The idea that women who return to part-time work after breaks in employment generally find themselves over-qualified for their role is a myth.
Michael Millar
-
-
Government plans to abolish the new Operating and Financial Review (OFR) have been met with hostility from the Institute of Directors (IoD).
-
Tensions are rising following reports that Chancellor Gordon Brown will use this week's launch of the Turner report on pensions as an excuse to scrap the public sector pensions deal.
-
Engineers from British Gas are threatening strike action over the closure of the company's final salary scheme to new entrants.
-
Medium-sized businesses will lead recruitment activity going into 2006
-
David Blunkett, who recently resigned as work and pensions secretary, is to go back to university to become a lecturer
-
The government has announced plans to encourage diversity in the legal professions
-
A study of pension systems in the European Union has ranked the UK in sixth place
-
Members of Britain's largest civil service union have voted to create a political fund which will allow the union to campaign on political issues
-
A project to tackle the big recruitment and retention problems faced by London boroughs’ highways and transport departments is launched on Wednesday by the Association of London Government
-
Home Office minister Fiona McTaggart has said a new law on corporate manslaughter will be implemented by the end of this parliament
-
The proportion of graduates finding work when they leave university has gone up for the second year in a row
-
The Women and Work Commission will delay proposing controversial recommendations on changes to the law to address gender pay discrimination for a further eight months.
-
Professional services firm Deloitte has launched a £10m training academy that will offer free advice to HR directors.
-
Strike misery could soon return to the London Underground after the RMT union announced it was balloting staff for strike...