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APSA Citation Generator
Paste a DOI or link and get a correct APSA reference plus the in-text citation in seconds. Free for students — no sign-up needed to try it.
What a APSA reference looks like
APSA style is the American Political Science Association's adaptation of Chicago author–date, used by journals like the American Political Science Review and by political science departments. Citations stay compact in the text while references carry full publication detail.
Reference list entry
Berg, Lena. 2023. "Climate Adaptation in Coastal Cities." Journal of Urban Studies 18 (2): 101–18.
In-text citation
(Berg 2023)
Key APSA rules
- In-text citations use author and year without a comma: (Berg 2023).
- Multiple works by one author in the same year get letter suffixes: 2023a, 2023b.
- The reference list follows Chicago: Berg, Lena. 2023. "Title." Journal 18 (2): 101–18.
- Page ranges may be compressed (101–18) following Chicago number style.
Frequently asked questions
Is the APSA citation generator free?
Yes. You can generate APSA citations free of charge — paste a DOI or URL above and copy the result. A free account saves 5 sources a week to projects; CitApp Pro removes the cap and adds unlimited AI reference lists.
What does a APSA reference look like?
A journal article in APSA style is formatted like this: Berg, Lena. 2023. "Climate Adaptation in Coastal Cities." Journal of Urban Studies 18 (2): 101–18.
Which subjects use APSA style?
APSA is most common in political science and public policy. Always check your course guide, since departments sometimes use their own variant.
Which APSA edition does CitApp follow?
CitApp follows the 2018 revision (based on Chicago).
Keep every source organized
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