You must be free then and delivery in 12 hours. You have to choose one from Section A and one from Question B
It is on competition law uk
Exam-style referencing is used to reference ‘in-text’. It means that your references are inserted in the body of your text, instead of in the footnotes
— as illustrated below. Accordingly, you should put a bracket at the
end of a quote (where you have still included quotation marks) or at the
end of a paraphrased sentence/argument, and indicate where that
information comes from in short-hand. As mentioned before, references or
citations in brackets will not count towards word limit. You can deduct
them from your total word count.
For example, if you wrote about
what (scholar) Tania Aplin said about an area of law, you could convey
that argument and put the author’s name in brackets at the end of the
sentence, e.g. (Aplin). Alternatively, if referring to an author’s
opinion, you could start a sentence mentioning that author (e.g. Tania
Aplin) followed by a description of their position in my own words, e.g.
“In Aplin’s opinion…” or “According to Aplin…”.
If you wrote
about a particular case, you would end the sentence with the short-hand
version of the case, e.g. (Bauman v Faussell) instead of the full case
citation (Bauman v Faussell [1978] RPC 485 (EWCA)). You may italicize
case names.
You may choose to move your exam-style references to
footnotes. If you choose to put your references in footnotes, then make
sure that all the sources are properly cited in the footnotes. Whether
you choose to place your exam-style references in–text or in footnotes,
you are not expected to use OSCOLA guide in your references.


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