Employment UK

  • January 22, 2026

    London Underground Beats Asbestos Whistleblowing Claim

    London Underground has defeated a claim from a former employee that it sacked him for blowing the whistle on issues linked to asbestos exposure, convincing a tribunal that ill health was the real reason he was fired.

  • January 21, 2026

    MoD Pushes Back Deadline For Military Hearing Loss Claims

    The Ministry of Defence has handed armed forces personnel an extra six months to join a cohort of thousands of servicemen and women who are taking legal action over their hearing loss.

  • January 21, 2026

    5 Questions For Bellevue Law Founder Florence Brocklesby

    Florence Brocklesby met a few of her firm's future lawyers at her children's nursery gates. Here, the founder of Bellevue Law, who pioneered the hybrid model a decade before COVID-19, speaks to Law360 about leading an ethical, women-forward outfit.

  • January 21, 2026

    US Performers Lose Challenge Over UK Royalties Legislation

    Trade unions representing more than 230,000 U.S. singers and performers can't overturn secondary legislation that restricts their right to fair royalty payments, as a London court found Wednesday it lacks the power to decide whether the law violated unincorporated international treaties.

  • January 21, 2026

    Selling Stolen Bikes Counts As Work To Bar Benefit Claim

    An appeals court said Wednesday that a man imprisoned for selling stolen bikes "at scale" was not entitled to claim Employment Support Allowance while he did so, ruling that the criminal activity he engaged in counted as work.

  • January 21, 2026

    White Ethiopian Airlines Manager Wins Discrimination Case

    A tribunal has ruled that Ethiopian Airlines racially discriminated against its only senior white British employee by showing a "distinct bias or preference" toward staff from Africa.

  • January 21, 2026

    DWP Boss Defends Delays Over Women's Pension Fixes

    The government was forced to pause a plan to fix errors that led to a generation of women being underpaid their state pension because of a U-turn on whether to pay compensation to those affected, a top Whitehall official said Wednesday.

  • January 20, 2026

    Letby Avoids Further Criminal Charges Over Baby Deaths

    Prosecutors said Tuesday that they would not be charging Lucy Letby with the murder and attempted murder of nine more infants because there was not enough evidence to pursue the case, as the former nurse serves out her whole-life prison sentence. 

  • January 20, 2026

    Tribunal Dismisses HMRC Race Claims After 4-Year Delay

    A tribunal has thrown out two claims of race discrimination in the workplace from an HM Revenue and Customs worker, concluding that there was no convincing reason for the allegations being advanced more than four years late.

  • January 20, 2026

    Ex-Entain Execs Lose Privacy Claim Against Watchdog

    Two former executives at the predecessor of betting giant Entain have lost their claim that Britain's gambling regulator wrongly published private and confidential information about them in its announcement of regulatory review.

  • January 20, 2026

    Russell Brand Faces New Rape, Sexual Assault Charges

    Actor and comedian Russell Brand attended a London court remotely on Tuesday to face two new charges of rape and sexual assault.

  • January 20, 2026

    NHS Nurses Win Claim Over Trans Changing Room Policy

    A tribunal has ruled that a National Health Service trust harassed several female nurses by requiring them to share female-only changing rooms with a biologically male trans woman.

  • January 20, 2026

    Baker McKenzie, HSF Kramer Tie Up £37.5M UK Pension Deal

    Pension Insurance Corp. said Tuesday that it has completed a £37.5 million ($50.5 million) bulk annuity buy-in with the Dr. Martens Airwair Group Pension Plan, securing the benefits of all 455 members of the shoemaker's defined benefit scheme.

  • January 19, 2026

    Top Court Asked To Review Precedent In Whistleblower Case

    Lawyers for an employer appealing a landmark case want the U.K. Supreme Court to clarify if a precedent enabling whistleblowers to bring a detriment dismissal claim against their employer alongside a separate dismissal case could still stand since it left the law "in a most undesirable state." 

  • January 19, 2026

    Ex-Accenture Consultant Wins Appeal To Revive Bias Claim

    An appellate tribunal ruled Monday that a former consultant at Accenture should get another shot at her disability discrimination case, concluding that the judge hearing the case ignored evidence that endometriosis was affecting her everyday life. 

  • January 19, 2026

    Former NHS Manager Gets Prison Sentence For £123K Fraud

    A former NHS manager has been sentenced to two and a half years in prison for fraudulently diverting more than £123,000 ($165,000) from the health service, most of which he spent on gambling.

  • January 19, 2026

    Pensions Provider TPT Picks New Chief Compliance Officer

    British pensions provider TPT Retirement Solutions said Monday that it has hired Helen Taylor as its new chief legal, risk and compliance officer.

  • January 19, 2026

    MPs Endorse Emma Douglas For Chair Of Pensions Watchdog

    Senior MPs on a cross-party House of Commons committee have formally endorsed Emma Douglas to be the new chair of the pensions watchdog.

  • January 19, 2026

    PRA Warns Of 'Competitive Pressure' On Life Insurers

    The Prudential Regulation Authority has said it is concerned that insurers involved in the pension deals market could be tempted to take risks in order to maintain an edge in an increasingly competitive market.

  • January 19, 2026

    Over 1M Retired Households 'Mainly' Reliant On State Pension

    More than 1.2 million retired households in the U.K. are "mainly" dependent on the state pension for their retirement income, a retirement specialist company said Monday.

  • January 16, 2026

    Judicial Watchdog Faces Court Challenge Over Bullying Claim

    The Judicial Conduct Investigations Office is set to face a court review over its failure to properly investigate Employment Judge Philip Lancaster, who has been accused by multiple women of bullying and other serious misconduct during hearings.

  • January 16, 2026

    UK Supreme Court To Hear Landmark Whistleblowing Case

    The U.K.'s top court will soon determine whether whistleblowers who claim automatic unfair dismissal can bring separate detriment cases based on sackings, after senior barristers formally filed their appeal in the landmark case.

  • 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.

Expert Analysis

  • Whistleblower Protection: When Private Turns Public

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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.

  • New UK Supply Chain Disclosures Apply To US Companies

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    Starting in October 2015, some U.S. companies, including many that already come within the scope of the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act, will be required to make disclosures about the steps their supply chains are taking to prevent human trafficking under the U.K.'s Modern Slavery Act, says Michael Littenberg at Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP.

  • A New Compliance Challenge For Cos. Doing Business In UK

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    On the heels of the U.K. Bribery Act of 2010 — a close copy of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act — the United Kingdom has now taken cues from another novel U.S. enactment, this time the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act, and delivered its own disclosure regime on the doorsteps of the international business world, say attorneys with Perkins Coie LLP.

  • UK-Based LLP Partners Now Enjoy More Protections

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    The crux of the debate in Bates van Winklehof v. Clyde & Co LLP was whether a partner could be considered a “worker” under U.K. law. The U.K. Supreme Court's holding will have potentially wide-reaching implications for LLPs with U.K.-based partners, say Katie Clark and Sharon Tan of McDermott Will & Emery LLP.

  • Mapping The Revised UK Takeover Landscape

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    The key impact of recent and impending changes to the U.K. Takeover Code for private equity bidders is that a bidder is now required to disclose its plans for employer contributions to the target’s defined benefit pension schemes, including the current arrangements for funding any scheme deficit, say attorneys with Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.

  • Religious Freedom In The Workplace: UK Edition

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    Recently, four U.K. cases concerning whether each employee had been discriminated against on the grounds of religion culminated in the European Court of Human Rights' decision in Eweida and Others v. the United Kingdom. As demonstrated by these cases, it appears that aims such as the protection of other human rights carry more weight than projecting a certain corporate image, say attorneys with Latham & Watkins LLP.

  • 4 Big Changes Coming To UK Private Antitrust Enforcement

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    The U.K. government recently published its response to its consultation on private actions in competition law. If implemented, the proposals to introduce opt-out collective actions and settlement procedures for businesses and consumers as well as a fast-track process are likely to increase significantly the number of claims started in the U.K., say attorneys with Allen & Overy LLP.

  • 10 Tips For An Effective Cross-Border Investigation

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    Multinational employers may find themselves investigating alleged wrongdoing that occurred in more than one nation, and U.S.-based lawyers and human resources executives often coordinate and directly carry out investigations overseas. But before boarding an international flight to interview witnesses or to review personnel files, in-house counsel and HR executives need to understand that the rules are different when it comes to conducting international investigations, says Philip Berkowitz of Littler Mendelson PC.

  • Choice-Of-Law Clauses: Drawbacks For Employers

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    The problem with an employment context choice-of-law clause is that it implicates tougher employment laws of the selected jurisdiction without blocking the mandatory application of tougher employment protection laws. The multinational employer now has to comply with two sets of employment protection laws, rather than just one, says Donald Dowling of White & Case LLP.

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