Post Courier, PNG's national daily newspaper run their headlines about an incident that happened at the gates of a hotel in Port Moresby on the 6th of February 2023 (Port Courier's front page), where thousands of job seekers gathered for a walk in interview for only 100 vacancies highlights the pressing issue of unemployment in Papua New Guinea.

All this is written in the Resource Booklet, Youth/Graduate Unemployment in Papua New Guinea.pg.5,2023.

Now how do I cite this?
Cite it for me.

3 answers

To cite the information you provided, you can use the following format, depending on the citation style you are required to use (APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.). Here are examples in both APA and MLA formats:

APA Format

Author. (Year). Title of the document. Publisher. URL (if applicable)

Since the specific author is not mentioned, you can cite it as follows:

Resource Booklet. (2023). Youth/Graduate unemployment in Papua New Guinea. Post Courier.

MLA Format

"Title of the Document." Publisher, Year, Page Number.

In MLA style, it would look something like this:

"Youth/Graduate Unemployment in Papua New Guinea." Post Courier, 2023, p. 5.

Please make sure to adapt these formats based on the specific guidelines provided by your institution or publisher, especially if there are known authors or specific details that would alter the citation.

Show me some examples of MLA citation in a full sentence.

Sure! Here are a few examples of full sentences that incorporate MLA citations:

  1. According to the resource, "Youth/Graduate Unemployment in Papua New Guinea," the significant gathering of job seekers highlights the critical issue of unemployment in the country (Post Courier 5).

  2. The report notes that thousands gathered for a walk-in interview at a hotel in Port Moresby, emphasizing the competition for limited job opportunities ("Youth/Graduate Unemployment in Papua New Guinea" 5).

  3. As outlined in the Post Courier’s resource on youth unemployment, the event on February 6, 2023, demonstrated the urgent need for more job vacancies to accommodate the increasing number of graduates seeking work ("Youth/Graduate Unemployment in Papua New Guinea" 5).

In these sentences, the citations follow the phrasing of the text and are placed at the end, integrating smoothly into the narrative.