Employment UK

  • August 19, 2025

    Recruiter's CEO Fired Over Clashes With Bosses Wins £111K

    An employment tribunal has ordered a healthcare recruiter to pay £111,663 ($151,000) to its former chief executive after admitting that it had unfairly dismissed him just two weeks before a liability hearing over poor financial performance.

  • August 19, 2025

    Ex-Vodka Co. Exec Can't Enforce £2M Payout In High Court

    A London court has ruled that a vodka company's former executive must restart his quest to cash in a £2 million ($2.7 million) tribunal payout after he breached "straightforward" rules by asking the wrong court to enforce the ruling.

  • August 19, 2025

    Pensions Watchdog Says £80M Returned To Scam Victims

    More than £80 million ($108 million) has been paid out to pension savers who fell victim to scams, after a landmark court victory paved the way for compensation, the U.K. retirement savings watchdog said Tuesday.

  • August 18, 2025

    Opaque Bonus Policies Widen Gender Pay Gap In Law Firms

    Opaque bonus processes and a tendency for women to specialize in lower-earning practices are hampering progress by law firms as they seek to close the more than 31% bonus pay-gap, experts say.

  • August 18, 2025

    Law360's 2025 UK Law Firm Gender Pay Gap Report

    Law360 has collected and analyzed the gender pay-gap reports from more than 100 top law firms in the U.K. and compiled that data into a new tool, revealing that male employees typically earned 26% more than their female colleagues in 2024. Check out our analysis of the findings in the coverage below.

  • August 18, 2025

    Asda Loses Bid To Stall Unionizing At UK Depots

    Asda Stores Ltd. lost its challenge on Monday to a bid by trade union GMB to form a collective bargaining unit at its depots, as an adjudicator ruled that the retail giant's concerns about manipulation of supporter numbers are immaterial.

  • August 18, 2025

    Diarra To Restart €65M Claim Against FIFA Transfer Rules

    French former professional football player Lassana Diarra said Monday that he will relaunch his €65 million ($75.8 million) claim against the game's world governing body and the Belgian association over allegedly unlawful and restrictive no-poaching agreements.

  • August 18, 2025

    Aviva Launches Flexible Annuity To Boost Retirement Control

    Aviva said Monday that it has launched a new retirement income program that pays a guaranteed amount over a fixed term to give clients more control over their pension savings.

  • August 18, 2025

    Companies Told To Prepare For New Fraud Prevention Law

    Large organizations must gear up for the new "failure to prevent fraud" offense that will come into force in a fortnight or prepare for an investigation, the Serious Fraud Office warned Monday.

  • August 18, 2025

    JB Drax Sues Exec Over Resignation In £400K Loan Dispute

    A derivatives broker has accused a sales executive of resigning in breach of a £400,000 ($542,000) loan agreement and exposing it to unfair competition because he had access to sensitive information.

  • August 18, 2025

    UK Launches State Pension Review Amid Aging Population

    The government launched its third review into the state pension age on Monday to determine how lawmakers should go about setting the age at which Britons receive retirement payments in the future.

  • August 18, 2025

    FCA Warns Of Consumer Risk In Pension Transfer Incentives

    The City watchdog is concerned about the use of financial incentives used to encourage Britons to transfer their pensions, as it published a sweeping review of the impact of anti-fraud rules on the retirement sector.

  • August 18, 2025

    Eversheds, Fieldfisher Guide Brother's £56M Pension Deal

    The European arm of global electronics giant Brother Industries Ltd. has agreed to a £56 million ($76 million) full pension program buy-in with Just Group PLC, the financial services company said on Monday.

  • August 17, 2025

    Law360's 2025 Review Of Gender Pay Gaps At UK Law Firms

    The gender pay gap at the U.K.'s highest-earning law firms is 26% on average — but disparities within a single firm can vary from zero to more than 100%. Law360 has collected and analyzed gender pay-gap reports from over 100 firms and compiled that data into a new tool.

  • August 17, 2025

    Women At UK Law Firms Earn 26% Less Than Men

    The U.K.'s highest-earning law firms are making fractional progress in closing the gender pay gap. In a new project, Law360 dives deep into what's behind the inequality at British firms — and what it will take to close the gap.

  • August 15, 2025

    Medical Union Loses Bid To Block NHS Changes

    A London judge denied a medical union's bid on Friday to stop the U.K.'s health department from implementing recommended changes to union members' jobs, ruling that the union had not met the test for relief before a full hearing.

  • August 15, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Transport for London hit with a procurement claim by the operator of Oyster card, while Mastercard and Visa face claims from the Rocco Forte Hotel Group, and Liverpool Football Club lobbed a claim against a security company.

  • August 15, 2025

    Pro Rugby Exec Quits Alleging Misogyny From Owners

    The chief operating officer of a professional rugby club has alleged its owners suggested she sleep with someone at the sport's governing body in an open letter on Thursday announcing her resignation. 

  • August 15, 2025

    Engineer Fired After Raising Gas Safety Concerns Wins £66K

    An employment tribunal has ordered an energy infrastructure company to pay a former chief engineer more than £66,000 ($89,500) for unfairly firing him after he raised concerns with a job to replace gas mains in London.

  • August 15, 2025

    Tech Co. Denies Liability For Founder's Legal Fees

    An anti-piracy technology firm has rejected a founder's claim that it is obliged to pay for his £186,000 ($252,000) legal bill for litigation against the business, denying that it agreed to cover those legal fees.

  • August 15, 2025

    Asos Avoids Bias Case Over Worker With Anti-Uniform Beliefs

    Fashion retailer Asos did not discriminate against the philosophical beliefs of an employee working for IT firm Ricoh UK by requiring him to wear uniforms that impeded his duties on-site, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • August 15, 2025

    L&G Sees Near £1T Pension Deals Globally Over Next Decade

    Legal & General has said global insurers could secure up to £1 trillion ($1.4 trillion) in pension liabilities over the next decade.

  • August 14, 2025

    Trustees Warned To Follow Rules Or Face Jail, Fines

    The Pensions Regulator on Thursday warned pension scheme trustees that they face large fines or even jail if they flout investment rules designed to protect savers.

  • August 14, 2025

    UK Faces Pensions Crisis As Savings Fall Short, Says Official

    A director at the pensions watchdog has said that ensuring workers in Britain have sufficient financial resources in later life is the "challenge of our time."

  • August 14, 2025

    Ex-CEO Denies Contract Breaches In £4.6M Dividend Spat

    An education company's former chief executive has denied allegations in a £4.6 million ($6.2 million) claim that she had caused the business to violate the terms of its government contracts by paying herself profits as dividends rather than reinvesting them.

Expert Analysis

  • ESG Regs Abroad Offer Road Map For US Multinational Cos.

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    Recent regulations in the European Union and United Kingdom mandate certain companies to disclose climate-related and other environmental, social and governance information to investors, serving as a harbinger of things to come in the U.S., say Petrina McDaniel and Shing Tse at Squire Patton, and Kimberly Chainey at AptarGroup.

  • How Will UK Use New Penalties For Debt-Dodging Directors?

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    Thomas Shortland at Cohen & Gresser discusses the scope of the new disqualification regime for company directors who dissolve their businesses to avoid paying back state COVID-19 loans, and identifies factors that may affect how frequently the government exercises the new powers.

  • How Immune Are State Agents From Foreign Courts?

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    The ongoing case of Basfar v. Wong is the latest to raise questions about the boundary between commercial or private activity and the exercise of sovereign authority that shields state agents from foreign judicial scrutiny — and the U.K. Supreme Court's upcoming decision in the matter will likely bring clarity on exceptions to the immunity doctrine, say Andrew Stafford QC and Oleg Shaulko at Kobre & Kim.

  • Human Rights-Focused Lending Models Can Curb Trafficking

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    In light of increased environmental, social and governance attention and the 10th anniversary of the United Nations’ adoption of the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the financial sector should expand and align its anti-trafficking efforts with ESG measures by linking human rights outcomes to lending frameworks, say Sarah Byrne and Ed Ivey at Moore & Van Allen.

  • Green Investments Are Not Immune To ESG Scrutiny

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    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.

  • What G-7 Xinjiang Focus Means For UK And US Companies

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    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.

  • UK Employment Case May Lead To New Discrimination Suits

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    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.

  • Opinion

    Nestle Ruling Shows Supply Chain Human Rights Flaws

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    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.

  • Addressing Environmental Justice As Part Of ESG Initiatives

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    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.

  • 2 UK Pension Cases Guide On 3rd-Party Due Diligence

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    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.

  • US Cos. Must Get Ready For EU Human Rights, Climate Policy

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    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.

  • What Growing Focus On ESG Means For Insurers

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    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.

  • 5 Ways To Address Heightened Forced Labor Compliance Risk

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    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.

  • UK Whistleblowing Laws May Be Ripe For Reform

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    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.

  • G4S Deferral Agreement Illustrates SFO's Enforcement Focus

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    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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