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03 October 2019 / Charles Pigott
Issue: 7858 / Categories: Features , Employment , EU
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One-sided flexibility: redressing the balance

The government’s plans to tackle one-sided flexibility in the labour market march in step with Europe… for now. Charles Pigott reports
  • The government has published a consultation paper on measures to address ‘one-sided flexibility’ in the labour market.
  • This follows the launch of the Living Hours Standard by the Living Wage Foundation and coincides with the publication of a new EU Directive on ‘transparent and predictable’ working conditions.

One-sided flexibility—a requirement for a worker to be available for work at very short notice, without a guarantee that any work will be available—was one of the issues addressed in the Taylor review. The review was commissioned by Theresa May soon after she become prime minister and published in July 2017 (see Good work: the Taylor review of modern working practices).

The Taylor review interpreted its brief broadly, which resulted in a focus not just on new forms of labour such as gig work, but on ‘good work’ in general. That said, it had long been a preoccupation of government that its core employment protection legislation did too little

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After Woodcock confirmed no general duty to warn, debate turns to the criminal law. Writing in NLJ this week, Charles Davey of The Barrister Group urges revival of misprision or a modern equivalent
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