Employment UK

  • January 07, 2026

    UK Broker Snaps Up Cambridge Benefits Biz

    Insurance broker Verlingue said it has acquired employee benefits and financial planning specialist EBCam for an undisclosed amount as it continues expanding in the U.K. employee benefits market.

  • January 07, 2026

    Trustees Urged To Review Pension Plan Objectives

    Pension plan trustees should review their long-term objectives and evolve their strategies accordingly ahead of a year set to be marked by continued change in the retirement savings landscape, Lane Clark & Peacock LLP has said.

  • January 07, 2026

    UK Rail Pension Program Adds New GC From Post Office

    The manager of Britain's railways pension plan said Wednesday that Sarah Gray, former interim general counsel at the Post Office, will be joining its executive committee as general counsel.

  • January 07, 2026

    Ex-Jefferies Banker To Face 2028 Trial For Insider Dealing

    A former Jefferies International adviser and his alleged associate denied committing insider dealing to make £70,000 ($94,000) from the £969 million takeover of a real estate investment trust when they appeared at a London court on Wednesday.

  • January 06, 2026

    Uber Changes UK Contracts Over New Minicab VAT Rules

    Uber has changed its contracts with its British drivers to reclassify itself as an agent, a move that will save it from collecting value-added tax on fares, just before the U.K.'s overhaul of tax rules for the minicab sector took effect.

  • January 06, 2026

    Barclays Settles $643K Fraud Detection Failure Claims

    Barclays Bank PLC has settled a $643,000 claim from a Singaporean fire safety company that alleged the bank negligently failed to prevent an elaborate fraud that duped the fire safety business into transferring funds to criminals.

  • January 06, 2026

    Lawyers Warn Of 'Missing Victims' Of Post Office Scandal

    Lawyers for people prosecuted by the Post Office based on faulty IT data told a parliamentary committee Tuesday that there are still "missing victims" of the miscarriage of justice, almost two years after lawmakers voted to have all wrongful convictions quashed.

  • January 06, 2026

    More UK Adults Would Prioritize Pension Savings In 2026

    The number of working Britons who would increase their pension contributions in 2026 if they reviewed their retirement savings increased by nine percentage points over 2025 in the biggest year-on-year shift in pension behavior, a survey has found.

  • January 06, 2026

    LNER Train Drivers Lose £453K Retirement Payouts Claim

    U.K. rail operator LNER did not discriminate against four train drivers by denying them early retirement payouts for ill-health because they were over 65, a tribunal has ruled.

  • January 06, 2026

    Broadstone Helped Steer Record £500M Pension Deals In 2025

    Financial services consultancy Broadstone said Tuesday that it helped to steer 36 pension deals worth a record £508 million ($687 million) in 2025, taking the total of transactions completed through its SM&RT Insure service to more than £1 billion.

  • January 06, 2026

    Barista Wins £26K After Cafe Sacks Her Over Mental Health

    A barista who was told she was "not a good fit" and sacked from a café after she returned from a period of absence for mental health reasons was awarded more than £26,000 ($35,200) by a tribunal on Tuesday.

  • January 05, 2026

    Lawyer Resigned Over Court Blunder, Not Workload

    A lawyer who resigned after missing a court deadline has failed to convince a tribunal that her former firm essentially forced her to quit by leaving her with two cases that she felt were outside her expertise.

  • January 05, 2026

    Salvation Army Worker Fairly Sacked For Refugee Comment

    A former social services worker for the Salvation Army who called for all refugees to be sent back on a boat in a comment to colleagues that used offensive language has lost his unfair dismissal claim against the charity.

  • January 05, 2026

    Pensions Body Voices Fears Over Superfund Lifeboat Levy

    Proposals by the pensions lifeboat body to continue charging a levy to superfunds do not reflect the risks posed in the emerging sector and stops the funds benefiting from the zero charge applied to other schemes, a retirement savings provider said Monday.

  • January 12, 2026

    Travers Smith's Pensions Head Joins Pinsent Masons

    Pinsent Masons LLP said Monday that it has hired the head of pensions at Travers Smith LLP, marking the loss of another senior partner for the London law firm.

  • January 05, 2026

    Divorced Women Face 61% Pension Gap In UK

    Divorced women in the U.K. retire with substantially smaller pension savings than their male counterparts, highlighting a deepening "pension gap" tied to marriage and lifetime earning patterns, a consultancy said on Monday.

  • January 05, 2026

    UK Pensions Deal Market Could Hit Record £55B In 2026

    Pension deals in the U.K. could hit a record £55 billion ($74 billion) in 2026 if favorable pricing continues amid a rise in acquisitions among some of the biggest insurers in the sector, Lane Clark & Peacock LLP said Monday.

  • January 02, 2026

    Courts Seek Thousands Of New Magistrates As Backlog Rises

    The Ministry of Justice called Saturday for thousands of people to volunteer as magistrates amid a rising backlog of cases waiting to be heard in the criminal courts.

  • January 02, 2026

    Warwick Uni Beats Professor's Sex Discrimination Claim

    An associate professor of finance lost her sex discrimination claim against the University of Warwick when an English employment tribunal found she had not been given higher requirements as a woman to pass her probation, according to a judgment published Friday.

  • January 02, 2026

    Shakespeare Festival Actor Was Volunteer, Not Worker

    A tribunal has ruled that an actor at Cambridge Shakespeare Festival was not entitled to pay because she was a volunteer rather than a worker, deviating from a recent decision deeming actors at the same festival as workers.

  • January 02, 2026

    Pensions Bill To Reshape UK Retirement Sector In 2026

    The U.K. pensions industry will be in a state of flux in 2026 because of the passage of a raft of reforms geared toward boosting the role of the sector in domestic investment.

  • January 02, 2026

    Litigation Risks Top Challenges Faced By UK Insurers In 2026

    Insurers will be forced in 2026 to grapple with new litigation, including the adoption of fast-emerging AI technology by businesses and subsequent disputes over "forever chemicals."

  • January 02, 2026

    Employment Rights Act 'The Big Issue' In 2026

    Employment law in 2026 will be focused on the Employment Rights Act — but official standards of behavior for finance professionals and a new labor regulator will also shake up the status quo.

  • January 02, 2026

    Belief And Sex Bias Employment Claims To Grow In 2026

    Lawyers expect claims that seek legal protection for potentially controversial beliefs — especially gender-critical views — to grow in 2026 as the U.K. Supreme Court's landmark ruling on sex-based protections changes the outlook for sex discrimination claims.

  • January 01, 2026

    BigLaw Leaders Tackle Growth, AI, Remote Work In New Year

    Rapid business growth, cultural changes caused by remote work and generative AI are creating challenges and opportunities for law firm leaders going into the New Year. Here, seven top firm leaders share what’s running through their minds as they lie awake at night.

Expert Analysis

  • 5 Steps For Keeping Supply Chains Free Of Uighur Slavery

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    In light of a March report identifying 83 global brands suspected of supply chain links to forced labor of Uighurs — an ethnic minority long targeted by the Chinese government — companies should adopt certain procedures to identify red flags in their own supply chains, say Benjamin Britz and Rayhan Asat at Hughes Hubbard.

  • Perspectives

    Addressing Modern Slavery Inside And Outside The UK

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    As the problem of modern slavery persists, U.K. companies must take a broad approach when rooting out slave labor in their supply chains, and should not ignore the risk posed by suppliers within the U.K., says Maria Theodoulou of Stokoe.

  • UK Antitrust Watchdog Proposals Would Bolster Enforcement

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    The U.K. Competition and Markets Authority's proposals for reshaping competition enforcement and consumer protection would shift the historical balance in U.K. competition policy, increasing regulatory burden on companies while weakening judicial scrutiny of CMA actions, says Bill Batchelor of Skadden.

  • UK's New 'Name And Shame' Approach To Anti-Trafficking

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    There has been considerable anxiety and speculation from companies over the annual transparency statement required by the U.K. Modern Slavery Act, but a recent tender announcement from the U.K. Home Office provides key insights into what to expect, say attorneys with Perkins Coie.

  • A Victory For Legal Privilege In Cross-Border Investigations

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    The U.K. Court of Appeal's recent decision in Serious Fraud Office v. Eurasian Natural Resources is a substantial step toward confirming the application of legal privilege in internal investigations, and has significantly reduced the divergence in U.K. and U.S. privilege law, say attorneys with Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy LLP.

  • Is It Time To Prosecute UK Cos. For Human Rights Violations?

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    The idea of holding companies criminally liable for human rights abuses committed overseas has gained traction over the past decade. Though the U.K. government has made it clear that it has no immediate plans for further legislation in this area, calls for corporate criminal liability are only likely to get louder, say Andrew Smith and Alice Lepeuple of Corker Binning.

  • UK Employment Law Risks In Cross-Border M&A

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    U.K. employment law has developed in myriad ways and continues to do so. The acquisition of U.K.-based companies or assets will therefore often give rise to employment law considerations that are unfamiliar to U.S. buyers, says Richard Moore of Lewis Silkin LLP.

  • 4 Questions About Whistleblowing In The UK And Beyond

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    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

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    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

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    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.

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    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

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    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?

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    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

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    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

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    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.

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