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Employment UK
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December 16, 2025
'Train And Prepare': Lawyers On Employment Bill's Passage
Controversial changes to protection against unfair dismissal are at the top of the watch list for employment lawyers as the Employment Rights Bill approaches royal assent — but there are plenty of other reforms that lawyers say will complicate businesses' operations.
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December 16, 2025
Employment Rights Bill Passes Ahead Of Year-End Recess
The Employment Rights Bill passed its final parliamentary hearing on Tuesday, paving the way for royal assent before Christmas.
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December 16, 2025
Gowling, CMS Guide £7M Pension Deal For Materials Co.
Goodfellow Cambridge Ltd. has offloaded £7 million ($9.4 million) of its pension liabilities to insurer Just Group, in a deal guided by Gowling WLG and CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP.
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December 16, 2025
Employment Tribunal Case Backlog Tops Half A Million
The backlog of open cases at the Employment Tribunal rose nearly 12% over the past year after it hit 515,000 in the third quarter of 2025, the Ministry of Justice has revealed.
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December 16, 2025
Addison Lee To Pay 800 Drivers' Costs Over Fake Email
An employment tribunal has called out Addison Lee's "unreasonable conduct" in a decision that requires the private-hire taxi service to pay 800 drivers thousands of pounds in legal costs for falsifying key evidence, Leigh Day said on Monday.
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December 15, 2025
DWP Did Not Harass Staffer By Branding Her 'Always Tired'
A manager at the Department for Work and Pensions did not harass a staffer with ME and fibromyalgia by claiming that she was "always tired," a tribunal ruled in a decision released Monday.
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December 15, 2025
Ex-Director Claims £400K Denied After Forced Exit
A former director of a traffic-management business has sued the company's new owner and a fellow director, alleging he was forced out of the business and then wrongly denied £400,000 ($535,000) in share sale payments.
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December 15, 2025
EHRC Faces Backlash For Failing To Record Trans Meeting
A trans rights group has accused the U.K.'s equalities watchdog of not valuing the voices of transgender people because it failed to record and keep notes of the only meeting it had with a major trans rights organization in the last three years.
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December 15, 2025
Ex-RSA Boss Hit With 13-Year Ban Over Accounting Scandal
The former chief executive of one of Ireland's biggest insurers has been disqualified for 13 years by the country's financial regulator over an accounting scandal that dates back more than a decade.
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December 15, 2025
Gov't Floats Rule Change For Pension Trustee Standards
The government on Monday floated new professional standards for pension trustees and administrators as retirement funds are set to grow rapidly in scale.
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December 12, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Shell hit with a climate change claim from 100 survivors of a typhoon in the Philippines, London Stock Exchange-listed Oxford Nanopore bring legal action against its co-founder, and the editors of Pink News sue the BBC for defamation following its investigation into alleged sexual misconduct at the news site.
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December 12, 2025
FCA Floats Pension Transfer Overhaul For Better Outcomes
The Financial Conduct Authority has proposed rules that will allow pension providers to create new online planning tools for customers considering a savings transfer.
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December 12, 2025
BBC Hit With Libel Claim By Founders Of LGBT News Website
The couple who run LGBT news website PinkNews have filed a libel claim against the BBC after describing allegations broadcast in a documentary investigating sexual misconduct at the publisher as "false, inconsistent and malicious."
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December 12, 2025
Collective Pension Rules Need Safeguards, Trade Body Says
Plans by the U.K. government to allow savers to transfer their retirement pots into a collective program must be supported by strong safeguards to protect retirees against unforeseen hitches such as market volatility and mispricing, a trade body has said.
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December 12, 2025
FCA Misconduct Update Still Leaves Firms 'In The Dark'
Clarity from the Financial Conduct Authority on the limits of its powers to tackle bullying and harassment will come as a relief to professionals — but lawyers have warned that non-banking companies must now join lenders to broaden staff training, revisit conduct policies and strengthen whistleblowing protocols.
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December 12, 2025
Still 'Too Much Complexity' In Savers' Retirement Choices
Savers in the U.K. still face "too much complexity" over their retirement decisions, a pensions provider has said, warning that many are ditching official guidance and turning to social media platforms such as Facebook for information.
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December 11, 2025
MPs Quiz Minister On Missed Evidence On Women's Pensions
The government has been asked to explain how it missed a key piece of evidence before it ruled out a compensation scheme for older women who missed out on state pension benefits.
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December 11, 2025
Late Filing Voids Adviser's Bid For Alleged €10M Share Payout
An adviser won't be able to pursue claims that fund services giant IQ-EQ fired him to avoid paying out some €10 million ($12 million) in a share sale, after an employment tribunal held that his unfair dismissal complaint was filed too late.
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December 11, 2025
Aviva Pens £4M Pension Deal For UK Steel Tube Maker
A U.K. steel supplier has completed a £4 million ($5.3 million) full-scheme buy-in of its retirement plan with Aviva PLC, pensions company First Actuarial has said.
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December 11, 2025
DLA Piper-Led WTW To Buy NatWest Fintech Pensions Biz
Insurance broker WTW has agreed to acquire pensions provider Cushon from NatWest Group to expand its operations in the rapidly growing defined contribution retirement savings market.
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December 11, 2025
Lords Shoot Down Employment Bill Over Payouts Controversy
The Employment Rights Bill has failed to pass its final legislative hurdle, as the House of Lords narrowly voted to reject the reform package for a fourth time over a last-minute amendment to remove the cap on compensation for unfair dismissal.
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December 10, 2025
Scottish Gov't Not Liable In Judicial Officer's Assault Case
A female legal practitioner cannot hold Scotland's government vicariously liable for alleged assaults and harassment committed by a senior judge in 2018, even though two had occurred within the court environment, the U.K.'s top court ruled Wednesday.
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December 10, 2025
Fife Ruling Little Help In Solving Single-Sex Space Disputes
A keenly-awaited ruling in a nurse's claim that she was harassed by the use by a transgender doctor of a women's changing room provides little clarity to employers on how to manage disputes over single-sex facilities, as a tribunal largely side-stepped a landmark decision on the legal definition of a woman.
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December 10, 2025
Doctor's Appeal Over NHS Dismissal Says TUPE Rules Apply
A British doctors union and a GP on Wednesday urged the Court of Appeal to revive the GP's claim over being dismissed during the restructuring of his NHS employer, arguing a tribunal wrongly held the doctor's sacking was not covered by work transfer regulations.
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December 10, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Strengthens Rules On Admin Oversight
The U.K. retirement savings watchdog has urged trustees to increase scrutiny on pension administrators, in order to better protect savers.
Expert Analysis
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Human Rights-Focused Lending Models Can Curb Trafficking
In light of increased environmental, social and governance attention and the 10th anniversary of the United Nations’ adoption of the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the financial sector should expand and align its anti-trafficking efforts with ESG measures by linking human rights outcomes to lending frameworks, say Sarah Byrne and Ed Ivey at Moore & Van Allen.
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Green Investments Are Not Immune To ESG Scrutiny
As investment informed and motivated by environmental, social and governance considerations accelerates, companies and investors in the green technology sector must keep in mind that regulators, consumers and communities will not grant them free passes on the full range of ESG concerns, say Michael Murphy and Kyle Guest at Gibson Dunn.
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What G-7 Xinjiang Focus Means For UK And US Companies
Attorneys at King & Spalding consider the shifting legal and political landscape, highlighted at last month's G-7 summit, around eradicating forced labor in China’s northwest Xinjiang region, and what U.K. and U.S. businesses with supply chain exposure should do to mitigate their legal, financial and reputational exposure.
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UK Employment Case May Lead To New Discrimination Suits
The recent Maya Forstater case before the U.K. Employment Appeals Tribunal, concerning whether gender-critical beliefs are a protected characteristic, could provoke an influx of discrimination cases on the basis that philosophical beliefs could trump other protected characteristics, says Jules Quinn at King & Spalding.
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Opinion
Nestle Ruling Shows Supply Chain Human Rights Flaws
The Supreme Court's recent ruling in Nestle v. Doe — blocking claims that chocolate makers aided and abetted child slavery in Africa — underscores the need for federal legislation to ensure that U.S. corporation supply chains are not complicit in human rights abuses overseas, says Alexandra Dufresne at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences.
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Addressing Environmental Justice As Part Of ESG Initiatives
Recent calls for racial equity and government regulators' increasing focus on social and environmental concerns make this a good time for companies to integrate environmental justice into their environmental, social and governance efforts, say Stacey Halliday and Julius Redd at Beveridge & Diamond, and Jesse Glickstein at Hewlett Packard.
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2 UK Pension Cases Guide On 3rd-Party Due Diligence
The U.K. Court of Appeal's recent decision in Adams v. Options UK, and upcoming hearing in Financial Conduct Authority v. Avacade, highlight important precautions self-invested personal pension operators should take when dealing with unauthorized third parties, says Paul Ashcroft at Wedlake Bell.
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US Cos. Must Get Ready For EU Human Rights, Climate Policy
The European Union will likely adopt new human rights and climate change regulations for corporations — so U.S. companies and investors should assess their risk exposure and implement compliance processes tailored to their industries, locations and supply chains, say David Lakhdhir and Mark Bergman at Paul Weiss.
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What Growing Focus On ESG Means For Insurers
As the world pays steadily more attention to environmental, social and governance issues, insurers and reinsurers will need to integrate ESG risks into their underwriting and compliance efforts, but doing so will help attract consumers and achieve positive investment returns, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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5 Ways To Address Heightened Forced Labor Compliance Risk
In response to ever-increasing enforcement efforts targeting forced labor, companies can leverage available resources to assess conditions in their supply chains and avoid unintended imports and exports with entities known for human rights violations, say Joyce Rodriguez and Francesca Guerrero at Thompson Hine.
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UK Whistleblowing Laws May Be Ripe For Reform
COVID-19 has reignited calls to expand U.K. whistleblowing laws, with many advocating for enhanced reporting protections and independent oversight of cases, says Pia Sanchez at CM Murray.
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G4S Deferral Agreement Illustrates SFO's Enforcement Focus
The Serious Fraud Office’s recent deferred prosecution agreement with multinational security services company G4S suggests the agency’s approach to compliance, program remediation and corporate renewal is evolving to favor parent company involvement and the appointment of independent compliance monitors, say Chris Roberts and James Ford at Mayer Brown.
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Opinion
Time To Fix Human Rights Abuses In US Gov't Supply Chains
The U.S. government buys goods made in global supply chains where human and labor rights violations are commonplace, so to drive better rights compliance among contractors, it should adopt six key reforms to the federal procurement process, says Isabelle Glimcher at the New York University Stern School of Business.
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Opinion
Reflections On The UK Bribery Act 10 Years On
While the U.K. Bribery Act has been positive overall, regulators should seek urgent reform to better enable the investigation and prosecution of companies and individuals for economic crimes, especially in cases directly harming people and the environment, says Chris Phillips at Alvarez & Marsal.
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Human Rights Are Becoming A Compliance Issue
A recent commitment from the European Union's commissioner for justice to introduce rules for mandatory corporate human rights due diligence next year may signal the arrival of this issue as a global business imperative, making it as fundamental as anti-corruption diligence, say attorneys at Paul Hastings.