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Recent Editions
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Human Times
North America
Meta layoffs face AI bias claim

Twenty-six Meta employees have sued the company, alleging that AI-assisted systems used during mass layoffs disproportionately selected workers with disabilities, medical conditions, pregnancies, or caring responsibilities. The plaintiffs claim employee rankings considered productivity, AI token use, communications, documents, keystrokes, screen content, emails and browser history, disadvantaging those who had taken medical leave. They are seeking to pause layoffs scheduled to begin on July 22 while pursuing individual arbitration claims. The lawsuit also alleges Meta failed to test its systems for discrimination under California and New York City rules. Meta rejected the accusations, with a spokesperson stating: “Workforce management and organizational decisions were and are made by people, not AI.” The case appears to be the first major U.S. lawsuit challenging the alleged use of artificial intelligence to determine layoffs and could test how existing employment protections apply to automated workplace decision-making.

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Human Times
UK
Pension age rise could hit millions

The UK government is considering advancing the state pension age to 68 by 2037, affecting approximately five million people currently aged 49 to 55. This change, which could save the Treasury around £6bn annually, would mean these individuals must work an additional year to qualify for their pensions, costing them an estimated £12,500. Although no final decision has been announced, the Treasury has indicated this policy shift aligns with previous government reviews aiming for a sustainable pension system. As the landscape of retirement continues to shift, professionals should prepare for potential changes impacting their financial planning and retirement timelines.

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Human Times
Europe
Portugal faces EU action over migration laws

The European Commission has initiated two infringement proceedings against Portugal for not implementing directives on migration. The first concerns the Single Amendment Directive 2024/1233, which streamlines the process for non-EU workers. Portugal missed the 21 May deadline to report on its progress. The second issue involves the Reception Conditions Directive 2024/1346, which mandates adequate living conditions for asylum seekers, with a deadline of 12 June. The Commission emphasised the importance of timely transposition for legal certainty and effective migration management, giving Portugal two months to respond.

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Human Times
Middle East
Hiring slump hits Gulf region

Recruitment in the Gulf region fell by 3% in Q2 2026, reversing earlier growth, according to Cooper Fitch. The decline was most notable in software, sales, marketing, public sector, and human resources. Dr Trefor Murphy of Cooper Fitch noted that uncertainty has hindered broader hiring, stating: "Nothing kills growth like uncertainty." The World Bank has also reduced its GCC growth forecast to 1.3% due to regional conflicts. Despite the downturn, some sectors, like investment finance, saw hiring increases, with Murphy suggesting that the overall drop was not as severe as anticipated.

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