Hottest Topics...

 

Personal Injury Compensation readers benefit from invaluable insight into the hottest topics that impact on the personal injury community including:

  • The Compensation Act 2006: what is its impact on the way UK courts approach compensation claims?
  • Employers’ liability for psychiatric injury related to bulling and stress in the work place: where are we now?
  • The very latest government proposals, including the initiative to reform the use of medical expert witnesses.
  • Breaches in health and safety.
  • Care home and hospital mistreatment: is provision adequate?
  • Traffic accidents: we debate the challenging new trends.
  • The opposing affect of fatal accident and clinical negligence cases on the claimants and defendants.
  • Injury caused by faulty goods or services.

Feature Articles and Guest Editorials...

Personal Injury Compensation is always keen to consider feature articles or guest editorials about personal injury issues in the news or on the horizon. Now is an ideal time to share your thoughts with your colleagues and with us!

 

We will happily consider papers reviewing topics of current interest, analysis of the latest cases and or case studies on personal injury including psychological as well as physical injuries.

 

Guest editorials and feature articles should be between 1,000 to 2,000 words long. If you would like to submit a high-resolution image of yourself we may be able to upload the photograph along with your article on our website.

 

We are particularly interested in paired opposing editorials assessing the same topic from different perspectives, so if you have an idea for something along these lines we would be especially pleased to hear from you.

 

Preparing your article
Send your article to eleanor.baylis@informa.com via email as a Word file. As well as the main text of the article, include a title, your full name, relevant qualifications and affiliations, job title, the name of the company or organisation that you work for and the city where you're located.

 

Enough detail must be provided for all references so that a reader can easily locate them. This includes giving full details of legislation and information sourced from other papers, books or the internet. Cite references in numerical order in the text and list them in order at the end of the paper.

 

Accepted articles will be edited into house style, normally with a chance for you to review changes made to the copy. If you don't respond to a request for comment on the edited copy before the given deadline, we will assume that the document is ready for publication.

Include a cover note with your contact details, qualifications and background. Copies of any published documents referred to in the submitted article may also be requested. And don't forget your photograph.

 

Copyright
An article sent to Personal Injury Compensation must be original unpublished work, not submitted elsewhere for publication. Copyright of accepted articles, as edited and set out in Personal Injury Compensation (both print and electronic versions) belongs to Informa Healthcare, a Trading Division of Informa UK Ltd. For this reason, you may be requested to sign an Assignment of Copyright agreement; however, you may retain the right to re-use data collected during research and preparation in other work.

 

Reprints
You'll receive two complimentary copies of the issue in which your article appears. You can also buy reprints of articles from the Informa Healthcare Reprint Service. The cost depends on length and number of copies required. PDFs are also available, sometimes at no cost if the article is used on your company website, and a hyperlink is included to the Personal Injury Compensation website.

 

Contact: Eleanor Baylis, Editor
Email: Eleanor.baylis@informa.com
Phone: +44(0)20 7017 4079