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Updated 16 October 2014 Taylor & Francis Style Sheet non-standard Journal title and acronym Women’s History Review (RWHR) Trim size B5 Catchline Women’s History Review, 2013 Vol. XX, No. X, Month 2009, pp. X–X, http://dx.doi.org/0000... Footline © 2013 Taylor & Francis

Running heads A. Author and B. Author (verso) Women’s History Review (recto) In Editorials use Editorial (verso) In Reviews use Book Reviews () Logo Routledge Article type (when needed) REVIEW ESSAY (above title) INTRODUCTION: Title of Introduction Title Caps for Main Words Before : lower case after colon Authors An Author and Another Author Affiliation Given in first footnote (see Notes on contributors below) Received dates Not given Abstract Italics, no heading Keywords Not given Correspondence details Given in first page footnote (see Notes on contributors below) Headings A Bold, Caps for Main Words: lower case after colon B Italic, Caps for Main Words: lower case after colon Indented Tables Table 1. Title of Table ranged left Source: Source of table. Table 1 in text. Figures Figure 1 Title of figure. Ranged left Source: Source of figure. Figure 1 in text. Permissions statement for If the rightsholder has supplied text for this purpose, use their text. third-party figure and table Otherwise, insert the rightsholder’s name within the square : captions © [Rightsholder]. Reproduced by permission of xxx. Permission to reuse must be obtained from the rightsholder. Displayed quotations Indented left and right. Lists Follow author. Indented Acknowledgements At end before notes Funding A heading. Goes after Acknowledgements Text smaller Funding agency written out in full. Grant number in square brackets. Multiple grant numbers separated by and . Agencies separated by semi-colon, e.g. This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust [grant number xxx]. This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust [grant number xxx], [grant number xxx]; Cancer Research UK [grant number xxx]; another funder [grant number xxx]. Supplemental data A heading. Goes after Funding Text smaller Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here. [link to data] Notes numbers in text.1 Use endnotes - see reference style below Notes on contributors First page under short rule Author A is ...... her publications include...... Correspondence to: ...... Email: Author B is ...... Appendix Following references. B heading. Spelling preferences Follow author. Punctuation Single quotes Unspaced for parenthetical dash Numbers and units Spelt out numbers one hundred and below. Twenty-two. But 30% Dates Twentieth century. 1930s. 3 May 1990. Editorial Section heading: EDITORIAL As article. Other article types Section heading: VIEWPOINT As article Book reviews Section heading: Book Reviews

Title of Book: lower case after colon AUTHOR’S NAME Publisher Location: Publisher, Year Pp xiii + 366. £14.99. ISBN 9780748640164

[Use ISBN:13 number, no need to specify if hardback/paperback etc.]

Notes (If present Notes come before reviewer name/affiliation block) (Follow same style as articles) REVIEWER NAME Affiliation © 201X, Reviewer Name

Reference Style References are presented using a numbered endnotes system, cued in the text by superscript numbers, no brackets. Author/date systems are not permitted.

Section heading: Notes

A full reference is given the first time the work is mentioned:

Ted Thompson (Ed.) (1987) Dear Girl: the diaries and letters of two working women, 1897-1917 (London: The Women’s Press).

Further references should consist of the author’s and the title of the work or, if it is long, shortening the title:

Taylor, Eve and the New Jerusalem.

Please do not use op. cit. However, ibid. should be used to refer to the same work as that cited immediately above.

For journal articles: Sandra Stanley Holton (1992) The Suffragist and the ‘Average Woman’, Women’s History Review, 1, pp. 9-24.