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First time writing a question, just started learning Latex a few months ago. I am writing an article aimed to be published at the Financial History Review (Cambridge) and they use a Bibliography style I cant find. I usually use natbib {apalike} for most papers. Here is an example of the Style they requireenter image description here and the link to the author guidelines is here https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/financial-history-review/information/instructions-contributors.

If anyone can give me a hand, I appreciate it.

  • They will reformat your paper, won't they? Or you just submit the final pdf to them? – pluton May 14 '21 at 02:39
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    Welcome to TeX.SE. When confronted with the task of replicating an uncommon bibliography style, it's often a good idea to employ the makebst utility that's part of the custom-bib package. The utility provides a menu-driven, interactive interface; each question comes with multiple choice answers, one of which being the default. The good news is that the makebst was created by the author of the natbib package and that its code works very well with the natbib citation management package. – Mico May 14 '21 at 02:49
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    I noticed that their instructions also state: "Please note that you should supply a WORD or RTF document for the main text body (including footnotes, bibliographical references, appendices) and a different single document in PDF for Tables and Figures." You may therefore want to verify with the editorial office that they'll accept a LaTeX document – Mico May 14 '21 at 02:53
  • thanks for the help, yes I also noticed the WORD requirement, what I generally do in those cases is work on LaTex and do a pdf-doc convert, and reformat. – Francisco Borja May 14 '21 at 10:14

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