LRD guides and handbook May 2019

Law at Work 2019 - the trade union guide to employment law

Chapter 11

Ending of fixed-term contracts 





[ch 11: page 394]

On 6 April 2013, the law changed, limiting employers’ duty to consult collectively on the expiry and non-renewal of fixed-term contracts. As a result, dismissals that result from the expiry and non-renewal of fixed-term contracts must now be ignored when calculating whether 20 or more redundancy dismissals have been proposed in a 90-day period. 





The ending and non-renewal of a fixed-term contract only counts as a dismissal for the purposes of the 20-employee threshold if the employer proposes to end the contract prematurely, in other words, before its expiry date, for a reason related to redundancy (that is, a reason unrelated to the individual), such as a funding cut or the premature ending of a project. 




This change to the law overturned an important victory by the higher education union UCU in Lancaster University v UCU [2010] UKEAT/0278/10/2710, in which the union won a substantial protective award for members when the university failed to consult collectively over the non-renewal of fixed-term contracts. A report by the UCU in 2016 has described fixed-term contracts as the “norm” for early career academics in higher education. Around 76% of all teaching and research assistants are on insecure contracts.