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The catalyst of Covid-19 must bring a positive change to our offices: Clare Reddy writes for Property Week
01 April 2021Covid-19 has been, and continues to be, a catalyst for change. At some point, life will settle into a new rhythm, which will come with its own challenges. As we grapple with hybrid ways of working, the pandemic has shown that our experiences have not been equal and has emphasised the increased importance of wellbeing.
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UK: Equal Pay: UK Supreme Court Allows Asda Employees To Make Equal Pay Comparison. Lucy Lewis writes for Mondaq
09 April 2021The UK Supreme Court has confirmed that Asda's retail staff can compare themselves to higher-paid distribution depot staff for the purposes of an equal pay claim. This article explains.
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Ireland - Artificial Intelligence Comparative Guide: Victor Timon writes for Mondaq
21 April 2021In this Chapter, Victor describes the current AI environment in Ireland and some of the opportunities and challenges which arise from that.
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Has Brexit turned our advertisers into Little Englanders? Brinsley Dresden writes for Campaign
30 April 2021"When two tribes go to war, a point is all that you can score." When Frankie wrote those lines on his way to Hollywood in 1984, he can’t have been thinking of the culture wars between Leavers and Remainers in post-Brexit Britain.
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How much should we trust an ecommerce partner? Alan Hunt writes for The Times
30 April 2021We are expanding our ecommerce offering and looking to work with a new outsourced provider. Legally should we retain the relationship with our customer or trust this to our ecommerce partner?
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What can we do about an EU customer charging us for Brexit delays? Rebecca Harries writes for The Times
05 May 2021We make goods in the UK and are struggling with delivering our products to Europe on time because of additional costs and delays caused by Brexit. One of our overseas customers is threatening to impose financial penalties on us for the delay. What should we do?
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Mental health matters - how we reacted to COVID-19: Emma Richardson writes for The Law Society
11 May 2021In this article for The Law Society, Emma Richardson shares the ways we've supported our employees' wellbeing since the first lockdown in March 2020.
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Can EU nationals continue frontier working post-Brexit? Joanna Hunt writes for HR magazine
20 May 2021As the dust from Brexit has settled, attention has turned to what this means for cross-border workers in the UK.
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How to respond if an employee is side hustling for a customer: Carla Feakins writes for The Times
20 May 2021Carla Feakins explains how to police employee side-hustles on the Times Enterprise Network.
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What's new In Irish employment law? 3 key areas to watch: Síobhra Rush writes for Mondaq
27 May 2021Three areas of employment law in Ireland have seen recent significant developments: employment status and the gig economy; collective bargaining arrangements; and gender pay gap reporting.
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United States: What Price Loyalty? Brinsley Dresden writes for Mondaq
02 June 2021The concept of loyalty has been under severe strain this week. Dominic Cummings' excoriating denunciation of the mendacity and ineptitude of the Prime Minister and Health Secretary has been a seminal example of the evaporation of loyalty in a former colleague.
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My relationship with a supplier is broken. Can I go straight to court? Rebecca Harries writes for The Times
04 June 2021We’ve supported a supplier through Covid but they are now really letting us down. We have a dispute resolution clause in our contract but we’ve had some heated calls and the relationship is broken. Can I skip it and go straight to court?
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What can we do about a court judgment that arrived while our office was closed? Mark Lim writes for The Times
21 June 2021We have just opened the post after two months away from the office to find a court judgment against us. It was filed by a supplier who is claiming that we owe them money. What can we do?
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Why the UK government had to allow HFSS online ads 'loophole': Brinsley Dresden writes for Mediatel News
28 June 2021Boris Johnson's attempts to fight the invasion of foreign HFSS advertisers is less like Churchill and more like Canute, writes Brinsley Dresden.
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The test for equal pay comparisons - going back to the source: Carolyn Soakell writes for PLC Magazine
29 June 2021In what might be the last ruling of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in a UK equal pay case, the ECJ has confirmed that female staff working in Tesco stores can rely directly on the EU “single source” test in order to compare themselves to men working in distribution centres (K and others v Tesco Stores Ltd C-624/19).
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How can I revert a contract to pre-Covid terms? Frances Simm writes for The Times
02 July 2021Having tweaked our contracts with several customers to reflect lockdown restrictions, we now want to revert back to the terms we had. I assume there’s a catch?
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Inspired or infringing? The fine margins for marketers seeking to win big at the Olympics: Alex Kelham writes for SportBusiness
05 July 2021Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. And you can say the same about ambush marketing. One person’s outrageous ambush is another’s genius marketing campaign.
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How to manage: Employers need to prepare for the introduction of statutory sick pay: Síobhra Rush writes for Business Post
05 July 2021Whether they already provide paid sick leave or not, all employers should review their employment contracts, policies and procedures to ensure they comply with new law.
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Can my business run a promotion celebrating the Olympics? Alex Kelham writes for The Times
20 July 2021Many businesses will be buzzing with ideas of how to capitalise on the long-awaited Olympics this month. While you can certainly get into the spirit of it, there are strict rules in place to protect the Olympic and TeamGB brands.
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The fate of statues under the new National Planning Policy Framework: Sara Hanrahan writes for Property Week
30 July 2021On 20 July, MHCLG published its latest revisions to the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF). One notable amendment, a modification to the application process for the removal of historic statues, is a political hot potato.