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Catalogue |

Editors
| Nicholas
Bellamy |
Henry
Harder |
| University
of Queensland, Australia |
University
of Northern British
Columbia, Canada |
A quality peer-reviewed journal from the International Forum on Disability
Management (IFDM), a growing network of disability management researchers.
The forum meets every two years and seeks to improve the standing of
the disability management movement worldwide as one that firmly places
the interest of workers and employers on equal footing thereby creating
an environment that leads to successful worksites in every regard.
Historically disability management has primarily been concerned with
return to work post injury or illness. This narrow focus is expanding
to include persons with disabilities who have never entered the workforce
and disability issues in general. Nevertheless its strength and its
uniqueness derive from its activity in the workplace and its emphasis
in finding solutions to disability related issues in the workplace.
Editorial
Board
- Elizabeth
Kendall Griffith University, Australia
- Muriel
Westmorland McMaster University, Canada
- Nicholas
Buys Griffith
University, Brisbane
The e-journal version
of International Journal of Disability Management Research is
available in over 15,000 libraries worldwide including 90% of US
college and university libraries and every major research library
across Australia and New Zealand. It is also available as part of
the AAP Online Collection and ALPSP Learned Journals Collection.
Open
Access and Author Self-Arching Policy
Australian
Academic Press adheres to the Open Access (OA) “Green Standard” for
author self-archiving which allows journal authors who have published
in an Australian Academic Press journal to upload their original
accepted-for-publication manuscript (termed an author post-print*)
(NOT the publisher's PDF version) to an online archive, repository,
or website but must stipulate that public availability be delayed
until 12 months after first online publication in
the journal.
* Definition of an author post-print: A post-print is the final draft of an author's
manuscript that has been accepted for publication with any referee's ammendments
but before it has undergone typesetting, layout, copyediting, and proof correction
by the Publisher.
|

ISSN 18338550
2 issues per year
ONLINE ONLY
2010
SUBSCRIPTION RATE AU$
Institutions
Australia $145.00
Institutions Overseas $160.00


 |
Aims
and Scope
The International
Journal of Disability Management Research publishes research
findings in areas covered by disability management including
prevention of injury and disability, occupational rehabilitation
and employment of people with injury and disability. The Journal
has a particular aim of encouraging and publishing findings from
studies conducted in a range of countries that focus on disability
management interventions in the workplace. All articles are peer
reviewed. The Journal will consider manuscripts for publication
that include original research, systematic literature reviews
and case studies.
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Editorial
Enquiries
Professor
Nicholas Bellamy
CONROD
Level 3 Mayne Medical School,
The University of Queensland
Herston Rd, Brisbane Qld 4006
Australia
n.bellamy@uq.edu.au
Author
Guidelines
All articles are
refereed. Papers submitted to the journal must not previously have
been published nor submitted for publication to any other journal.
General
Style Guidelines
- Contributions
should follow the format and style described in the Publication
Manual of the American Psychological Association (5th ed.). Spelling
and punctuation should conform to The Macquarie Dictionary (4th
ed.). For matters of style not covered in these two publications
the Style manual for authors, editors and printers (6th ed.) should
be consulted.
- Uncommon abbreviations
and acronyms should be explained. Do not use underlining except
to indicate italics. Full stops should not be used in abbreviations
or acronyms (e.g., NSW).
- Use single quotation
marks to introduce a word or phrase used as an ironic comment,
as slang, or which has been coined. Use quotation marks the first
time the word or phrase is used; do not use them again. Do not
use quotation marks to introduce a technical or key term. Instead,
italicise the term.
- Do not use any
footnotes. Endnotes should be kept to a minimum and listed at the
end of the text under the centred heading "Endnotes".
Acknowledgments should be placed at the end of the article with
a separate heading.
- Tables should
be at the end of the manuscript, not in the main text. Their approximate
positions in the text should be indicated by the words, “Insert
Table X here”. Horizontal and vertical lines should be used
sparingly.
- Photographs,
graphs and figures should be at the end of the manuscript, not
in the main text, and include placement instructions in the Word
document, such as "Insert Fig x here".
- A list of figure
captions should follow the tables in the manuscript.
- References should
follow the format and style described in the Publication Manual
of the American Psychological Association (5th ed.). Examples of
citations are:
The theory
was first propounded in 1970 (Larsen, 1971).
Larsen (1971) was the first to propound the theory.
Examples
of references are:
Fisse,
B. (1989). The proceeds of crime act: The rise of money laundering,
offences and the fall of principle. Criminal Law Journal,
13, 5-23.
Zelinski, E.M., & Gilewski, M.J. (1988). Memory for prose
and aging: A meta-analysis. In M.L. Howe & C.J. Brainerd
(Eds.), Cognitive development in adulthood (pp. 133-158). New
York: Springer-Verlag.
Digital
Submission Guidelines
- Documents should
be saved as a Microsoft Word document (or in RTF format if using
another program) double-spaced with minimum margins of 25 mm on
both sides and in A4 page size.
- The first page
of the document should include the title of the article only.
- The second page
should include the title again, with the full names and affiliations
of all the authors followed by a full postal and e-mail addresses
for the corresponding author. A word count and suggested running
head of no more than 50 characters including spaces should also
be provided on this second page.
- The
third page should contain an abstract only, not exceeding 200 words.
It should provide a brief overview of the aims, method and major
findings and should not refer to the body of the text in the abstract.
- FIGURES, GRAPHS,
ILLUSTRATIONS, PHOTOGRAPHS, SPECIAL CHARACTERS
To ensure optimum quality, please follow the guidelines
below when submitting artwork.
Figures,
graphs, illustrations and photogrpahs should be prepared
to the correct size and each one supplied as an individual
file, separate to the manuscript Word file. Include placement
instructions in the Word document, such as "[Insert
fig 1 here]".
Figures created in Microsoft Word, Excel or Powerpoint
need to be saved as PDFs.
Figures created in a drawing program such as Adobe llustrator,
CorelDRAW, Freehand, Microsoft Publisher or similar should
be saved as EPS (encapsulated postscript) files.
Figures created in Photoshop or with other photographic
software should be saved with a minimum resolution of 600
dpi and in TIF format. Minimum resolution for scanned graphics
is 300dpi for halftone work (e.g., photographs) and 600
dpi for line art, and these should also be in TIF format.
All figures and graphs should should be in black and white
line art (artwork that has only text and lines, no shades
of grey or blocks of colour).
All photographs should be supplied as separate files in
JPEG or TIFF formats for a minimum 300 dpi resolution.
(As a rough guide, the file size of each photograph should
be above 200KB).
Manuscripts which contain special characters (equations,
Chinese characters, etc.) need to be supplied as a high
resolution PDF file (print or press format) with all fonts
embedded as well as the Word or RTF document.
Prior to sending artwork, the separate files of figures,
graphs, illustrations, and so on, should be printed by
the author to test that the fonts have been embedded correctly
and there is no distortion in the artwork (e.g., lines
and fonts reproduce cleanly with no jagged lines or fuzzy
edges), as any such faults cannot be corrected by the publisher.
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