Employment UK

  • January 16, 2026

    Nurse Wins £24K Over Biased Probe Into Her Nap On The Job

    A Black nurse who faced disciplinary action for allegedly sleeping while at work has won £23,600 ($32,000) after persuading a tribunal that the company discriminated against her by interviewing only white staff about the incident.

  • January 16, 2026

    Parliament Watchdog Targets Women's Pension Failings

    The parliamentary watchdog said Friday it has "serious concerns" over delays by the Department for Work and Pensions in its efforts to learn from the women's state pensions scandal.

  • January 16, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.

  • January 16, 2026

    EU Pensions Watchdog To Tighten Single Market Integration

    The European Union has launched its long-term strategy to strengthen and streamline the bloc's insurance and retirement sectors through to 2030, amid rising geopolitical, economic, environmental and technological turbulence.

  • January 16, 2026

    UK Businesses See AI As Growing Legal Threat, Allianz Warns

    More than half of U.K. businesses fear legal risks and damage to reputation from the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence, insurance giant Allianz has warned.

  • January 15, 2026

    NHS Settles Whistleblower Claims In Letby Hospital Case

    A former NHS chief executive won a payout to settle her unfair dismissal case against the health service, after she raised concerns over leadership at the trust where Lucy Letby was accused of murdering seven babies.

  • January 15, 2026

    Army Staffer Loses Appeal To Bring Bias Case Against MoD

    The Court of Appeal ruled Thursday that there are good reasons why civilians and former members of the military can bring bias cases over a botched internal complaint while serving members cannot.

  • January 15, 2026

    Ex-Ofsted Staffer Overturns 'Flawed' Cancer Dismissal Ruling

    A London appeals tribunal has ruled that Ofsted discriminated against an inspector by sacking her shortly after she returned to work following major cancer surgery, overturning an "extensively flawed" decision to reject her claim.

  • January 15, 2026

    Employment Judge Sanctioned For 'Hostile' Behavior In Court

    An employment judge has been sanctioned for displaying "hostile" behavior during a tribunal hearing after facing broader allegations of bullying and intimidation by multiple claimants.

  • January 15, 2026

    Gov't Drops Planned Probe Into UK Pensions Ombudsman

    The government confirmed it has dropped a pledge to carry out a review of the U.K.'s pension arbitration body, in the wake of the Atomic Energy Agency Technology retirement fund scandal.

  • January 15, 2026

    Pensions Watchdog Hires Treasury Mandarin As Policy Chief

    The Pensions Regulator said Thursday it has appointed as its new policy chief one of the leading architects behind the government's push for retirement funds to invest more in the economy.

  • January 15, 2026

    Pensions Co. Vidett Acquires London Governance Biz

    Governance and pensions services provider Vidett has acquired Bridgehouse Company Secretaries, an outsourced corporate governance business, as it strengthens its position in an evolving corporate services market.

  • January 14, 2026

    Labour Party Won't Block Scottish Budget With Mansion Tax

    The Labour Party will not block plans to implement what is commonly known as a mansion tax in Scotland at a threshold lower than the rest of the U.K. and to raise income tax thresholds to cut taxes for low earners, the party's Scottish leader said Wednesday.

  • January 14, 2026

    Coastguard Loses Bid To Upend Volunteer's Worker Status

    A London appeals court rejected on Wednesday an attempt by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency to overturn a ruling that a volunteer rescue officer held worker status before losing his job.

  • January 14, 2026

    Dyson Forced Labor Claims Could Swell Ahead Of 2027 Trial

    Dyson could face around 100 more claims from workers alleging forced labor when they made components at Malaysian factories for the appliance manufacturer, a London court said Wednesday.

  • January 14, 2026

    New TPR Chair Floats 'Rule-Making' Powers For Watchdog

    The Pensions Regulator should be granted new rule-making powers similar in scope to the Financial Conduct Authority, the incoming chair of the watchdog told MPs on Wednesday.

  • January 14, 2026

    Ex-GMB Member Must Pay £5K Costs After Tribunal No-Show

    A tribunal has ordered a former member of the GMB to pay £4,800 ($6,500) in costs after she behaved unreasonably by failing to turn up at three hearings during her discrimination claim against the trade union.

  • January 14, 2026

    Osborne Clarke Steers £35M Pension Deal For Ferry Co.

    A transport company has offloaded £35 million ($47 million) of its pension plan liabilities to insurer Just Group PLC in a deal steered by Osborne Clarke.

  • January 13, 2026

    Barrister Loses Bid For Costs After Employment Appeal Win

    The Employment Appeal Tribunal has refused a bid by a Garden Court Chambers barrister to get two companies to pay his costs for defending himself against their unsuccessful wasted costs application over his management of a discrimination case brought by a former staffer.

  • January 13, 2026

    Service Co. Says It Was Wrongly Blocked From Gov't Contract

    A communications services provider argued at the start of a London trial Tuesday that the Department for Work and Pensions was wrong to exclude it from the procurement process for a videoconferencing contract because of its answer to a technical question.

  • January 13, 2026

    Jo Sidhu Fails To Overturn Disbarment For Sexual Misconduct

    The former chair of the Criminal Bar Association, Jo Sidhu KC, lost his fight on Tuesday to overturn his disbarment for sexual misconduct toward a young aspiring lawyer, as a London court ruled that the sanction was justified.

  • January 13, 2026

    Met Proves Contracted Forensic Docs Were Not Employees

    A group of 21 former forensic medical examiners have lost the bulk of their claims against the Metropolitan Police after a tribunal ruled that the contracted doctors did not hold employee status.

  • January 13, 2026

    Pensions Body Warns MPs Over 'Salary Sacrifice' Reforms

    The government's plan to cap salary sacrifice arrangements will pile additional costs on businesses and deter additional pensions saving, a trade body has warned lawmakers.

  • January 13, 2026

    Pinsent Masons Guides £213M Pension Deal For Siemens

    Pension Insurance Corp. PLC said Tuesday it has concluded a £213 million ($287 million) full scheme buy-in to secure the retirement benefits for the U.K. employees of global medical technology group Siemens Healthineers AG.

  • January 12, 2026

    Paralegal Banned From Law For Lying About Missing Docs

    A former paralegal has been permanently banned from working for law firms after a tribunal concluded Monday she lied to a firm and a client by falsely claiming documents had been misplaced.

Expert Analysis

  • Spotlight On UK's Changing Employment Laws

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    The U.K. government recently announced that it is consulting on proposals, which, if implemented, will have a significant impact on the U.K. workplace and employment litigation. With these, plus other ongoing bills, proposals, reviews and consultations, it appears that employer-friendly legislation is on the horizon for 2013, says Suzanne Horne of Paul Hastings LLP.

  • Determining Whose Laws Protect Border-Crossing Employees

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    Probably the most common question in international employment law practice is, "which countries’ employment laws protect border-crossing employees such as expatriates and mobile workers?" This question is relevant when arranging any mobile job, expatriate posting or “secondment,” and it becomes vital when a multinational needs to dismiss border‑crossing staff, says Donald Dowling or White & case LLP

  • UK Reforms: A New Era In Criminal Cartel Enforcement?

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    A law before U.K. Parliament, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill, aims to achieve "strong, sustainable and balanced growth" through wide-ranging measures that seek to improve several areas of the law. In particular, the proposed competition law reforms represent a major re-casting of the U.K. regime, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP.

  • Recent Developments In German Competition Law

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    The first half of 2012 saw again significant enforcement activity at the German Federal Cartel Office. The authority prohibited two mergers, imposed fines on three cartels, installed an anonymous whistleblower system, and started the second phase of its food sector inquiry, say Silvio Cappellari and Maria Held of Arnold & Porter LLP.

  • Weighing UK Pensions Regulator's Moral Hazard Powers

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    The question of whether the U.K. Pension Regulator's moral hazard powers are enforceable outside the U.K. arose first in the Sea Containers case in 2008 and, more recently, in the cases of the Nortel Networks’ U.K. DB Scheme and the Great Lakes DB Scheme. The differing approach of the Pension Regulator, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and the Canadian courts in each of these cases is noteworthy, say Sian Robertson of Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP and David Cleary of Greenberg Traurig LLP.

  • Extra-Territorial Application Of The Automatic Stay

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    A recent decision in the Nortel Networks Chapter 11 proceedings demonstrates the difficulty of an expansive approach to U.S. bankruptcy court jurisdiction and calls into question the ability of claimholders to participate in statutorily mandated foreign proceedings without risking loss of their claims and potential sanctions in the U.S. bankruptcy court, say Steven R. Gross, Katherine Ashton and Shannon Rebholz of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.

  • Effective Management Of UK Employee Exits

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    This article aims to explain in general terms the protections that apply to employees in the United Kingdom and the choices available to an employer in relation to possible employee terminations — along with the relative risk and costs when deciding how to terminate, says Bettina Bender of CM Murray LLP.

  • Trends For Encouraging Employee Whistleblowing

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    There appears to be little doubt that there is an emerging international consensus that whistleblowing is a legitimate tool for dealing with economic fraud and should be encouraged as one way of stemming such wrongdoing, say Eric A. Savage and Anita S. Vadgama of Littler Mendelson PC.

  • U.S. Incentives, EU Employees And Conflicts Of Law

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    U.S. employers frequently offer senior employees who are based overseas the opportunity to participate in incentive and bonus arrangements that contain provisions protecting the employer’s interests. Any doubt concerning the enforceability of such provisions in the EU now appears to have been resolved in the employees’ favor, say Christopher K. Walter and Mark M. Poerio of Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker LLP.

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