Author. In a note, list the author(s) first name first. In the bibliographic entry, list the first author last name first, comma, first name; list other authors first name first.
Article title. Enclose the title and subtitle (if any) in quotation marks, and capitalize major words. In the notes section, put a comma before and after the title. In the bibliography, put a period before and after.
Periodical title. Italicize the title and subtitle, and capitalize all major words. For a magazine or newspaper, follow with a comma.
Journal volume and issue numbers. For journals, follow the title with the volume number, a comma, the abbreviation no., and the issue number.
Publication date. For journals, enclose the publication year in parentheses and follow with a comma (in a note) or with a period (in a bibliography). For other periodicals, give the month and year or month, day, and year, followed by a comma.
Page numbers. In a note, give the page where the information is found. In the bibliographic entry, give the page range.
Retrieval information. Provide the article’s DOI, if one is given, the name of the database and an accession number, or a “stable or persistent” URL for the article in the database. Because you provide stable retrieval information, you do not need to identify the electronic format of the work (i.e., PDF, as in the example shown here). End with a period.
Citations for the journal article below would look like this:
ENDNOTE
1. Howard Schuman, Barry Schwartz, and Hannah D’Arcy, “Elite Revisionists and Popular Beliefs: Christopher Columbus, Hero or Villain?” Public Opinion Quarterly 69, no. 1 (2005), 13, doi:10.1093/poq/nfi001.
BIBLIOGRAPHIC ENTRY
Schuman, Howard, Barry Schwartz, and Hannah D’Arcy. “Elite Revisionists and Popular Beliefs: Christopher Columbus, Hero or Villain?” Public Opinion Quarterly 69, no. 1 (2005). 2–29. doi:10.1093/poq/nfi001.