House style is maintained by the Digital and Design team. If you have a question about something that's not listed please contact web@brunel.ac.uk

 Names and titles

Our working name is Brunel University London. Wherever possible, the full title should be used on the first occurrence. Brunel alone will suffice in subsequent mentions.

However, if it affects the flow of an intro to a news story, Brunel can be used and the full title used on the second occurrence. For example:

  • Music entrepreneur and Brunel alumna Elizabeth Cawein has been nominated for a prestigious award after giving grassroots talent a platform to play on. Elizabeth, who completed her master's degree in Contemporary Music at Brunel University London in 2008, was pitched alongside 400 nominees from 70 universities across the country before being named a finalist in the Education UK Alumni Awards.

Titles

Works of art/literary works (books, plays, paintings, pieces of music), film titles, exhibition names, TV/radio programmes should be italicised, for example:

·    Panorama, BBC, Dark Aemilia, A Conspiracy of Alchemists.

Research project titles and names of awards should not be italicised. Instead, use single inverted commas, for example:

  • '20 ways to improve your life'.
  • 'Vice-Chancellor's travel prize'.
  • 'Student-led teaching awards'.

Titles of newspapers/magazines/journals should not be italicised, for example, The Guardian.

Avoid use of bold, underlines, italics or capitals to emphasise words unless stated elsewhere in this document.

Web addresses should be bolded in marketing material, not press releases.

Capitalisation

Don't capitalise every word in a heading unless using a title or name e.g. Research impact: Solutions to worldwide problems.

When used as the degree title or department name then use capitals, but when used in text such as "suitable for those interested in pursuing a career in engineering" or "suitable for those who have studied sociology or anthropology or a related social science subject" then lower case is appropriate.

Some commonly used examples where capital letters are required are:

  • Visiting Professor
  • A-/AS-level
  • Joint/Single Honours
  • Higher Education.

Some commonly used examples where lower case letters should be used:

  • departmental (department is only capitalised when talking about the title of a department in full, for example, Department of Clinical Sciences, not the Clinical Sciences department, the department)
  • campus
  • international
  • upper second class degrees
  • universities (when it is general and not referring to Brunel University London)
  • term e.g. autumn term.

Don't use capital letters in website and email addresses.