Employment UK

  • April 11, 2025

    Teacher Loses Racial Bias, Harassment Claim

    An employment tribunal has thrown out a teacher's claims that staff at a grammar school in southeast England discriminated and harassed her, putting an end to her case after she'd already had allegations that the head teacher committed insurance fraud to pay his solicitors tossed out.

  • April 11, 2025

    UK Urged To Reduce Gov't Interference In Pension Sector

    The U.K. government should consider freeing pension providers to allocate the assets wherever they choose to maximize returns and boost the country's economic growth, an industry association has said.

  • April 11, 2025

    Hilton Settles Hiring Dispute Over Sabbath Observance

    The Hilton Belfast hotel has agreed to pay £10,000 ($13,000) to a man who claimed that the hotel rescinded its job offer because of his Judeo-Christian beliefs, the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland has said.

  • April 11, 2025

    Guardian Says Actor's Libel Claim Is 'Bizarre' And 'Childish'

    The publisher of The Guardian newspaper argued at the end of a trial on Friday that it was "frankly inconceivable" that stories alleging actor Noel Clarke sexually harassed, abused and assaulted women for about 15 years were the result of a defamation conspiracy.

  • April 11, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen law firm Michael Wilson & Partners reignite a 20-year dispute with a former director over an alleged plot to form a rival partnership, headphone maker Marshall Amplification sue a rival in the intellectual property court, and a commercial diving company pursue action against state-owned nuclear waste processor Sellafield. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new cases in the U.K.

  • April 11, 2025

    Officer Loses Appeal Over Unapproved COVID-19 Leave

    A former security officer has lost his appeal challenging a tribunal's decision to reject his claim for unfair dismissal after he took five weeks off during the COVID-19 pandemic to look after his vulnerable mother without permission.

  • April 11, 2025

    NHS Asks To Limit Streaming Access To Changing Room Case

    A National Health Service board has asked the Employment Tribunal to restrict public access to a case brought by a nurse, who says that she was harassed in a dispute over a transgender doctor's use of a single-sex changing room.

  • April 10, 2025

    Recruiter Wins £25K For Maternity Bias, Unequal Pay

    A recruitment consultant who left her job when her employer reneged on its offer for reduced hours after she had a baby has won more than £25,000 ($32,400), with a tribunal upholding her claim for maternity discrimination.

  • April 10, 2025

    Dyslexic College Lecturer Wins Bias Case Over High Workload

    An employment tribunal has ordered a U.K. college to pay £25,357 ($32,812) to a lecturer for making harassing comments about her dyslexia and failing to ease her workload, despite a doctor's report showing she was feeling overwhelmed.

  • April 10, 2025

    Part-Time Driver Says Booking-Fee Ruling Applied Wrong Test

    A minicab driver urged a London appellate court Thursday to overturn part of a tribunal's decision about whether his employer treated him worse for being a part-time employee, arguing that the tribunal had applied the wrong legal test.

  • April 10, 2025

    Navy Reservist Can Sue Over Part-Time Pay Rate Complaints

    A Royal Navy reservist can bring a claim that he was mistreated for seeking equal pay with full-time sailors in the service, as a tribunal ruled that the apparent statutory exclusion of reservists from that right "cannot be read literally."

  • April 10, 2025

    Charity Worker Fired Without Inquiry Wins Reduced Payout

    An employment tribunal has ordered a charity for people with learning disabilities to pay £6,100 ($7,900) to a former support worker for failing to investigate accusations that she abused users of the service before firing her.

  • April 10, 2025

    Aspiring Barclays Manager Gets OK To Bring Sex Bias Claim

    An employment tribunal has ruled that a Barclays Bank employee who was passed over for promotion after going on maternity leave can go ahead with her pregnancy discrimination claim despite missing the deadline, finding she had reasonably relied on internal grievance procedures.

  • April 09, 2025

    Sales Manager Fired For Running Own Eye Drops Biz Gets Payout

    An employment tribunal has ordered a management software firm to pay £10,219 ($13,037) to a former sales manager, after bosses jumped to the conclusion that he was liable for gross misconduct for setting up his own company. 

  • April 09, 2025

    Part-Time Firefighter Loses Claim Demotion Was Biased

    A fire service did not discriminate against a firefighter based on his part-time status when it demoted him to a lower role after his predecessor returned from leave, a tribunal has ruled.

  • April 09, 2025

    NHS Staff Win Pay Rise And Protections After Strikes

    More than a million National Health Service staff will benefit from a package of improved pay and measures to tackle violence against health workers announced by the health secretary on Wednesday, after years of negotiations and industrial action.

  • April 09, 2025

    Howden Accused Of Poaching Entire W&I Team From PIB

    A subsidiary of insurance consolidator PIB has accused Howden of decimating its warranty and indemnity team by poaching 32 staffers and executives and for recruitment in the rival's underwriting division, Dual.

  • April 09, 2025

    Care Provider Unfairly Fired Staffer With Long COVID, Crohn's

    A care organization unfairly axed a disabled employee on grounds of ill-health after his long COVID and Crohn's disease left him unable to take on a full workload, a tribunal has ruled.

  • April 09, 2025

    Rothesay Seals £105M Pensions Deal With Skipton

    A pension plan for U.K. building society Skipton has agreed a £105 million ($135 million) full buy-in deal with insurer Rothesay Life PLC, securing the benefits of all 705 members.

  • April 08, 2025

    Prison Officer Wins Race Bias Claim After Manager's Forgery

    An employment tribunal has ruled that a prison discriminated against one of its officers for being a Black African by ignoring his complaints about a colleague's racist remarks and delaying action, ultimately forcing him to quit.

  • April 08, 2025

    HMRC Beats Locum Doctor's Employee Tax Status Appeal

    A U.K. tribunal has upheld a decision that a locum urologist's contract with a hospital qualifies as employment for tax and national insurance purposes, despite an earlier decision misconstruing the nature of the arrangement.

  • April 08, 2025

    Barclays Denies Ex-Employee's Role In Transfer Fraud Case

    Barclays Bank told a London court that it is not responsible for a $643,000 fraud targeting a Singaporean fire safety company, arguing that the loss resulted from the company's "own failures" rather than any wrongdoing by the bank.

  • April 08, 2025

    Nigerian Villagers Seek Shell Execs' Docs In Pollution Case

    Thousands of Nigerian villagers urged the High Court on Tuesday to rebalance the "inequality of arms" in their battle with Shell by giving them access to documents that they believe could reveal the involvement of senior executives in decisions that led to widespread pollution.

  • April 08, 2025

    Single Mother Wins Sex Bias Claim Over In-Office Policy

    A construction company discriminated against a former employee by requiring her to work in the office for five days a week when she was a single mother who had to care for her young child, a tribunal has ruled.

  • April 07, 2025

    Employers Offer Flexibility As Response To Rising Sickness

    A surge in sickness-related absences across the U.K. is leading many employers to shift toward flexible working policies, a recruitment industry organization said Monday in announcing the results of recent research.

Expert Analysis

  • 4 Questions About Whistleblowing In The UK And Beyond

    Author Photo

    Following the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's announcement of its biggest-ever Dodd-Frank whistleblower awards, Chris Warren-Smith of Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP discusses whistleblowing in financial service industries in different jurisdictions with other Morgan Lewis attorneys based all around the world.

  • Revamping Contracts For GDPR: 3 Ways To Prepare

    Author Photo

    The EU's General Data Protection Regulation requirements — which take effect May 25 — create a substantial hurdle for thousands of companies worldwide and affect millions of vendor contracts, which now need to be reviewed, amended and potentially renegotiated, say Mathew Keshav Lewis and Zachary Foreman of Axiom Law.

  • Keys To Corporate Social Responsibility Compliance: Part 1

    Author Photo

    2018 may be the year that corporate social responsibility compliance becomes a core duty of in-house legal departments. Not only have legal requirements proliferated in recent years, but new disclosure requirements and more regulation are on the horizon, say attorneys with Ropes & Gray LLP.

  • A Guide To Anti-Trafficking Compliance For Food Cos.

    Author Photo

    Despite the 2016 dismissal of federal human rights cases against food companies in California, a similar class action — Tomasella v. Hershey Co. — was recently filed in Massachusetts federal court, and it’s one that companies in the sector should watch closely, says Markus Funk of Perkins Coie LLP.

  • Human Rights Benchmarks: A Primer For In-House Counsel

    Author Photo

    A number of corporate institutions and nongovernmental organizations have partnered together to “benchmark” how peer companies compare to each other in the area of human rights compliance. The reputational damage that these studies can cause should not be underestimated, say Viren Mascarenhas and Kayla Winarsky Green of King & Spalding LLP.

  • Basic Human Rights: Whose Job Is Enforcement?

    Author Photo

    The cases of Jesner v. Arab Bank and Doe v. Cisco Systems pose different legal tests under the Alien Tort Statute. But these decisions could hold major consequences for environmentalists, human rights activists and even individuals who have turned to ATS to go after transnational corporations, says Dan Weissman of LexisNexis.

  • Cos. Should Note Guidance From Gov'ts On Human Rights

    Author Photo

    Recent legislative and courtroom developments in the U.K., the U.S. and further afield may have a significant impact on human rights compliance requirements for companies doing business internationally, say attorneys with Covington & Burlington LLP.

  • Preparing For UK Litigation As A US Lawyer

    Author Photo

    Counsel fees, issue fees, risk of loss and the “additional” cost of a barrister mark significant differences between the U.K. and U.S. legal processes. The good news is that the bond between the U.K. and the U.S. arising out of our common history and law renders retaining and working with U.K. counsel seamless and rewarding, says Richard Reice of Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney LLP.

  • Whistleblower Protection: When Private Turns Public

    Author Photo

    In Chesterton v. Nurmohamed, a U.K. appeals court recently found that disclosing a breach of a worker's contract may satisfy the public interest requirement for whistleblower protection if a sufficiently large number of other workers are affected. This decision may cause some concern for well-known employers, say Emma Vennesson and Katherine Newman of Faegre Baker Daniels LLP.

  • Uber May Have Met Its Waterloo In Europe

    Author Photo

    Recent developments in Europe suggest that Uber’s business model — built on its claims that it is a digital platform between consumer and driver, not a transportation company, and that its workers are merely independent contractors, not employees governed by local labor laws — may be approaching collapse on the continent sooner than anticipated, says Thomas Dickerson of Herzfeld & Rubin PC.

  • Harmonizing US And UK Workplace Dress Codes

    Author Photo

    Given recent publicity surrounding workplace dress codes for women in both the U.S. and U.K., it's likely the issue will be subject to greater scrutiny going forward. Companies with an international reach must exercise particular caution when seeking to coordinate workplace dress codes across the business as considerations may differ widely, says Furat Ashraf of Bird & Bird.

  • Top 5 Business And Human Rights Concerns For Companies To Monitor

    Author Photo

    Businesses are being bombarded with information about their responsibilities toward global human rights and other nonfinancial efforts. According to Covington & Burling LLP attorneys Christopher Walter and Hannah Edmonds, U.K. businesses should be actively monitoring five key developments.

  • FCA's Work In Progress: Individual Accountability

    Author Photo

    In the case of the U.K. accountability regime, the sea change seems to have been more about the Financial Conduct Authority sending a message to firms, leaders and the public that things would be different — rather than replacing an ineffective regime. We anticipate a change within the financial services sector, as individuals are likely to want to eat more carrots and feel fewer sticks, say members of Taylor Wessing LLP.

  • Conflict Minerals Compliance: What To Do Now

    Author Photo

    In the final part of a three-part series on conflict minerals compliance, Michael Littenberg at Ropes & Gray LLP discusses practical compliance tips for this cycle and the next in light of past and expected trends in conflict minerals compliance.

  • UK Modern Slavery Act: Public Shame In The Supply Chain

    Author Photo

    Businesses are increasingly expected to respect human rights wherever they operate. Though light on government regulation, the U.K. Modern Slavery Act is designed to engineer pressure from consumers, investors and the media, which could ultimately be more effective at driving up standards than the threat of legal enforcement action, says Richard Tauwhare at Dechert LLP.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here
Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Employment UK archive.