How to Cite
Notes
These records are provided for research purposes only. For use beyond research, permission
must be received from the original repository. No reproduction or distribution of
media files (pdf or audio) is allowed without the permission of the original repository.
All responsibility for copyright infringement and invasion of privacy arising from
use of reproductions is assumed by the user.
Many of the pdf files in the Landscapes collections are selected portions of the document
from the source institution (for example a document of the minutes of a meeting will
contain the minutes of the full meeting on the original source institution's site,
but only the pages relevant to the project on this project's site. This is described
in the Immediate Source of Acquisition section of the page for the document. If you
are in any doubt about the completeness of the pdf file on the project site, please
confirm against the document in the source institution. Reference information is provided
on each record's page on our site, often with additional information in the metadata
(viewable by clicking on the metadata link).
Every page on this site has a unique static URL address which results in simpler,
more reliable citations. The URL is visible in the URL box at the top of your browser
window. The footer on each page specifies an edition number, should you want to include
that.
Example citation
A citation for the page for the Oral History of Keiko Mary Kitagawa as seen on April
1, 2021:
MLA citation
Landscapes of Injustice Research Collective. "Keiko Mary Kitagawa, interviewed by
Rebeca Salas, 17 June 2017." Landscapes of Injustive Archive, edited by Jordan Stanger-Ross, U of Victoria, 1 Apr. 2021, https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/oral_history_kita115_2017-06-17.html.
Chicago citation
Landscapes of Injustice Research Collective. "Keiko Mary Kitagawa, interviewed by
Rebeca Salas, 17 June 2017." Landscapes of Injustice Archive. Ed. Jordan Stanger-Ross. Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed April 1, 2021.
https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/oral_history_kita115_2017-06-17.html.
APA citation
Landscapes of Injustice Research Collective 2021. Keiko Mary Kitagawa, interviewed
by Rebeca Salas, 17 June 2017. In J. Stanger-Ross (Ed), Landscapes of Injustice Archive. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/oral_history_kita115_2017-06-17.html.
Example citation
A citation for the page for the Nellie McClung essay on "Find the scapegoat, Japanese
Canadians" as seen on April 1, 2021:
MLA citation
McClung, Nellie. "Find the scapegoat, Japanese Canadians" Landscapes of Injustive Archive, edited by Jordan Stanger-Ross, U of Victoria, 1 Apr. 2021, https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/bca_pr0542_ms0010_box_5_file_2.html.
Chicago citation
McClung, Nellie. "Find the scapegoat, Japanese Canadians." Landscapes of Injustice Archive. Ed. Jordan Stanger-Ross. Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed April 1, 2021.
https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/bca_pr0542_ms0010_box_5_file_2.html.
APA citation
McClung, N. 1937. Find the scapegoat, Japanese Canadians. In J. Stanger-Ross (Ed),
Landscapes of Injustice Archive. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from https://loi.uvic.ca/archive/bca_pr0542_ms0010_box_5_file_2.html.
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How to Cite
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Terminology
Readers of these historical materials will encounter derogatory references to Japanese
Canadians and euphemisms used to obscure the intent and impacts of the internment
and dispossession. While these are important realities of the history, the Landscapes
of Injustice Research Collective urges users to carefully consider their own terminological
choices in writing and speaking about this topic today as we confront past injustice.
See our statement on terminology, and related sources here.