Categories: Insights, Publications · News, Publications

Tag: GDPR, Whistleblowing


5 Apr 2023

Wide-ranging whistleblowing protection (Italia Oggi Sette Affari Legali – 5 April 2023, Vittorio De Luca)

Protection also extends to shareholders, apprentices, the self-employed, and consultants.

Wide-ranging whistleblowing protection. In addition to their current employees and collaborators, private sector companies must also provide protection to employed workers, apprentices, self-employed workers, freelancers and consultants, volunteers and trainees (including unpaid ones), shareholders, those exercising administrative, management, control, supervisory or representative functions (including if those functions are exercised on a de facto basis) and all persons working under the supervision and direction of contractors, subcontractors and suppliers. This is provided for by Italian Legislative Decree No 24/2023 in which the Italian legislator implemented Directive (EU) 2019/1937 (the so-called Whistleblowing Directive). The provisions will be effective from 15 July 2023 or from 17 December thereafter for companies with an average number of employees of up to 249, as well as for companies that have adopted the organisational model required by Italian Legislative Decree No 231. The purpose of the provision is to oblige companies and other organisations covered by the regulation to activate computer tools to enable the reporting of breaches of regulatory provisions. The legislator, including the EU legislator, intended to protect potential whistleblowers. Protection must also be guaranteed even when the employment relationship has not yet been established, if the information was acquired during the selection process or in any case during the pre-contractual phase, during the probationary period or after termination of the relationship if the information on possible breaches was acquired during the course of the relationship. The protection measures for whistleblowers are also aimed at ‘facilitators’ (i.e. those who assist the worker in the reporting process), persons who work in the same work context as the whistleblowers and who are related to them by a stable emotional or familial relationship up to the fourth degree, work colleagues of the whistleblower who work in the same work context and who have a long-standing and ongoing relationship, or entities owned by and entities that work in the same context as these persons. Between now and the entry into force of the decree, recipient companies will have to i) identify and approve appropriate procedures to regulate the reporting process, ii) activate the aforementioned computerised reporting channels, iii) implement what is necessary to ensure protection and confidentiality for the reporting parties, and iv) provide for and regulate remedial initiatives in the event of reported breaches. This is without neglecting seemingly insignificant details, such as the finalisation and posting of the disciplinary code, which is often missing, incomplete or inadequately completed.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

8 Apr 2026

Management of corporate email after termination of employment: the limits according to the Italian Data Protection Authority

The Italian Data Protection Authority (i.e. “Garante per la protezione dei dati personali”) has once again provided guidance on how employers should manage corporate email accounts after the…

8 Apr 2026

Oral dismissal: the burden of proof on the employee

With order no. 4077 of 23 February 2026, the Italian Supreme Court addressed the issue of oral dismissal, holding that an employee challenging the termination of the employment…

8 Apr 2026

DID YOU KNOW THAT… incompatibility between colleagues may justify the transfer of an employee? 

The Italian Supreme Court, with order no. 4198 of 25 February 2026, held that an employee’s transfer may be lawfully implemented also in the presence of a situation…

7 Apr 2026

The boundary between rest and inactivity in the management of working hours (AIDP – HR Online, 7 April 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Alesia Hima)

In the organizational language of companies, terms such as “breaks,” “waiting times,” or “downtime” are often used. In operational practice, these expressions tend to be treated almost as…

17 Mar 2026

Equal pay: green light for the decree on pay equality and wage transparency (People are People, 16 March 2026 – Claudia Cerbone, Martina De Angeli)

Claudia Cerbone and Martina De Angeli, professionals at the De Luca & Partners firm, author this article dedicated to the draft legislative decree approved last February 5 by…

10 Mar 2026

The transfer of the employee is lawful when there is incompatibility with the company environment (Camera di Commercio Italo-Francese, 10 March 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Silvia Zulato)

With Order No. 4198 of 25 February 2026, the Italian Supreme Court (Court of Cassation) – Labour Section – reaffirmed that a situation of environmental incompatibility may justify…