Contents

Attribution

Examples

Most of the content has been copied from one place

Example A

Example B

Copyright owner / source unknown

Example A – Recommended for archival collections and publication use.

Example B – Abridged version version suitable for internal / teaching use

My own work

Example A – UniSA owns copyright (format - Author, School, Institution)

Example B – UniSA owns copyright (format - Author, Institution)

Example C – UniSA owns copyright (format – Team, Portfolio, Institution)

Television broadcasts

Example A – off-air recording copied in reliance on the Part VA Statutory Licensing Scheme

Example B – full citation

Example C – off-air recording copied in reliance on the Part VA Statutory Licensing Scheme

Films

Example A – full citation

Example B - abridged

Photographs

Example A – Creative Commons

Example B – Photographer unknown

Example C – royalty free (for print use)

Example D – royalty free (for online use)

Figures and other factually derived diagrams

Example A – Figure from a textbook

Example B – Figure which has been adapted

YouTube clips

Example A – Creative Commons

Example B – Creative Commons

Library subscribed video resources

Example A – Kanopy Streaming

Terms of Use Statements

Student work

Attribution

A good rule of thumb for what to include in an attribution statement is:

Title

Author

Source

License (terms of use)

If the source of the content does not contain all the information necessary for a complete citation, include as much detail as you can and add a statement that the creator is unknown.

The attribution statement should be clear and legible. If it is not possible to include an attribution statement with the work copied, use a bibliography or list of sources that clearly identifies which citation accompanies which work.(Adapted from Best practices for attribution by CreativeCommons.org. under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.)

Examples

Most of the content has been copied from one place

Example A

Unless otherwise stated, all text, images, logos, diagrams and photographscopyright Joe Blogs.

Example B

Unless otherwise stated, all photographs courtesy of the State Library of South Australia.

Copyright owner / source unknown

Example A – Recommended for archival collections and publication use.

'Source unknown. All reasonable efforts have been taken to identify the copyright owner of this material. If you are the copyright owner or know who they are, please contact '.

Example B – Abridged version version suitable for internal / teaching use

This presentation contains writing examples from a range of Australian and international newspapers. Attribution is provided for those examples where the source and author can be identified.

My own work

Example A – UniSA owns copyright (format - Author, School, Institution)

Jane Smith, Lecturer. School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy, University of South Australia

Example B – UniSA owns copyright (format - Author, Institution)

John Green, University of South Australia.

Example C – UniSA owns copyright (format – Team, Portfolio, Institution)

Published by Learning Advisors, Teaching and Innovation Unit, University of South Australia

Television broadcasts

Example A – off-air recording copied in reliance on the Part VA Statutory Licensing Scheme

Emergency. Presented Jenny Brockie, [Off-air recording] Broadcast 1 Sept 2009 at 7:30pm, SBS, 60 min.

Example B – full citation

'Born free', episode 12: Dexter. Directed by Michael Cuesta, written by Melissa Rosenberg and Daniel Cerone, Showtime Entertainment, c2006.

Example C – off-air recording copied in reliance on the Part VA Statutory Licensing Scheme

Megastructures: Hoover Dam Bridge (National Geographic). [Off-air recording]. Broadcast Date: 25 Feb 2013A

Films

Example A – full citation

The Castle, produced by Debra Choate, directed by Rob Sitch; written and conceived by Santo Cilauro, Tom Gleisner, Jane Kennedy and Rob Sitch. Frontline Television Productions Pty Ltd, 1997, 82 min.

Example B - abridged

Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, 1977, George Lucas [DVD] Lucas Films.

Photographs

Example A – Creative Commons

Sensationsby Carolina Pitanga, 2009. Viewed 1 Sept 2009 at Licensed under a CC BY-NC-SA 2.0licence.

Example B – Photographer unknown

'Bob Hawke and Hazel Hawke at Lodge', Canberra, 14 March 1983, photographer unknown. Viewed 1 Sept 2009. Family photograph collection, Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Library

Example C – royalty free (for print use)

Cracked ice by myshkovsky, 2016. Viewed 17 May 2017 at Stock photo ID:511582938

Example D – royalty free (for online use)

Cracked iceby myshkovsky, 2016. Stock photo ID: 511582938. Viewed 17 May 2017.

Figures and other factually derived diagrams

Example A – Figure from a textbook

Figure 17.1. Cooper, GS, Krever, E & Vann, RJ 2002, Income taxation: commentary and materials, 4th edn, Australian Tax Practice, Sydney, NSW, p. 345.

Example B – Figure which has been adapted

'The Art flowchart' adapted from Escritt, S 2000, Art nouveau, Phaidon, London, p. 15.

YouTube clips

Example A – Creative Commons

Developing a research question by Laurier Library [Online YouTube clip]. Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0 BY Licence. Accessed [insert access date dd mm yyyy]

Example B – Creative Commons

Peer review in 3 minutes by libnscu [Online YouTube clip]. Published under a Creative Commons 3.0 BY-NC-SA US license. Accessed [insert access date dd mm yyyy]

Library subscribed video resources

Example A – Kanopy Streaming

The Code: Numbers - Ep 1 of 3. (2012). Kanopy online streaming. Educational re-use permitted.

Terms of Use Statements

Student work

Reproduced with permission from the author for use in University of South Australia programs and courses. Further reproduction without the prior written permission of the author(s) and the University of South Australia is strictly prohibited.