Employment UK

  • December 09, 2025

    UK Watchdog Targets Pension Barriers In Private Markets

    The Pensions Regulator has said it will launch an investigation into why Britain's largest retirement funds are delaying investment in private markets as part of a push to spur the £3 trillion ($4 trillion) sector to plow more cash into the economy.

  • December 08, 2025

    MPs Vote To Remove Cap On Unfair Dismissal Payouts

    The House of Commons voted Monday night to amend the Employment Rights Bill to remove the £118,000 ($157,200) limit on payouts that tribunals can award employees for unfair dismissal.

  • December 08, 2025

    US Fund Loses $5.4M Bonus Battle With Fired London Trader

    A London court ordered a U.S. investment fund to pay $5.4 million to a sacked portfolio manager on Monday, ruling that the company had no right to withhold his discretionary bonus amid criminal probes into his trading.

  • December 08, 2025

    Pension Reforms Could Boost UK Investment By £220B

    The government could raise £220 billion ($293 billion) in additional investment in Britain over the next decade through a series of reforms to pensions, insurance and home building, an insurer said in a report on Monday.

  • December 08, 2025

    NHS Trust Did Not Push Midwife To Quit Over TikTok Videos

    A tribunal has rejected a claim from a midwife that a National Health Service trust forced her to quit by raising concerns over her TikTok channel, ruling that the repercussions were not severe enough to spark her resignation.

  • December 08, 2025

    Hamlins Partner Cleared Of Journalist Blackmail Allegations

    A disciplinary tribunal dismissed allegations on Monday that a Hamlins LLP partner blackmailed a journalist by improperly threatening to bring contempt proceedings in a case over alleged corruption.

  • December 08, 2025

    Ex-Police Chief Faces 2027 Trial For Alleged Fraud

    A former police chief constable accused of lying about his military career and education when applying to work for the police and perjuring himself in court will stand trial at the end of 2027, a judge said Monday.

  • December 08, 2025

    More Than 3M Savers Hit By Salary Sacrifice Budget Change

    The government's plan to cap pension salary sacrifice arrangements will worsen the growing crisis of pension under-saving, a former pensions minister has warned, after an official report found that at least 3.3 million workers will be affected.

  • December 08, 2025

    Hip-Hop DJ Tim Westwood Denies Rape, Sexual Assault

    Hip-hop DJ and broadcaster Tim Westwood appeared in court on Monday to deny 15 charges of rape and other sexual offenses involving seven different women spanning over three decades.

  • December 05, 2025

    Mothercare Manager Wins £68K Over Maternity Dismissal

    A tribunal has ordered early years brand Mothercare to pay £67,800 ($90,500) in damages after it unfairly sacked a manager during her maternity leave and hired the freelancer who'd been covering her role.

  • December 05, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Mozambique sue the late tycoon Iskandar Safa's family and Privinvest amid the wider $1.9 billion "tuna bond" fraud case, Entain face a claim from a major U.S. pensions agency, and a Mexican lawyer accused of embezzlement bring legal action against Travelers Insurance Co. 

  • December 05, 2025

    A&O Guides Stagecoach On £1.2B Pension 'Run On' Deal

    Asset management giant Aberdeen Group PLC said Thursday it would take over as the sponsor of the £1.2 billion ($1.6 billion) Stagecoach pension scheme, in a landmark deal steered by Slaughter and May, A&O Shearman and CMS Cameron McKenna.

  • December 05, 2025

    UK Watchdog Intervenes In Food Co.'s Pension Plan

    Britain's retirement savings watchdog said on Friday its intervention, sparked by concern for members of a pension arrangement sponsored by a food manufacturer, has prompted the business to commit to putting around £300 million ($400 million) into the plan.

  • December 05, 2025

    Ex-CPS Paralegal Sentenced For Misusing Boyfriend's Files

    A former Crown Prosecution Service paralegal has received a suspended prison sentence at an English court for gaining access to her then-boyfriend's criminal file without authorization, the prosecution service said Friday.

  • December 05, 2025

    Gov't Seeks Unlimited Unfair Dismissal Payouts, Despite Talks

    The U.K. unveiled plans Friday to abolish the £118,000 ($157,500) cap on compensation for successful unfair dismissal claims, disappointing those who recently persuaded the government to abandon its policy of "day one" protection.

  • December 05, 2025

    Ex-Barclays VP's Discrimination Suit Trimmed Further

    A London tribunal has further whittled down a discrimination case brought by a former Barclays vice president, slamming the financier's failure to furnish his "scattergun" allegations with sufficient detail.

  • December 04, 2025

    Lending Biz CEO Settles Share Transfer Row With Ex-Director

    The chief executive of a lending company has settled his claim in a London court that a former business partner forced him to hand over shares in the company by inventing a fraud allegation.

  • December 11, 2025

    Eversheds Sutherland Bags Dublin Partners After Restructure

    Eversheds Sutherland has hired its first two partners in Ireland since integrating its Irish practice into its international business in September, with a tax specialist returning from Pinsent Masons and an employment expert joining from Ogier Ireland LLP.

  • December 04, 2025

    Engineer Can't Stop Trans Women From Using Female Toilets

    A female engineer has failed to convince an employment tribunal that defense supplier Leonardo was harassing and discriminating against women by allowing transgender individuals access to toilets based on their reassigned gender. 

  • December 04, 2025

    EU Parliament Urged To Act On Gaps In Pensions Savings

    European savers deserve better returns and stronger consumer protections to ensure they have adequate pension pots, policy advocates have claimed, warning that reform is necessary to ensure citizens have sufficient resources in retirement.

  • December 04, 2025

    Sheffield Hallam Uni Settles Forced Labor Libel Claim

    A university apologized in a London court on Thursday to a major Hong Kong-based textile and clothing manufacturer for a report into apparel supply chains which linked some of the suppliers to human rights abuses against China's Uyghur minority and other groups.

  • December 04, 2025

    Gov't To Address Pension Inflation In New Bill

    The government has said it will use its current set of pension reforms to push through long-awaited inflation-linked increases to the retirement benefits of older workers.

  • December 04, 2025

    Legal Challenge Withdrawn After Gov't Pensions U-Turn

    Campaigners fighting for compensation over historical failings on payments of women's state pensions have scored a win after the government agreed to reconsider its decision not to create a redress program within 12 weeks.

  • December 03, 2025

    Payroll Co. Sued Over MoD Data Breach

    Manchester firm Barings Law has said that it has brought a High Court claim against a payroll software company over a breach of U.K. Ministry of Defence payroll data, alleging the company may have exacerbated the harm it caused by not raising the alarm.

  • December 03, 2025

    Italian National Loses Post-Brexit Work Status Bias Appeal

    An Italian national can't revive his claim that his former employer discriminated against him based on his nationality, after an appellate board found that bosses had only asked him for proof of settled status following the post-Brexit introduction of new rules.

Expert Analysis

  • Spotlight On UK's Changing Employment Laws

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    The U.K. government recently announced that it is consulting on proposals, which, if implemented, will have a significant impact on the U.K. workplace and employment litigation. With these, plus other ongoing bills, proposals, reviews and consultations, it appears that employer-friendly legislation is on the horizon for 2013, says Suzanne Horne of Paul Hastings LLP.

  • Determining Whose Laws Protect Border-Crossing Employees

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    Probably the most common question in international employment law practice is, "which countries’ employment laws protect border-crossing employees such as expatriates and mobile workers?" This question is relevant when arranging any mobile job, expatriate posting or “secondment,” and it becomes vital when a multinational needs to dismiss border‑crossing staff, says Donald Dowling or White & case LLP

  • UK Reforms: A New Era In Criminal Cartel Enforcement?

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    A law before U.K. Parliament, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill, aims to achieve "strong, sustainable and balanced growth" through wide-ranging measures that seek to improve several areas of the law. In particular, the proposed competition law reforms represent a major re-casting of the U.K. regime, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP.

  • Recent Developments In German Competition Law

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    The first half of 2012 saw again significant enforcement activity at the German Federal Cartel Office. The authority prohibited two mergers, imposed fines on three cartels, installed an anonymous whistleblower system, and started the second phase of its food sector inquiry, say Silvio Cappellari and Maria Held of Arnold & Porter LLP.

  • Weighing UK Pensions Regulator's Moral Hazard Powers

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    The question of whether the U.K. Pension Regulator's moral hazard powers are enforceable outside the U.K. arose first in the Sea Containers case in 2008 and, more recently, in the cases of the Nortel Networks’ U.K. DB Scheme and the Great Lakes DB Scheme. The differing approach of the Pension Regulator, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and the Canadian courts in each of these cases is noteworthy, say Sian Robertson of Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP and David Cleary of Greenberg Traurig LLP.

  • Extra-Territorial Application Of The Automatic Stay

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    A recent decision in the Nortel Networks Chapter 11 proceedings demonstrates the difficulty of an expansive approach to U.S. bankruptcy court jurisdiction and calls into question the ability of claimholders to participate in statutorily mandated foreign proceedings without risking loss of their claims and potential sanctions in the U.S. bankruptcy court, say Steven R. Gross, Katherine Ashton and Shannon Rebholz of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.

  • Effective Management Of UK Employee Exits

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    This article aims to explain in general terms the protections that apply to employees in the United Kingdom and the choices available to an employer in relation to possible employee terminations — along with the relative risk and costs when deciding how to terminate, says Bettina Bender of CM Murray LLP.

  • Trends For Encouraging Employee Whistleblowing

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    There appears to be little doubt that there is an emerging international consensus that whistleblowing is a legitimate tool for dealing with economic fraud and should be encouraged as one way of stemming such wrongdoing, say Eric A. Savage and Anita S. Vadgama of Littler Mendelson PC.

  • U.S. Incentives, EU Employees And Conflicts Of Law

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    U.S. employers frequently offer senior employees who are based overseas the opportunity to participate in incentive and bonus arrangements that contain provisions protecting the employer’s interests. Any doubt concerning the enforceability of such provisions in the EU now appears to have been resolved in the employees’ favor, say Christopher K. Walter and Mark M. Poerio of Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker LLP.

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