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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
Amazon has been granted a preliminary injunction by a federal judge to block the New York State Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) from enforcing a new state law that the online retailer considers an attempt to illegally regulate private-sector labor relations. A state law recently signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul permitted PERB to hear private-sector labor cases while its federal counterpart, the National Labor Relations Board, lacked the necessary quorum to make rulings. U.S. District Judge Eric Komitee cited a 1959 Supreme Court precedent in concluding that Amazon would likely succeed on its claim that federal labor law forbade New York from enforcing its law. The online retailer had been seeking to block PERB from hearing a case concerning the August 9th firing of Brima Sylla, a local union vice president at its JFK8 warehouse in Staten Island, Amazon's only U.S. facility to unionize.
Human Times
UK
The Department for Business and Trade has outlined proposals that could ban non-compete clauses outright, or introduce a minimum salary threshold or limits on the length of time for which they can apply. In a working paper, published alongside last week’s budget, the government said such clauses "play a part in restricting employee movement, limiting knowledge spillovers and can undermine incentives for innovation." Sinead Casey, partner and head of UK employment at Linklaters, observed: “If changes are to be implemented following the consultation, then a key challenge for the government will be how such change is enforced, bearing in mind the undoubted chilling effect on litigation of non-compete clauses posed by the potential legal cost and risk for individual employees.”
Full Issue
Human Times
Europe
The UK's Department for Business and Trade has outlined proposals that could ban non-compete clauses outright, or introduce a minimum salary threshold or limits on the length of time for which they can apply. In a working paper, published alongside last week’s budget, the government said such clauses "play a part in restricting employee movement, limiting knowledge spillovers and can undermine incentives for innovation." Sinead Casey, partner and head of UK employment at Linklaters, observed: “If changes are to be implemented following the consultation, then a key challenge for the government will be how such change is enforced, bearing in mind the undoubted chilling effect on litigation of non-compete clauses posed by the potential legal cost and risk for individual employees.”
Full Issue
Human Times
Middle East
Dubai's early adoption of artificial intelligence has helped the emirate move ahead of global competitors, a senior official has said. Speaking at Care for Sustainability MENA in Dubai, Marwan Al Zarouni, chief executive of AI at Dubai's Department of Economy and Tourism (DET), said Dubai is “lead[ing] by example.” He observed that every government entity now has a designated AI officer to lead digital transformation internally, a model which will speed the integration of the technology across essential public services and regulatory systems. “We created a unified vision for executing AI in government. Having an AI officer in every department is extremely important to us,” he said, adding “It ensures ownership, alignment and the ability to move quickly.”
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