There is "hopeless confusion" in the debate over who should take responsibility for the health of employees, it was claimed last week.
Georgina Fuller
-
-
One in four companies would prefer to break the law than risk hiring a pregnant woman or a woman that is likely to get pregnant, according to research by the Recruitment Employment Confederation (REC).
-
The London Development Agency (LDA) is recruiting for an Olympic head of HR on behalf of the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA)
-
One in five of the UK’s largest companies still have no female senior directors and less than 4% of all boardroom seats are taken up by women
-
Many working fathers believe spending more time with their baby is a “career killer” and not financially viable, according to a new survey
-
A Muslim sales executive who was offered alcohol as a sales incentive is suing his employer for religious discrimination
-
Starbucks has had its first ever strike after staff in Auckland, New Zealand staged a one-hour protest about New Zealand’s minimum wage for staff working in the fast-food sector
-
An unmarried teacher who was sacked from a New York Catholic school for being pregnant is suing for unfair dismissal
-
HSBC will attempt to woo graduate bankers by creating 60 ‘super banks’ with designer interiors
-
Benefit claimants could be referred to a therapist in a bid to tackle the UK's endemic sick-note culture if proposals from the welfare minister, Margaret Hodge, get the go-ahead
-
The failure to communicate with and 'engage' employees not only makes work life a bit of a yawn, but is seriously affecting the UK's ability to compete on the global stage
-
The NHS is facing a recruitment crisis as nurses are being lured overseas by higher wages, the Royal College of Nurses (RCN) has warned
-
The fire service in Durham has set up a day of action in an attempt to attract female applicants.
-
Scots unemployment figures still worse than UK as a whole despite 3,000 new jobs.
-
The number of young people starting apprenticeships has risen by 16.7% since last year, according to the Learning and Skills Council (LSC).