HR evidence review
Frame the workplace question, gather relevant tribunal decisions, and appraise whether the sources actually support the issue under review.
Employment Tribunal research platform
Tribuno helps professional users structure employment-law research, compare tribunal decisions, inspect source-family lenses and draft cautious, source-cited research memos.
Research file
A professional workspace should show what has been retrieved, what has been checked, and what still needs review before a memo is treated as useful research support.
| Ref | Source | Use in research | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | ET comparable | Dismissal process and investigation fairness | Saved |
| L1 | ACAS Lens | Process guidance for disciplinary handling | Check wording |
| L2 | Statute Lens | Relevant statutory framework and source link | Source linked |
| M1 | Memo readiness | Citations present, thin areas still flagged | Needs review |
Designed for professional review
Tribuno is shaped for users who need to explain why a source matters, not just receive a fluent answer.
Frame the workplace question, gather relevant tribunal decisions, and appraise whether the sources actually support the issue under review.
Move from fact pattern to source text, Lens passages, citation labels, and cautious memo drafting without hiding the underlying material.
Keep ET decisions, ACAS guidance, statute, procedure and higher-authority case law visibly separate while comparing how they inform the research question.
Source-first workflow
Employment Tribunal research is usually a chain of source choices. The UX should make each choice inspectable before it becomes part of a memo.
Structure facts, chronology, issues and research questions before searching.
Search comparable ET decisions and inspect metadata, snippets and source links.
Save decisions, review Lens panels, and check citation/source coverage.
Generate a research memo from selected sources with visible caveats and citations.
Research starting points
Each workflow starts from a bounded source question, then routes to the source trail and sample output.
The list stays deliberately narrow. It is a research entry point, not a menu of legal outcomes.
Compare investigation, consultation, warnings, appeal, and reasonableness patterns across selected tribunal decisions.
Structure adjustment requests, knowledge, occupational health evidence, implementation delay, and comparator reasoning.
Review protected disclosure, causation, detriment, chronology, and employer explanation patterns without predicting outcome.
Inspect ACAS Code and guidance passages beside selected ET decisions while keeping guidance separate from tribunal comparables.
Compare remedy reasoning, compensation headings, mitigation, reductions, and award signals across source decisions.
Workspace access
Access is account-based. Review sample outputs and the product workflow first so you can judge whether Tribuno fits the way you review tribunal sources.