Employment UK

  • August 14, 2025

    Prison Officer Can Appeal Firing Over Clash With Colleague

    A former prison officer on Thursday won a bid to revive his case that he was unfairly sacked for confronting a colleague after the pair had a heated exchange while he was subject to a final written warning.

  • August 14, 2025

    Cycling Charity Bans Trans Women From Gongs After Ruling

    A British cycling charity has banned transgender women from being nominated for an annual award for females following legal advice.

  • August 14, 2025

    Workplace Safety Regulator To Probe Reality TV Star's Death

    Britain's regulator for workplace health and safety will take over the investigation into the death of a former reality TV personality who fell to his death.

  • August 14, 2025

    Aviva Reports Dip In Pension Deals Amid Market Slowdown

    Insurance giant Aviva said Thursday that it penned £2 billion ($2.7 billion) worth of bulk annuity deals in the first half of 2025, marking a fall compared with the corresponding period the previous year.

  • August 13, 2025

    HSF Kramer, CMS Guide £36M Pension Deal For German Bank

    Pension Insurance Corp. has completed a £36 million ($49 million) buy-in transaction involving the pensions of 156 members of The Helaba Group in a deal guided by CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP and Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer LLP.

  • August 13, 2025

    Thousands Of Sainsbury's Female Staff Fight For Equal Pay

    Thousands of female shop workers for retail giant Sainsbury's have claimed that their jobs are of equal value to those of better-paid male warehouse staff in their fight for equal pay.

  • August 13, 2025

    UK Employers Targeted By Foreign Worker Sponsorship Scam

    U.K. organizations that sponsor overseas workers have been targeted by fraudsters posing as the Home Office and using a sophisticated phishing scam to steal sensitive data, according to cybersecurity company Mimecast.

  • August 13, 2025

    EAT Draws Hard Line On Bringing 2nd Claim During 1st

    An appeals tribunal has upheld a decision to block a worker's second claim against a social housing provider, ruling that he should have tried to add the complaint to the first claim he had filed.

  • August 13, 2025

    Gov't Urged To Tackle UK Self-Employed Pensions 'Crisis'

    The government should allow HM Revenue and Customs and financial advisers to provide personalized "nudges" to self-employed workers to encourage retirement saving amid mounting concern that they are not putting enough money aside, a cross-party think tank has said.

  • August 13, 2025

    Recruitment Co. Founder Wins £229K For Botched Dismissal

    A recruitment agency must pay £229,118 ($310,000) to one of its co-founders after it unfairly dismissed him and failed to pay him his bonus, an employment tribunal has ruled. 

  • August 13, 2025

    Squire Patton Steers £23M Pension Deal For UK Steelmaker

    Reinforced-steel supplier Rom Ltd. has agreed a £23 million ($31 million) full pension scheme buy-in with Just Group, the financial services company said Wednesday.

  • August 13, 2025

    Machinery Biz FD Gets 11-Year Ban For £1.5M Undeclared Tax

    A former financial director of a machinery business has been banned from the profession for 11 years for submitting false value-added tax returns over three years and leaving more than £1.5 million ($2 million) undeclared to HM Revenue and Customs.

  • August 12, 2025

    Calling A Woman's Attire 'Conservative' Could Be Harassment

    A tribunal has ruled that a business consultant working at Shell may have harassed a female colleague by labeling her clothes "conservative," rejecting the consultant's own set of claims against his former employer.

  • August 12, 2025

    WME Denies Poaching Agent To Target Rival's Top Clients

    William Morris Endeavor Entertainment has denied poaching an agent from a rival U.K. talent agency, dismissing allegations that he used press coverage to lure clients including Queens of the Stone Age, Coldplay and boygenius.

  • August 12, 2025

    Financial Data Provider Sues Rival For Database Theft

    A financial data provider has accused a former product director at one of its subsidiaries of copying a valuable database on infrastructure and energy deals in order to launch a rival platform.

  • August 12, 2025

    HMCTS Says 'No Evidence' IT Bug Affected Case Outcomes

    The body that manages the court system in England and Wales insisted on Tuesday that a widely-reported technical problem did not affect cases, saying an internal investigation found "no evidence" of an impact on outcomes.

  • August 12, 2025

    Insurer Utmost Group's Assets Grow To £107B After Rival Buy

    Utmost Group said Tuesday that its gross cash inflows increased to £5.3 billion ($7.1 billion) in the first half of 2025 after the British insurer completed the acquisition of rival Lombard International in December.

  • August 12, 2025

    Hospitality Swamped By Employment Claims As Reforms Near

    British hospitality and leisure businesses are facing a disproportionate number of employment tribunal claims as the government pursues reforms to strengthen workers' rights to get redress, a report from law firm Birketts LLP showed Tuesday.

  • August 12, 2025

    Gov't Faces Litigation Over Shell, BAE Secondment Scheme

    A human rights organization has warned the foreign secretary that a plan to invite staff from oil giant Shell and defense contractor BAE Systems to take on diplomatic roles might be unlawful.

  • August 11, 2025

    Business School Must Face Visa Sponsorship Bias Claim

    A business school can't escape a former staffer's claims that it is racially discriminating against him for being Egyptian by failing to obtain a visa sponsorship after employees were transferred to another company, an employment tribunal has ruled. 

  • August 11, 2025

    Synagogue Org To Ax Rabbi After Inquiry By Retired Judge

    A U.K. Jewish charity and synagogue organization did not act unfairly by sacking a rabbi after a retired judge deemed him guilty of gross misconduct following allegations of sexual misconduct, a tribunal ruled in a decision released Monday.

  • August 11, 2025

    Heathrow Staffer Fired Over Allegedly Racist Video Wins £44K 

    Heathrow Airport must pay £43,999 ($59,000) to a security officer it unfairly fired for showing his colleague a video allegedly portraying India as dirty, but it does not have to give him back his job, an employment tribunal has ruled. 

  • August 11, 2025

    Royal London Secures £1B In Pension Deals Since Launch

    The Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Ltd. said it has secured at least £1 billion ($1.34 billion) in pension scheme liabilities since entering the de-risking market last year.

  • August 11, 2025

    7 Local Gov't Pension Funds To Join Border To Coast

    Border to Coast Pensions Partnership said Monday that seven local government pension scheme funds that manage approximately £45 billion ($60.5 billion) plan to join the pool, as part of the wider plan to consolidate the U.K.'s retirement pot.

  • August 11, 2025

    Most Pension Savers Under 65 Tap Funds Early, Data Shows

    Approximately 70% of the three million savers in Britain who withdrew money from their retirement pots after government reforms in 2015 did so before they reached state pension age, a retirement specialist said Monday.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • 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.

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