EU employment protection is usually limited to “employees”, meaning that independent contractors are not covered. However, EU law often leaves it to Member States to determine the meaning of employee. The directives regulating transfers of undertakings, collective redundancies, written working conditions, information and consultation, part-time work, temporary agency workers etc. are all examples of protection covering only ‘employees’ as defined by each Member State. |
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Case Reports |
2016/55 New Supreme Court decision on the distinction between independent contractors and employees (NO) |
Journal | European Employment Law Cases, Issue 4 2016 |
Keywords | Independent contractors, Employees |
Authors | Marianne Jenum Hotvedt and Anne-Beth Engan |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
2016/35 What does Brexit mean for UK employment law? (UK) |
Journal | European Employment Law Cases, Issue 3 2016 |
Keywords | Brexit, employment law |
Authors | James Davies |
Author's information |
Case Reports |
2016/40 The court has no jurisdiction to rule on the merits of an employer’s decision to make employees redundant (LI) |
Journal | European Employment Law Cases, Issue 3 2016 |
Keywords | Dismissal; redundancy |
Authors | Inga Klimašauskienė |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The Supreme Court of Lithuania recently affirmed that the courts have no competence to assess the merits of an employer’s decision to restructure and make staff redundant, as the decision was at the employer’s discretion to make. |
Case Reports |
2016/31 Supreme Court: employer cannot dismiss employee for exercising freedom of speech (SL) |
Journal | European Employment Law Cases, Issue 2 2016 |
Keywords | Freedom of speech |
Authors | Nives Slemenjak |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The employee, a public servant, criticised her employer’s director in an email that she sent all of her co-workers. The email made its way into a newspaper. She was dismissed. She challenged her dismissal successfully: the Supreme Court, weighing the employee’s right to freedom of speech against the employer’s right to protect its reputation and business interests, held the dismissal to be unfounded. |
ECtHR Court Watch |
ECtHR 12 January 2016, application 61496/08. (Bărbulescu), Fundamental RightsBărbulescu –v– Romania, Romanian case |
Journal | European Employment Law Cases, Issue 1 2016 |
Keywords | Fundamental Rights |
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