HR intelligence to lead, innovate & grow.

Want to get your daily slice of HR knowledge to your inbox? Sign up now

Human Times helps you stay ahead of the latest news and trends that impact the HR industry. Every weekday, our unique blend of AI and team of expert HR and employment editors and researchers monitor 100,000s of articles, and social posts to create summaries of the most relevant and useful content to help you lead, innovate and grow. The award winning Human Times newsletter has four geographical editions with news tailored to your region.

From HR leadership to diversity and inclusion, hybrid working, organisational data, performance management, and retention strategies, Human Times is the only trusted free online news source dedicated to covering the most up to date headlines, articles, reports and interviews to make sure you’re abreast of changes in the HR industry.

HT banner
Recent Editions
ht-recent-1
Human Times
North America
Sonderling aims for Labor Secretary role

During a Senate confirmation hearing, Keith Sonderling, President Donald Trump's nominee for Labor Secretary, emphasized his extensive experience in labor law. He has served as acting secretary since April, following Lori Chavez-DeRemer's departure. "Few people have had the opportunity to experience the department from so many perspectives," Sonderling said. Despite his qualifications, he faced criticism from Democratic senators, particularly Patty Murray, who expressed concerns over the rescinding of a Biden-era overtime pay rule that could have benefited 4m workers. Murray warned that confirming Sonderling might lead to further erosion of worker protections. Sonderling also addressed concerns about the management of Department of Education grants and the impact of artificial intelligence on jobs, stating: "What we believe we're going to see is that AI-impacted jobs can potentially make you more productive." He is expected to be confirmed despite the contentious hearing.

Full Issue
ht-recent-2
Human Times
UK
Obesity deepens Britain’s worklessness crisis

University of York research suggests more than 600,000 people in Britain may be unemployed because of obesity, highlighting significant consequences for productivity and public spending. Analysis of 284,258 UK Biobank participants found obesity reduced the likelihood of employment by 4.2 percentage points, with a stronger effect among men at 6.6 points compared with 2.1 points for women. Lower education levels were also linked to greater employment risks, while having a degree appeared to offer some protection. Lead author Dr Aharon Katz said: “Tackling obesity isn’t just a health imperative, it’s an opportunity to boost economic productivity.” Researchers called for targeted workplace policies that challenge discrimination and improve inclusion. Separate findings showed weight-loss injections reduced sickness absence by 45% after nine months and long-term absences by 56%. With two in three UK adults overweight or obese, policymakers are exploring treatments to help unemployed people return to work, although NHS access remains limited.

Full Issue
ht-recent-3
Human Times
Europe
Germany backs flexible job trials

Germany’s cabinet has approved Labour Minister Bärbel Bas’s proposal allowing employees to test a potential new job for up to four weeks, or six weeks exceptionally, without immediately resigning or accepting a permanent offer. The “job-to-job trial” is designed to move skilled workers quickly from declining industries into sectors facing shortages. Bas said workers should be able to change industries “quickly and easily” when companies cut jobs. The legislation would also make digital communication standard for unemployment benefit recipients, ending the requirement to remain available for postal correspondence. Further measures include video access to employment agencies, digital-first applications and reduced workplace-safety administration, potentially removing up to 123,000 safety officer roles in smaller businesses. Trade union Verdi criticised this as weakening safety. The package is expected to reduce annual bureaucracy costs by more than €720m, although Green labour-market spokeswoman Sylvia Rietenberg questioned whether it adequately addresses disruption from AI, decarbonisation and economic transformation.

Full Issue
ht-recent-4
Human Times
Middle East
AI skills surge in Gulf job market

AI requirements appeared in 3.4% of professional Gulf vacancies during the first half of 2026, nearly triple the 1.2% recorded in 2022, according to GulfTalent’s analysis of 118,000 jobs across the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Adoption remains highly concentrated: nearly one-third of technology vacancies mention AI, compared with around one in 15 banking and audit roles. Most other industries remain at one in 30 vacancies or fewer. AI involvement also increases with seniority, reaching roughly one in 12 leadership roles. Among AI-connected vacancies, about one-third require employees to use AI, another third involve implementation, and one-quarter focus on selling AI services. Fewer than 10% involve building models. GulfTalent said AI capability is becoming a “competitive necessity” in technology, while most sectors remain early in their transition.

Full Issue
top-shadow
Read the latest HR highlights