All of the sources you use in your work have to be referenced using the Leeds Beckett Harvard style. For example, a book you use needs to have a citation in the text:
(Stephens, 2020)
and a corresponding reference at the end of your work:
Stephens, P. (2020) Absence of clutter: minimal writing as art and literature. Cambridge: The MIT Press.
You can find guidelines and lots of examples on the Skills for Learning website:
Staff and students can request new items for the Library collection.
See the Request It! page to find out more.
Individual eBook titles can be accessed online through Discover. The following eBook collections are also available:
DOAB provides access to over 70,000 scholarly, peer-reviewed open access books, on a variety of subjects.
The Ebook Central collection includes titles purchased by your librarian, such as key resources on from reading lists and other eBooks for wider reading.
Institution of Civil Engineers collection, but also useful to anyone researching architecture, building and the built environment, land management, property management, urban design, planning, transport and urban design.
We have access to the eBook collection up until 2016, and the full text journal archive content between 1836 and 2002 containing every peer-reviewed technical paper published by the ICE. Once you have run a search on the database you can select the years 1836-2002.
Focuses on adult comic books and graphic novels. Includes works from both recognised and less mainstream artists. You can also access interviews, criticism, and journal articles that document the continual growth and evolution of this art form.
Discover a new topic or subject with these introductory eBooks written by authors who are experts in their field.
VLE Books covers a wide range of topics based on your core course reading list and is one of our largest owned eBook collections.
There are also a number of free open access eBook providers, including: