchableplaceholder
for the page number, for example:
See page [XXX].
Do not use cross-references such as ‘
belowthefigure’or‘
aboveTable1’,asyourfiguremayend
up differently positioned to where it is in your manuscript.
Keep cross-references to a minimum.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
18
Endnotes
Check that endnotes are numbered correctly within each chapter (not throughout the book as
a whole) and that all necessary information is correctly supplied.
The usual style is for endnotes to be at the end of the book, but with multi-authored works they
can be at the end of each relevant chapter. Check with ASP.
Ensure that any references in endnotes are presented correctly. Convert to author–date citations
and move to the text if necessary.
Referring to web pages
Avoid referring only to URLs, since these can change. Provide enough information for readers
tobeabletofindtheintendedpage.
See the ‘Collection’ page of the AIATSIS website. [not, see https:/ aiatsis.gov.au/collection]
Court cases and other legal material
Ensure all legal material is cited accurately. If material is referred to often, you may choose
touseashortenedformafterthefirstuse.
Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) (the Native Title Act) [or the NTA]
Mabo v Queensland [No. 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1 (
Mabo) . . . in the
Mabo decision . . .
Afterthefirstfullmentionofanact,itdoesnotneedtobeitalicised.
Follo
w the Style manual advice about referring to Acts, bills, court cases and so on.
The
Australian guide to legal citation provides detailed information about how to refer
to court cases (Chapter 2), legislation (Chapter 3) and other legal material.
Punctuation styles
ASP generally recommends minimal punctuation, as per the Australian Government’s online
Style manual.
Ref
er to the online Style manual for detailed use of punctuation and for punctuation marks
that are not discussed in this guide.
Full stops
Follow conventional use but:
• don’t use with abbreviations, other than Latin abbreviations
• don’t use with contractions (Dr, Prof) or acronyms (AIATSIS, UK)
• don’t use after people’s initials (JM Brown) or in organisations’ names.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
19
Commas
Use to avoid ambiguity.
The student, said the teacher, was acting inappropriately. (teacher speaking)
The student said the teacher was acting inappropriately. (student speaking)
Thestudentfinalisedhisreportbeforehiscomputercrashed,andwalkedtothephotocopier.
(student walked to the photocopier)
Thestudentfinalisedhisreportbeforehiscomputercrashedandwalkedtothephotocopier.
(computer walked to the photocopier)
Use the serial, or Oxford, comma only to avoid misunderstanding.
There were many expeditions, including those of Sturt, Mitchell, Burke and Wills, and Darling.
Hyphens
Check the Macquarie dictionary for hyphenated words.
Useinadjectivalcompoundsbeforeanounbutnotwhenthecompoundismodified.
a well-known university
high-quality research, very high quality research
Don’tuseinacompoundmodifiedbyanadverbendingin‘ly’.
a highly regarded university
Dashes
Use en dashes:
• between spans of numbers and dates
3–6 pm (not 3-6 pm), 1970–72 (not 1970-72)
• for negative numbers (–5) and to show minus (5 – 5 = 0)
• in compounds where each word is in series or parallel: nouns with nouns, adjectives with adjectives
US–UK trade relations (not US-UK trade relations).
But note: United States – United Kingdom relations takes a spaced en dash as, when spelled out,
one or more of the entities has two or more words.
Use em rules (with a space on either side) as parenthetical dashes.
Needless to say we were game — on that night, anyway — to stand up and take part.
Use an unspaced two-em rule (——) to indicate a repeated name in a reference list/bibliography.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
20
Ellipses
Use a single space either side of an ellipsis.
e.g. Parliament . . . recognises Aboriginal peoples as traditional owners . . .
If authors have trouble doing this, type three full stops, with a space [#]before and after,
and the editor will change them to ellipses.
word#...#word
e.g. Parliament . . . recognises Aboriginal peoples as traditional owners . . .
Quotation marks
ASP follow
s the Style manual recommendations in relation to punctuation and quote marks.
Some points on usage:
• use single quotation marks
• usetodefineatermthefirsttimeitisused(e.g.theterm‘intergenerationalequity’means...)
• use double quotation marks for a quote within a quote
In defending the accuracy of the song, Ms Doe allowed that ‘McDonald’s animals were not
housed “in a farm” as such, but rather in a free range paddock’.
• if a whole sentence is a quotation, place the full stop inside the closing quote mark
He said, ‘At the time there was little they could do to prevent the removal of Old McDonald’s
animals.’
• if any part of the sentence is not quoted matter, place the closing quote mark inside the full stop
He said that ‘there was little they could do to prevent the removal’.
• where expressions such as ‘she said’ interrupt a quote, place the comma before the quote mark
‘There was little they could do to prevent the removal,’ he said.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
21
Citations and references
ASP prefers numbered endnotes for our trade titles. For academic and specialist titles we prefer
the author–date (Harvard) systems. Check with ASP before using a different system.
Citations
Present text citations in academic works as follows:
• one author: Haag (2009) reported . . . / as reported in the study (Haag 2009:10–11)
• two authors: Haag and Richards (2010) reported . . . / as reported in the study
(Haag and Richards 2010)
• three or more authors: (Haag et al. 2010)
• multiple citations: (Haag 2010; Richards 1902, 1908; WHO 2019) [list alphabetically
or as per author preference]
• multiple works by the same author: (Haag 2011a, 2011b
but Haag 2011a–c)
• original publication date: (Lawrence 2018[1923]).
Check that all citations appear in the reference list.
The reference list
A reference list includes only works cited in the text. A bibliography includes all cited works, as well
as works that are not cited. ASP prefers reference lists. Check with ASP before using a bibliography.
Names:
• forfirstauthor,placeacommaaftertheauthor’ssurname
• for subsequent authors names, place the initials before the surname
• use an ampersand between author names.
Publication date:
• place a comma after the publication year
• do not enclose the publication year in brackets
• where required, enclose day and month in brackets.
Titles:
• use minimal capitalisation for titles other than periodical titles
• use single quote marks for chapter titles and titles of articles
• use italics for titles of books, periodicals etc.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
22
Other publication details:
• for Australian placenames include the state or territory abbreviation unless the place
of publication is a capital city
• for United States placenames include the state postal abbreviation
• use minimal page numbers and a space before the number (e.g. p 54).
Online access details:
• provide URLs rather than using hyperlinks
• place URLs at the end of the reference list entry and do not use a full stop.
Follow the examples presented here. For reference requirements not presented in these examples,
refer to the
Style manual. Where no example is available, provide the minimum information required
so that a reader can locate the publication (e.g. original held by the author).
Book
In the subtitle, note that the subtitle, following the colon, only takes an initial capital where a word
would usually take a capital.
Bargallie, D 2020,
Unmasking the racial contract: Indigenous voices on racism in the
Australian Public Service, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra.
Perkins, C 1975,
A bastard like me, Ure Smith, Sydney.
Denzin, NK, YS Lincoln & L Tuhiwai Smith (eds) 2008,
Handbook of critical and Indigenous
methodologies, Sage Publications Inc., Thousand Oakes, CA.
Smith, LT 1999,
Decolonizing methodologies: research and Indigenous peoples, Zed Books,
London and New York, and University of Otago Press, Dunedin.
Book chapter
Include page numbers for book chapters.
Payne, A-M 2019, ‘For all of us — for none of you? Practical reconciliation’ in A Thomas,
A Jakubowicz & H Norman (eds),
Does the media fail Aboriginal political aspirations?
45 years of news media reporting of key political moments, Aboriginal Studies Press,
Canberra, pp 138–55.
Journal article
Note that there is no punctuation after the journal title and no spaces between volume,
issue and page numbers.
McCarthy, FD 1962, ‘The rock engravings of Depuch Island, north-west Australia’,
Records of the Australian Museum 2(5):121–48.
Carter, R 2007, ‘Racism and psychological and emotional injury: recognizing and assessing
race-based traumatic stress’,
The Counseling Psychologist 35(1):13–105.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
23
Journal article with doi
Notethatanaccessdateisnotneededifadigitalobjectidentifier(doi)isprovided.Donotuseafull
stop after the doi.
Bergman, K, P Sarkar, V Glover & TG O’Connor 2010, ‘Maternal prenatal cortisol and infant cognitive
development: moderation by infant–mother attachment’,
Biological Psychiatry 67:1026–32,
doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2010.01.002
Publication with an organisation as the author
Order alphabetically as per the abbreviation used in the citation.
ACAD (Australian Centre for Ancient DNA) 2020, ‘About’, accessed 17 October 2020,
www.adelaide.edu.au/acad/about
APA (American Psychiatric Association) 2013,
Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders
(5th edn), APA, Arlington, VA.
ATSIC (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission) 1992,
ATSIC annual report 1990–1991,
ATSIC, Canberra.
Two or more works by the same author
Orderworkschronologically,withtheearliestworkfirst.Forsecondandsubsequentwords,
replace the author’s name with two em dashes (em rules).
Moreton-Robinson, A 1992, ‘Masking gender and exalting race: Commonwealth Government
employment policies’,
Australian Feminist Studies 7(15):5–10.
—— 2000,
Talkin’ up to the white woman: Indigenous women and feminism,
University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Qld.
—— P Anderson, L Blue, L Nguyen & T Pham 2020,
Report on Indigenous success in higher degree
by research: prepared for Australian Government Department of Education and Training,
Indigenous Research and Engagement Unit, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane,
accessed 24 November 2020, https:/ eprints.qut.edu.au/199805/1/49092585.pdf
More than six authors
Use your judgment about whether to include all author names. Where a reference list contains
multipleworkswithmorethansixauthors,itisusuallybesttoprovideonlythefirstsixnames,
followed by et al.
Gray, L-A, HA D’Antoine, SYC Tong, M McKinnon, D Bessarab, N Brown et al. 2017, ‘Genome-
wide analysis of genetic risk factors for rheumatic heart disease in Aboriginal Australians
provides support for pathogenic molecular mimicry’,
Journal of Infectious Diseases 216(11):1460–70, https:/ doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix497
Edition no.
Smith, LT 2012,
Decolonizing methodologies: research and Indigenous peoples (2nd edn),
Zed Books, London and New York.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
24
No publication date
Deadly Questions nd, ‘Explore’, accessed 21 January 2019, https:/ deadlyquestions.vic.gov.au/explore
Original date of publication
Fanon, F 1986[1952],
Black skins, white masks, translated by Charles L Markmann,
Pluto Press, London.
Lawrence, DH 2018[1923],
Kangaroo (Text Classics edn), introduced by Nicolas Rothwell,
Text Publishing, Melbourne.
Conference paper
Gondarra, D 2006, ‘The thin black line: living apartheid on Groote Eylandt’, paper presented
at The Border Politics of Whiteness Conference, Critical and Cultural Studies,
Macquarie University, Sydney, 11–13 December.
Discussion paper
Altman, J 2001,
Sustainable development options on Aboriginal land: the hybrid economy in the
twenty-first century, discussion paper 226, Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research,
Australian National University, Canberra.
Newspaper article
Note the inclusion of the day and month in brackets after the year, and the inclusion of the place
of publication if the newspaper cannot be expected to be widely known.
Bourchier,D2010(28February),‘It’srainingfish...noreally’,
Northern Territory News, accessed
25 May 2011, www.ntnews.com.au/article/2010/02/28/127891_ntnews.html
Dungey, J 2000 (22 January), ‘Dismissing Eddie Gilbert’,
Sydney Morning Herald Good Weekend
Magazine, pp 10–15.
Venosta, J 2017 (19 July), ‘Former Canadian Regional Park given Aboriginal name’,
The Courier
(Ballarat), accessed 24 November 2020, www.thecourier.com.au/story/4800678/regional-
park-returns-to-indigenous-roots-photos/
Wheretheauthorofanewspaperarticleisunknown,anin-textreferenceisoftensufficient:
. . . as reported in the
Referee (30 January 1855, p 8) / (
Argus, ‘Vice on the riverbank Shepparton’,
17 November 1955, p 9).
Theses and other unpublished works
Do not italicise titles of unpublished works. Do not place quote marks around thesis titles.
Smith, CE 1989, Designed society and the Dreaming: assessing the relationship between style,
social structure and environment in Aboriginal Australia, unpublished BA (Honours) thesis,
University of New England, Armidale, NSW.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
25
Web page
Where a web page is part of a larger publication, treat it like a book chapter. If a web address starts
with https:/ www, shorten it to www.
ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) 2014, ‘Chronic kidney disease’ in
4727.0.55.003 —
Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health survey: biomedical results, 2012–13,
ABS, accessed 17 April 2020, www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/by%20Subject
/4727.0.55.003~2012-13~Main%20Features~Chronic%20Kidney%20Disease~113
Churchill, B 2020 (23 November), ‘No one escaped COVID’s impacts, but big fall in tertiary
enrolments was 80% women. Why?’,
The Conversation, accessed 23 November 2020,
https:/ theconversation.com/no-one-escaped-covids-impacts-but-big-fall-in-tertiary-
enrolments-was-80-women-why-149994
Parliament of Australia 2008, ‘Apology to Australia’s Indigenous peoples’, accessed 2 July 2020,
www.aph.gov.au/Visit_Parliament/Whats_On/Exhibitions/Custom_Media/Apology_to_
Australias_Indigenous_Peoples
Web pdf
Where practical, follo
w the Style manual recommendation to link to a landing page rather than
directly to a pdf.
Anderson, P & R Wild 2007,
Ampe Akelyernemane Meke Mekarle, ‘Little children are sacred’: report
of the Northern Territory Board of Inquiry into the Protection of Aboriginal Children from
Sexual Abuse, Department of the Chief Minister, Northern Territory Government, Darwin,
accessed5March2020,www.humanrights.gov.au/sites/default/files/57.4%20“Little%20
Children%20are%20Sacred”%20report.pdf
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet 2020,
Closing the Gap report 2020, Commonwealth
of Australia, Canberra, accessed 23 November 2020, https:/ ctgreport.niaa.gov.au/
[Closing the Gap is a policy title, hence the capital G]
Film
Noyce, P 2002,
Rabbit-proof fence, Hanway and Australian Film Finance Corporation, Australia.
TV show
Bare, I (director) 2014, ‘Episode 6: Adam Goodes’,
Who do you think you are?, Series 6,
television program, SBS Television, Sydney.
Online video
Ungunmerr, M-R 2017 (28 November),
Dadirri, YouTube video, accessed 20 July 2018,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tow2tR_ezL8
Social media
See the Style manual for more information on referencing social media.
#SOSblakaustralia nd, ‘Stop the forced closure of Aboriginal communities in Australia’, Facebook,
accessed 14 March 2016, https:/ m.facebook.com/sosblakaustralia/about?expand_all=1
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
26
Bond, C 2019 (30 April), ‘Also please stop weaponising . . . ’, Twitter post, accessed 1 April 2020,
https:/ twitter.com/drcbond?lang=en
Gilchrist, S 2016 (21 September), ‘Everywhen: the eternal present in Indigenous art from Australia’,
Yale Books Unbound, blog post, accessed 20 November 2017, http:/ blog.yalebooks.
com/2016/09/21/everywhen-the-eternal-present-in-australian-indigenous-art/
Heiss, A 2008 (12 February), ‘Rallying the troops — to get out of the NT’, blog post, accessed
15 Mar
ch 2016, http:/ anitaheissblog.blogspot.com.au/2008/02/rallying-troops-to-get-
out-of-nt.html
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
27
Quick style guide
This is a quick reference for common style questions. For further information, see pp [15–27].
Topic
Examples
Aboriginal or Torres
balanda, milil (a vine), yidaki (didjeridu) [not italic]
Strait Islander words
Aboriginal or Torres
Many of Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people prefer
Strait Islander people
tobecalledbytheirspecificgroupsorlanguagegroups.
‘TorresStraitIslanderpeople’refersspecificallytoFirstNationspeople
who have historic and cultural links to the Torres Strait Islands. All other
First Nations people of Australia are Aboriginal people. The terms
‘Indigenous’ and ‘First Nations people’ refer to all of Australia’s
Indigenous people.
Abbreviations
Mon, Tues, Wed, Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sun
ACT, NSW, NT, Qld, SA, Tas, WA, Vic
p 1, pp 1–5
Latin abbreviations
e.g., et al., etc., i.e.
Acts
Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 (Cth)
Native Title Act 1993 (Cth)
Northern Territory National Emergency Response Act 2007 (Cth)
(the Intervention)
Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth)
Book titles
Unmasking the racial contract: Indigenous voices on racism in the
Australian Public Service
Block quotes
30 words of more
Bullet lists
Use a selection of the following:
• bulleted points
• short paragraphs
• simple sentences.
Captions: how to
[Caption:] Figure 1.1: John Smith, Adelaide, 1901 (photograph courtesy
insert in a manuscript
of Sam Smith)
[Caption:] Figure 1.1: John Smith (photograph: Sam Smith)
[Caption:] Figure 1.1: Donny Woolagoodja,
Namarali at rest, 2004.
Acrylic on canvas, 1802 x 881 cm. Photograph from Blundell
and Woolagoodja (2005:192) reproduced with permission of
Donny Woolagoodja.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
28
Topic
Examples
Citations
Haag (2009) reported . . .
(Haag 2009:10–11)
Haag and Richards (2010) reported . . .
(Haag and Richards 2010)
(Haag et al. 2010) [for three or more authors]
(Haag 2010; Richards 1902, 1908)
(Haag 2011a, 2011b
but Haag 2011a–c)
(Lawrence 2018[1923])
Court cases
Mabo v Queensland [No. 1] (1988) 166 CLR 186
Mabo v Queensland [No. 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1
Dashes: closed
US–UK trade relations (but United States – United Kingdom relations)
en dashes
–5
3–6 pm
1918–89
Spaced em dashes
We were game — on that night, anyway — to stand up and take part.
Dates
20 June 2005
1990s [no apostrophe]
1918–89 [but use full years in obituaries]
Dictionary
Macquarie dictionary [online]
Ellipses
Parliament . . . recognises Aboriginal peoples as traditional owners . . .
Emphasis
the term ‘intergenerational equity’ is used . . .
Figure and table
[Figure 2 about here. File:
Figure 2-map.jpg]
placement
Foreign words
keris (daggers)
Headings
A note on terminology
Terminology: using Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander words
Initials
GA Robinson, TGH Strehlow
Language names
Ngarluma, English, Murrinh-Patha [not italic]
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
29
Topic
Examples
Numbers
zero to ninety-nine, 100, 101,102 etc. [in text, trade books]
zero to nine, 10, 11,12 etc. [in text, academic titles]
1000 [in text], 1,000 [in tables]
170,000
one million [spell out large round numbers in text]
firsttoninety-ninth,twentiethcentury[tradebooks]
firsttoninth,10thetc.,20thcentury[academictitles]
46–7, 10–16, 110–16, 402–5, 523–6 [minimal page numbers]
5percent[intext],5%[intablesandfigures]
Personal
(Grace Evans, personal communication, 1 May 2020)
communication
(Grace Evans, pers. comm., 1 May 2020) [for frequent use]
Grace Evans (pers. comm., 1 May 2020) said . . .
Place names
Uluru, Gariwerd, Titjikala [not italics]
Possessives
Smith’s paper, Hughes’ paper
Quote marks
He said, ‘I understood it was important.’
‘I understood it was important,’ he said.
He said that he ‘understood it was important’.
Subheadings
A note on terminology
Terminology: using Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander words
URLs
The Australian guide to legal citation . . . [in text]
Australian guide to legal citation . . . https:/ law.unimelb.edu.au/mulr/
aglc/about [in reference list]
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
30
Commonly used words
1967 Referendum, the
Close the Gap campaign/ Closing the Gap policy
A
coexist
Aboriginal Aboriginal land councils but Northern
Collection, the
Land Council, Central Land Council etc.
Commonwealth of Australia, but
Aborigines Protection Board (also the Board)
Commonwealth government
acknowledgment
Constitution (Australian), the (but constitutional)
adviser
cooperation
affectionately (not affectionally)
co-worker
am (not a.m.)
cooperate
among [not amongst]
coordinate
Anangu
coronavirus
Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands,
country[l.c.forgeneraluse,butcapforspecific
or APY Lands
use, e.g. Bawaka Country]
Aotearoa New Zealand
COVID / COVID-19
Apology, the
cross-cultural
APY Lands, or Anangu Pitjantjatjara
CrownandCrownlandc.1890[inrefs,figures
Yankunytjatjara Lands
etc.; in text, use circa or about]
audiovisual
D
Australian Constitution, the Constitution
decision making
but decision-making process
Australian Government [not Commonwealth
Dreaming, the [not Dreamtime]
Government]
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres
E
StraitIslanderStudies(inthefirstinstance
Ebook
and AIATSIS or the Institute thereafter)
Ecommerce
B
e.g. (not eg)
Bringing them home: report of the national
elders (or Elder if referring to an individual)
inquiry into the separation of Aboriginal
email
and Torres Strait Islander children from their
F
families (or the Bringing them home report)
Federal Court / Federal Court of Australia
Budget [cap when referring to a government
/ the court (when used both generically
Budget]
andspecifically)
C
federal government
Cabinet [cap when referring to a government
Federation
Cabinet]
First Nations [Australia]
CDRom capitalise not capitalize (and the same
First Nations [Canada: indigenous people who
for other words ending in ise/ize)
are not Inuit or Métis. The collective term
Central Australia
for Indians, Inuit and Métis is ‘indigenous
centre not center (and the same for other words
peoples’
not ‘First Nations’]
ending in re/er)
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
31
First World War rather than World War I
no one
(do not abbreviate to WWI)
north-east New South Wales
firsthand
north-east / north-west
Freedom Ride
Northern Australia
front line (n)/front-line (adj.)
NSWinofficialtitlesbutNewSouthWales
H
when referring to the state/place; also,
New South Wales Government (formal
health care [two words]
title) but the state government when
I
used generically
i.e (not ie)
Northern Territory Emergency Response
indigeneity
(NTER, the Intervention)
Indigenous when referring to Aboriginal
O
and Torres Strait Islander people
ongoing
indigenous [lower case when referring
generically to indigenous peoples around
P
the world]
Parliament of Australia / the parliament
inquiry
People, not persons
intercultural
per cent [two words, but use % in tables
Inuit [plural:
Inuit means ‘the people’ so do not
and in statistical reports]
add ‘the’ or ‘people’]
pm (not p.m. when referring to the afternoon
Inuk [singular of Inuit]
or evening)
Inuktitut [language]
policymaker
policymaking
K
postcolonial
kilometres (spell out in main text)
postdoctoral
Koori (NSW) and Koorie (Victoria)
postgraduate
L
postwar
Land Council
practice (n), practise (v)
licence (noun), license (verb), licensed (adjective)
Prime Minister, the (when referring to the
current prime minister; lower case when
M
referring to former prime ministers)
Mabo and others v. Queensland (No. 2)
program
(or the Mabo case)
Māori
R
Métis
RacialDiscriminationAct1975(inthefirst
instance and the Act thereafter)
N
reconciliation [general]
National Apology, the (or the Apology)
Reconciliation Action Plans
National Aborigines and Islanders Day
Reconciliation, the
Observance Committee (or NAIDOC)
native title
S
National Native Title Tribunal
saltwater
Night-time
Second World War rather than World War II
non-Indigenous
(do not abbreviate to WWII)
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
32
secret–sacred (en dash not hyphen) section (s)
/ sections (ss)
self-management
settler colonial/settler colonialism
short-lived
skilful
sociocultural
socioeconomic
songlines
south-east/ern
south-west but South West
(of Western Australia)
South-East Asia
south-eastern
state (both for state and territory and for the
body politic when used in its generic form)
state government [l.c.]
stockwork/ers
Stolen Generations [not Generation]
T
terra nullius [roman]
Third World
Thursday Island, or T.I.
Top End
traditional owners
W
Wave Hill walk-off (or the Gurindji strike)
website
Welcome to Country
wellbeing
Western
Western society
while [not whilst]
White Australia
whitefella
Worldview
Y
years not years’ when used in the possessive
(for example, ’45 years experience)
Yolŋu[notYolngu]
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
33
References
Aboriginal Studies Press 2015,
Guidelines for the ethical publishing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander authors and research from those communities, AIATSIS, Canberra, accessed 8 May
2021,https:/ aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-09/ethical-publishing-guidelines.pdf
Australia Council for the Arts 2019,
Protocols for using First Nations cultural and intellectual
property in the arts (revised edn), Australia Council for the Arts, Pyrmont, NSW, accessed
8 May 2021, www.australiacouncil.gov.au/programs-and-resources/Protocols-for-using-
First-Nations-Cultural-and-Intellectual-Property-in-the-Arts/
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies 2020,
AIATSIS code of ethics for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research, AIATSIS, Canberra, accessed 8 May 2021,
https:/ aiatsis.gov.au/research/ethical-research/code-ethics
Melbourne University Law Review Association Inc & Melbourne Journal of International Law Inc.
2018,
Australian guide to legal citation (4th edn), Melbourne University Law Review
Association Inc., accessed 10 May 2021, https:/ law.unimelb.edu.au/mulr/aglc/about
Snooks & Co. 2002,
Style manual for authors, editors and printers, John Wiley and Sons, Milton, Qld.
Aboriginal Studies Press style guide for authors and editors
34
Australian Institute of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Studies
GPO Box 553, CANBERRA ACT 2601
P 02 6246 1183
E xxx@xxxxxxx.xxx.xx
aiatsis.gov.au/asp
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