

The entries for the law and the case are not. The entries for the book and the article are as desired. Similar principles will also apply to the entries in the bibliography. That is, specifically legal sources should follow the Oxford Standard for the Citation of Legal authorities (OSCOLA), except that inline rather than footnote citations are used. (For example, it doesn't use bib strings and predates the more recent deprecation of the BibTeX backend.) The closest question I found was Creating Entry in Bibtex for Executive Orders, but that question and answer is quite old and I'm not sure whether it is a useful model for current Biblatex/Biber.I'm more asking, what configuration tasks are required? Is there a parallel process somewhere I could apply to this case? Where should the configuration happen?
#Biblatex with jabref code
If not, what approach to configuring Biblatex/Biber to do this would constitute best practice? I'm not asking for somebody to do this - the author-year style in my example actually differs somewhat from the one I'm using, so code addressing the problem here might not work well for me anyway. If so, what solutions are available and do any use OSCLA for specifically legal sources only?.This is partly a 'before I reinvent the wheel' question and partly a question about best practice.ĭo any existing solutions handle legal sources appropriately in documents using Biblatex/Biber which require a non-legal default style such as author-year for most sources?
