I am using the Harvard package and a Journal of Finance bst file (downloaded from the home page of Ivo Welch) in a LaTeX document. Here's my code:
\documentclass{report}
\usepackage{harvard}
\begin{document}
Citation one from \citeasnoun{Kozhan}, and also citation two from \citeasnoun{Kozhan}.
\bibliographystyle{jf}
\bibliography{references}
\end{document}
With sample references.bib file:
@inproceedings{Kozhan,
title={The Skew Risk Premium in Index Option Prices},
author={Kozhan, R. and Neuberger, A. and Schneider, P.},
booktitle={AFA 2011 Denver Meetings Paper},
year={2011}
}
This prints as:
Citation one from Kozhan, Neuberger, and Schneider (2011), and also citation two from Kozhan, Neuberger, and Schneider (2011).
I would rather have it as
Citation one from Kozhan, Neuberger, and Schneider (2011), and also citation two from Kozhan et al. (2011).
The guide on the Harvard citation styles (http://tex.loria.fr/bibdex/harvard.pdf) says:
[...] where there are more than two authors, all authors are listed in the first citation and in subsequent citations just the first author's name followed by `et al.' is used.
However, as can be seen by the example above, this does not seem to be the case. Why? Finally, how can I hyperlink my citations to the relevant entry in the references section?
\usepackage{hyperref}to your preamble. Note that this should, with some exceptions, be the last package you load. – Torbjørn T. Nov 14 '12 at 07:39harvardpackage. You could perhaps try what Mico mentions in this answer, loadingnatbibandhar2natinstead ofharvard. (In that case, you have to delete the.auxfile before compiling again, I think.) – Torbjørn T. Nov 14 '12 at 12:34natbib+har2nat, you should update the code in this question. – Torbjørn T. Nov 14 '12 at 15:48