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Employment UK
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October 20, 2025
MPs To Probe Pension Erosion Amid Inflation Concerns
Former employees of multinationals such as Hewlett Packard and American Express will tell MPs this week about how their pension income has been eroded by a failure to keep pace with the cost of living.
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October 20, 2025
Aerospace Biz Can't See UK Gov't Appraisal Of Chinese Deal
A London court has blocked an aerospace company's request to see the U.K. government's security assessment of a Chinese financing deal amid its claim that its former chief executive tried to tank the deal.
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October 17, 2025
Shipping Giant Gets Early Win In Ex-Employee's Forgery Case
A global shipping company has beat back a former employee's bid to be paid as he sues the company for allegedly forcing him to resign after he raised concerns that its environmental records had been forged.
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October 17, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Johnson & Johnson hit with a £1 billion ($1.34 billion) claim for allegedly selling contaminated baby powder, Carter-Ruck bring a claim against the Solicitors Regulation Authority, and Hewlett Packard file a probate claim against the estate of Mike Lynch.
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October 17, 2025
Civil Service Pension Administrator Denies Union Recognition
The organization managing a pension fund for civil servants has told MPs that it has never officially recognized a staff union, even as it prepares to hand over the reins to private sector giant Capita.
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October 17, 2025
UK Local Gov't Pension Funding Soars Ahead Of Reforms
The U.K.'s sprawling municipal retirement plan is now worth an estimated £450 billion ($604 billion), a consultancy said Friday, ahead of government plans to consolidate the highly fragmented scheme into several pension mega-funds.
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October 17, 2025
Calling Colleague 'Male Chauvinist Pig' Is Not Discriminatory
An employment tribunal has ruled that a female member of staff at a support services firm did not harass a Pakistani Muslim by calling him and others "male chauvinist pigs," because she was complaining about sexist treatment rather than making a racial jab.
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October 17, 2025
Kevin Spacey Faces Sexual Assault Claim From Hired Driver
A hired driver has accused Kevin Spacey at a London court of sexually assaulting him on several occasions in the early 2000s, including while he was driving the former Hollywood star to Elton John's home in Windsor.
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October 16, 2025
Dentons Introduces Domestic Abuse Policy To Aid Employees
Dentons has unveiled a new policy to extend support to staff who are experiencing domestic abuse.
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October 16, 2025
TV Staffer Fired Over 'White Man' Remark Wins Claim
A TV staffer has won her wrongful dismissal claim against the production company making a Lucasfilm-backed series, after convincing an employment tribunal that bosses had seized on her comments about working with a white man as an excuse to fire her.
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October 16, 2025
FilmOn Founder In Contempt In Sex Assault Judgment Debt
The founder of FilmOn and heir to a Coca-Cola fortune was found in contempt of court on Thursday for failing to provide information in proceedings to enforce in England one of several multimillion-dollar judgments over sexual assault claims.
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October 16, 2025
Barrister Gains Chance To Revive Disability Claim
A barrister who accused the head of an English criminal set of bullying in a disability discrimination claim was granted a chance on Thursday to challenge the ruling that he cannot sue because he was not disabled.
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October 16, 2025
BBC Denies Harassing Gregg Wallace In Data Breach Row
The BBC has denied causing distress or harassment to Gregg Wallace through its responses to his requests to access his personal data, telling a London court that it has now complied with his demands.
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October 16, 2025
Marsh Unit Warns Against Mandating Pension Investments
Pension funds must be primarily focused on getting the best income in retirement for their members rather than propping up the national economy, a unit of insurance giant Marsh McLennan warned.
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October 16, 2025
Newsquest Defends Report On Wage Practices At Welsh Club
An English regional newspaper publisher has defended itself against a Welsh telecommunications businessman's libel claim, saying it accurately reported that one of its companies underpaid its employers.
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October 15, 2025
Trans Activists Refer UK To Europe's Human Rights Court
Two transgender rights groups have referred the U.K. to the European Court of Human Rights, arguing that a ruling by the country's top court on the definition of sex revealed that Britain has failed to uphold transgender people's human rights.
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October 15, 2025
Minister And Watchdog Spar Over Equality Law Update Delay
The equalities watchdog hit out at a government minister on Wednesday over her delay in approving a proposed update to official guidance on anti-discrimination law after the U.K. Supreme Court ruled on the legal definition of a woman.
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October 15, 2025
Pension Run-On Could Generate Millions For UK Businesses
Businesses could see a multimillion-pound boost from allowing their pension schemes to continue generating investment returns rather than rushing into offloading liabilities to an insurer, a consultancy said Wednesday.
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October 15, 2025
Axiom Ince Staffer Wins £21K For Unfair Dismissal
A former executive assistant at Axiom Ince is entitled to claim more than £21,000 ($28,060) in compensation, a tribunal has ruled, as it said that the law firm breached his employment contract by firing him without giving him three months' notice.
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October 15, 2025
Lloyds OK To Reject Staffer's Request For 3-Day Workweek
A tribunal has ruled that Lloyds Bank did not act unreasonably when it refused an employee's request to compress her hours into longer shifts across fewer days.
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October 15, 2025
Welsh Broadcaster S4C Settles Dispute With Ex-CEO
The former chief executive of Welsh language television channel S4C has settled her dispute with the broadcaster after it cut her loose in 2023 amid allegations of bullying.
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October 15, 2025
Capita Fined £14M For Cyber-Failures In Pensions Breach
The data watchdog said on Wednesday that it has fined outsourcing company Capita £14 million ($18.7 million) for failures in holding personal data security during a cyberattack in 2023 in which the information of 6.6 million people was stolen.
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October 14, 2025
Ex-Mishcon De Reya Partner Can't Save Whistleblowing Claim
A former partner at Mishcon de Reya LLP has failed to revive his whistleblowing claim, as a London tribunal ruled there was no prospect of overturning its earlier decision that the claim could not be brought under British employment law.
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October 14, 2025
Nurses To Battle NHS Over Trans Changing Room Policy
Eight nurses are set to fight a National Health Service trust at trial over an alleged requirement to share female-only changing rooms with a biologically male colleague identifying as a woman, an evangelical advocacy group said Tuesday.
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October 14, 2025
UK To Hike Foreign Worker Sponsorship Fees By 32%
The U.K. government on Tuesday announced a 32% increase in the fees that employers must pay to sponsor skilled foreign workers, marking the first increase in the levy since 2017.
Expert Analysis
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Green Investments Are Not Immune To ESG Scrutiny
As investment informed and motivated by environmental, social and governance considerations accelerates, companies and investors in the green technology sector must keep in mind that regulators, consumers and communities will not grant them free passes on the full range of ESG concerns, say Michael Murphy and Kyle Guest at Gibson Dunn.
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What G-7 Xinjiang Focus Means For UK And US Companies
Attorneys at King & Spalding consider the shifting legal and political landscape, highlighted at last month's G-7 summit, around eradicating forced labor in China’s northwest Xinjiang region, and what U.K. and U.S. businesses with supply chain exposure should do to mitigate their legal, financial and reputational exposure.
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UK Employment Case May Lead To New Discrimination Suits
The recent Maya Forstater case before the U.K. Employment Appeals Tribunal, concerning whether gender-critical beliefs are a protected characteristic, could provoke an influx of discrimination cases on the basis that philosophical beliefs could trump other protected characteristics, says Jules Quinn at King & Spalding.
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Opinion
Nestle Ruling Shows Supply Chain Human Rights Flaws
The Supreme Court's recent ruling in Nestle v. Doe — blocking claims that chocolate makers aided and abetted child slavery in Africa — underscores the need for federal legislation to ensure that U.S. corporation supply chains are not complicit in human rights abuses overseas, says Alexandra Dufresne at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences.
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Addressing Environmental Justice As Part Of ESG Initiatives
Recent calls for racial equity and government regulators' increasing focus on social and environmental concerns make this a good time for companies to integrate environmental justice into their environmental, social and governance efforts, say Stacey Halliday and Julius Redd at Beveridge & Diamond, and Jesse Glickstein at Hewlett Packard.
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2 UK Pension Cases Guide On 3rd-Party Due Diligence
The U.K. Court of Appeal's recent decision in Adams v. Options UK, and upcoming hearing in Financial Conduct Authority v. Avacade, highlight important precautions self-invested personal pension operators should take when dealing with unauthorized third parties, says Paul Ashcroft at Wedlake Bell.
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US Cos. Must Get Ready For EU Human Rights, Climate Policy
The European Union will likely adopt new human rights and climate change regulations for corporations — so U.S. companies and investors should assess their risk exposure and implement compliance processes tailored to their industries, locations and supply chains, say David Lakhdhir and Mark Bergman at Paul Weiss.
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What Growing Focus On ESG Means For Insurers
As the world pays steadily more attention to environmental, social and governance issues, insurers and reinsurers will need to integrate ESG risks into their underwriting and compliance efforts, but doing so will help attract consumers and achieve positive investment returns, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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5 Ways To Address Heightened Forced Labor Compliance Risk
In response to ever-increasing enforcement efforts targeting forced labor, companies can leverage available resources to assess conditions in their supply chains and avoid unintended imports and exports with entities known for human rights violations, say Joyce Rodriguez and Francesca Guerrero at Thompson Hine.
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UK Whistleblowing Laws May Be Ripe For Reform
COVID-19 has reignited calls to expand U.K. whistleblowing laws, with many advocating for enhanced reporting protections and independent oversight of cases, says Pia Sanchez at CM Murray.
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G4S Deferral Agreement Illustrates SFO's Enforcement Focus
The Serious Fraud Office’s recent deferred prosecution agreement with multinational security services company G4S suggests the agency’s approach to compliance, program remediation and corporate renewal is evolving to favor parent company involvement and the appointment of independent compliance monitors, say Chris Roberts and James Ford at Mayer Brown.
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Opinion
Time To Fix Human Rights Abuses In US Gov't Supply Chains
The U.S. government buys goods made in global supply chains where human and labor rights violations are commonplace, so to drive better rights compliance among contractors, it should adopt six key reforms to the federal procurement process, says Isabelle Glimcher at the New York University Stern School of Business.
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Opinion
Reflections On The UK Bribery Act 10 Years On
While the U.K. Bribery Act has been positive overall, regulators should seek urgent reform to better enable the investigation and prosecution of companies and individuals for economic crimes, especially in cases directly harming people and the environment, says Chris Phillips at Alvarez & Marsal.
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Human Rights Are Becoming A Compliance Issue
A recent commitment from the European Union's commissioner for justice to introduce rules for mandatory corporate human rights due diligence next year may signal the arrival of this issue as a global business imperative, making it as fundamental as anti-corruption diligence, say attorneys at Paul Hastings.
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5 Steps For Keeping Supply Chains Free Of Uighur Slavery
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.