Employment UK

  • September 12, 2025

    Chef Loses Claim Over Disability He Never Mentioned

    An employment appeal tribunal ruled Friday that a former pub chef couldn't claim that a previous judge had skipped over his claw syndrome disability because he had never mentioned it.

  • September 12, 2025

    Nursery Gets Statutory Fine For Forging Staffer's Signature

    A London tribunal has ordered a nursery owner to pay a £17,000 ($23,000) statutory penalty after it forged a former employee's signature on a loan agreement without her knowledge.

  • September 12, 2025

    Barrister Disbarred Over False Claims About Oxford Degree

    A London legal disciplinary tribunal disbarred a King's Counsel barrister on Friday for falsely claiming that he had studied medicine at the University of Oxford when he applied for tenancy at a chambers in 2013.

  • September 12, 2025

    Ex-AIG IT Pro's Claim Struck Out Over Courtroom Misconduct

    A former AIG software developer on Friday had his whistleblowing claims against the insurer struck out after accusing a judge of perverting the course of justice, eating a meal during a hearing and calling a London tribunal a "circus."

  • September 12, 2025

    Gov't Will Oppose 'Indexation' Changes To UK Pension Bill

    The government has said it will oppose amendments to draft legislation that will mean retirement benefits for older pensioners rise with inflation.

  • September 12, 2025

    Squire Patton Leads £23M Welcome Break Pension Deal

    British motorway service station operator Welcome Break Group Ltd. has finalized a £23 million ($31.2 million) full-scheme buy-in of its pension plan with Just Group, the financial services company said Friday.

  • September 11, 2025

    FIFA Lifts Lid On Sports Disputes With New Legal Database

    The worldwide governing body of soccer has launched a free, searchable digital database of soccer-related cases adjudicated by the Court of Arbitration for Sport and the Swiss Federal Tribunal going back to 2002 in an effort to promote transparency in sports law.

  • September 11, 2025

    Ex-Ashurst Partner Barred By SDT Over Sexual Misconduct

    A London legal disciplinary tribunal has barred a former Ashurst Madrid partner from practicing at an English solicitors firm after finding that it had jurisdiction to make a ruling against him.

  • September 11, 2025

    Pensions Managers Urged To Boost Standards For Savers

    Pensions administrators must invest more to modernize their data systems and trustees should play a stronger role in raising standards to help the sector make improvements, the retirement savings watchdog warned on Thursday.

  • September 11, 2025

    Saudi Embassy Worker Wins Appeal Over State Immunity

    An appeals court overturned on Thursday a ruling that the Saudi Arabian embassy in London is immune from a former worker's tribunal claim, holding that her role was not close enough to the exercise of sovereign authority.

  • September 11, 2025

    Social Mobility Data Needed To Tackle Pensions Skill Shortage

    Recording social mobility data in the financial services sector would broaden talent pools across various companies and address the predicted skills shortage over the next decade, a pensions trade body has said.

  • September 11, 2025

    No New Judges As Employment Bill Nears Passage Into Law

    The Ministry of Justice has admitted that it has so far drawn a blank in its push to recruit new employment judges in 2025, despite concerns that the Employment Rights Bill could trigger a surge in claims.

  • September 11, 2025

    Pensions Watchdog Urges Vigilance On 'Impersonation Fraud'

    The retirement savings watchdog has urged pensions chiefs to tighten security amid a rising trend in which scammers attempt to pass themselves off as members of a retirement savings plan.

  • September 10, 2025

    UK Gov't Rebuffs Lawmaker Calls To Reform Lifetime ISAs

    The government shrugged off calls to reform the rules around Lifetime ISAs on Thursday, despite warnings that millions of Britons may have been wrongly sold the long-term savings product.

  • September 10, 2025

    Pinsent Masons Guides £105M Materials Co. Pension Deal

    ​Legacy pension plans for the industrial materials giant Mativ Holdings Inc.'s U.K. arm have completed two full-scheme buy-ins worth £105 million ($142 million) with Rothesay Life PLC, the insurer has said.

  • September 10, 2025

    Actors' Union To Appeal Over Casting Directory's Listing Fees

    Performers' union Equity said Wednesday that it will appeal against a decision by a London court to throw out its case against a casting directory over the listing fees it charges actors.

  • September 10, 2025

    Lawmakers Float Plan To End Lifeboat Fund Admin Levy

    The Liberal Democrats said Wednesday that they have backed reform that will see the permanent removal of a controversial levy on pension providers which funds the administrative expenses of the sector's lifeboat program.

  • September 10, 2025

    Football Club Chair Sues Newspaper Over Wage Allegations

    An English regional newspaper publisher is facing a libel claim from a Welsh telecommunications businessman over an article that said that one of his companies had underpaid its staff, according to court filings.

  • September 10, 2025

    NHS Radiographer Sues Trust Over £18K Underpayment

    A radiographer has claimed that an NHS university trust owes her £17,787 ($24,120), after it failed to pay her the correct rates for overtime and out-of-hours work over nearly a decade.

  • September 09, 2025

    Gregg Wallace Sues BBC Over Alleged Data Protection Breach

    Former "MasterChef" presenter Gregg Wallace has hit the BBC with a data protection claim, according to a newly-public listing on the London court's online filing system.

  • September 09, 2025

    Barrister Says KC Made Claim Of Medical Studies At Oxford

    A barrister told a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday that a King's Counsel claimed to have studied at the University of Oxford as part of a trial over allegations that the silk dishonestly asserted that he attended the institution and qualified as a doctor.

  • September 09, 2025

    UK Gov't Will Overturn Lords' Tweaks To Employment Bill

    The government will seek next week to overturn amendments that the House of Lords made to the Employment Rights Bill, Downing Street has confirmed amid concerns from trades unions over the future of the legislation.

  • September 09, 2025

    Dutch Pension Reform Could Mean Shakeup For Markets

    The sweeping reform of the €2 trillion ($2.3 trillion) Dutch pension sector from next year could have knock-on effects for bond markets and Eurozone banks, a credit rating agency warned Tuesday.

  • September 09, 2025

    Spurs Striker Richarlison To Face Unfair Dismissal Claim

    Tottenham Hotspur FC player Richarlison de Andrade will face an unfair dismissal claim brought by an employee after a tribunal declined to throw out the case in a ruling published Tuesday.

  • September 09, 2025

    Accountant Spied On By Boss Wins £14K Over Unfair Firing

    A former employee of an accounting company has been awarded £14,120 ($19,150) after an employment tribunal ruled that her employer unfairly fired her and then spied on her work computer to retrospectively justify its decision.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • Religious Freedom In The Workplace: UK Edition

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    Recently, four U.K. cases concerning whether each employee had been discriminated against on the grounds of religion culminated in the European Court of Human Rights' decision in Eweida and Others v. the United Kingdom. As demonstrated by these cases, it appears that aims such as the protection of other human rights carry more weight than projecting a certain corporate image, say attorneys with Latham & Watkins LLP.

  • 4 Big Changes Coming To UK Private Antitrust Enforcement

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    The U.K. government recently published its response to its consultation on private actions in competition law. If implemented, the proposals to introduce opt-out collective actions and settlement procedures for businesses and consumers as well as a fast-track process are likely to increase significantly the number of claims started in the U.K., say attorneys with Allen & Overy LLP.

  • 10 Tips For An Effective Cross-Border Investigation

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    Multinational employers may find themselves investigating alleged wrongdoing that occurred in more than one nation, and U.S.-based lawyers and human resources executives often coordinate and directly carry out investigations overseas. But before boarding an international flight to interview witnesses or to review personnel files, in-house counsel and HR executives need to understand that the rules are different when it comes to conducting international investigations, says Philip Berkowitz of Littler Mendelson PC.

  • Choice-Of-Law Clauses: Drawbacks For Employers

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    The problem with an employment context choice-of-law clause is that it implicates tougher employment laws of the selected jurisdiction without blocking the mandatory application of tougher employment protection laws. The multinational employer now has to comply with two sets of employment protection laws, rather than just one, says Donald Dowling of White & Case LLP.

  • 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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