View all news

Findings of personal injury claims research presented at BIICL

22 February 2016

Ken Oliphant, Professor in Tort Law at the University of Bristol Law, has organised an event to present findings of an international comparative project on legal cultures regarding the personal injury claims process.

At a time when the personal injury claims process in England and Wales lurches from one controversy to another, it is timely to ask what lessons can be learnt from how personal injury claims are resolved elsewhere. This event presents the results of a detailed comparative investigation of the claims process in three legal systems, based on extensive interviews with practitioners in each.

The three legal systems looked at are England and Wales, Norway and The Netherlands – three legal systems with contrasting traditions, liability laws and approaches to compensation for personal injury in general. The study shows that, though some aspects of the claims process are constant across national boundaries, there are pronounced differences in attitude which reflect – in varying degrees – differences in liability rules, procedural mechanisms, legal institutions and wider culture.

The research was conducted on behalf of the Institute for European Tort Law, Vienna, which teams up with the British Institute of International and Comparative Law for this event. The project was led by Ken Oliphant, former Director of the Vienna Institute, now Professor of Tort Law at the University of Bristol, in collaboration with teams of researchers at Cardiff University, the University of Bergen, and Erasmus University Rotterdam.

The event will be hosted at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, 17 Russell Square, London, in collaboration with the Institute for European Tort Law, Vienna.

Further information

For further information, and to book online, please visit http://www.biicl.org/event/1168.

Edit this page