After a Supreme Court ruling that Denise Brewster should receive her deceased partner's pension despite being unmarried, Michael Klimes explores its significance for other schemes
2016 was a big year for pensions in the courts, but the coming months already have a number of potentially game-changing cases lined up. James Phillips explores the cases to watch
A Supreme Court ruling could result in trustees having to review the way death benefits are awarded to surviving partners of unmarried couples.
An agreement has been reached on how to compensate members of the Nortel pension scheme after years of negotiations since the company went bust in 2009.
This week's biggest stories included Lloyds' trade union taking legal action over GMP equalisation, a same sex partner benefits appeal case, and asset managers arguing hidden fees are the 'Loch Ness Monster of investments'.
A man will make a case in the Supreme Court for his husband to receive the same death benefits a wife would be entitled to.
PP looks at hte impact of Innospec vs Walker
Top stories on PP this week included controversy over the exit of Paul Spencer from the BA scheme and the latest round of the Box Clever court battle. Here's what you might have missed.
The Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal by ITV over whether The Pensions Regulator (TPR) could expand on its allegations against the media giant in the Box Clever case.
Childcare voucher providers have won a two-year stay of execution with schemes remaining open following a delay to the government's tax-free childcare programme.