Last name and then your first
Wikipedia has an entry: Bibliography. It gives you the elements of a bibliography and how to organize it.
The appendix comes first.
Citation
Each entry in a bibliography is typically separated by a double space. This helps to visually distinguish one entry from another, making it easier for the reader to locate specific citations.
In a bibliography entry, the second and subsequent lines after the first line are typically indented using a hanging indent. This means that every line after the first line is indented by a certain amount (e.g., half an inch or 1.27 cm) to distinguish it from the first line. This can usually be done by adjusting the settings in your word processing software's paragraph formatting options.
In academic writing, references usually come first before the bibliography. References are typically cited within the text, while the bibliography is a separate list at the end of the document that includes all sources referenced in the paper.
To write a bibliography entry for a pamphlet, include the author's name, the title of the pamphlet in italics, the publication date, the publisher, and the format (e.g., pamphlet). For example: Author Last Name, First Name. Title of Pamphlet. Publication Year. Publisher. Pamphlet.
The textual link to the bibliography entry is usually the author's surname along with the year of publication. The entries are listed alphabetically by the author's surname.
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Bibliography originally comes from the Greek 'biblion' meaning 'book' and 'graphia' meaning 'writing'.
Probably the reference list--so that you can look up what you need to. However, to save time, look up the style that the bibliography needs to be and do your reference list in that style. Then, at the end, you will certainly have all the information you need to do it correctly as well as having it done! Just make sure that you don't have items in your bibliography that you don't cite in your paper.
The author's last name should appear first in a bibliography reference.