Contributed By Caspian Legal Center
Azerbaijani labour law is very protective of the employee and applies to all employees. Thus, in Azerbaijan, there is no legal distinction between blue- and white-collar workers. However, one semi-distinction shall be mentioned regarding the minimum 21 days’ annual paid leave rule: white-collar workers, which are understood to refer to employees who are usually involved in managerial or professional (specialist) work, are granted minimum 30 days’ annual paid leave.
Employees can be classified based on the nature and duration of the work performed as follows:
Fixed-Term Employment Contract
A fixed-term employment contract is defined as a contract that is concluded for a specific period of time. If this type of contract continues uninterrupted for more than five years, it is automatically deemed an indefinite employment contract.
The Labour Code establishes circumstances where fixed-term contracts may be concluded, such as for seasonal work and short-term work assignments, with the inclusion of “by mutual consent of the parties” indicating that these circumstances are not exhaustively limited. The Code also mandates fixed-term contracts in certain situations, particularly for positions involving high occupational health risks where the employer must inform the employee of the probable duration of potential occupational illness exposure.
Fixed-term employment contracts terminate automatically upon expiration of their stated term; however, if neither party provides written notice (whether on paper or through an electronic information system) of contract termination at least one week prior to the expiration date, the contract shall be automatically extended for the period originally specified in that contract.
Indefinite Term Employment Contract
Regarding indefinite term employment contracts, while the legislation does not provide extensive special regulation, it clearly establishes that if an employment contract does not specify the period for which it is concluded, it shall be considered concluded for an indefinite period. Importantly, an employment contract concluded without a specified term cannot be unilaterally replaced with a fixed-term employment contract without the mutual consent of both parties.
Employment Contracts With a Probation Period
Both indefinite and fixed-term employment contracts may include a probation period to assess the employee’s professional level and ability to perform the required labour function. For employment contracts concluded for up to six months, a probationary period of no more than two weeks shall be established. For all other employment contracts, a probationary period of no more than three months may be applied. The probationary period consists only of actual working hours during which the employee performs their labour function. Periods when the employee temporarily loses work capability or is absent from work while maintaining average salary are excluded from the probationary period calculation. Certain categories of employees are exempt from probation periods, including persons under 18 years of age and those who obtained their position through competitive selection processes.
Formal Requirements
According to recent legislative amendments, employment contracts shall generally be concluded in electronic document format. However, there is a specific exception for certain state body positions. Employment contracts regarding employees recruited to designated positions in state bodies must be concluded in written form on paper.
The legislation provides a model form of employment contract that may be utilised by mutual agreement of the parties, which is signed via e-signature tools by both parties. For employment relationships requiring written paper contracts in state bodies, the contract must be prepared in at least two copies. These contracts must be certified by the signatures and seals of both parties. One copy is retained by the employee and the other by the employer.
Mandatory Terms
The Labour Code requires employment contracts to include the following information:
Working Time Limits
The regular working week in Azerbaijan is up to 40 hours, typically spread across eight hours per day over five days. The duration of the working time cannot be extended beyond this limit, except in specific cases outlined in the Labour Code. Under a six-day schedule, daily hours are capped at seven hours (40-hour week), six hours (36-hour week), or four hours (24-hour week). For each hour of work performed at night, the employee is paid an additional fee of 20% of their hourly rate (position) salary.
Reduced Working Time
Certain employee categories are entitled to reduced working hours based on age, health status, working conditions and job requirements. Weekly limits are:
Employees in harmful working conditions are limited to work 36 hours weekly. Specific arrangements are established through collective agreements, if not concluded, employer–trade union consultations based on approved hazardous occupation lists. Similar 36-hour limits apply to high-stress positions involving mental strain, physical demands or health risks. When at least half of the daily working hours of these two types of employees fall at night, the part of the working hours falling at night shall be shortened by one hour.
The wages of employees working under reduced working hours is paid in full amounts determined for normal working hours.
Part-Time Work
Part-time work can be agreed upon by employer and employee either when signing the contract or during employment. On a mandatory basis, employers must grant part-time work when requested by pregnant women, employees with health conditions requiring reduced hours (per medical opinion), women with children under the age of 14 or disabled children, and those caring for chronically ill family members.
Part-time employees receive wages proportional to hours worked or output achieved. They maintain all standard employment rights and receive full annual leave entitlements. Working hours for mandatory cases are determined through employer–employee agreement, with pay calculated proportionally to time worked.
Shifts
Working in shifts – in two, three or four shifts – is introduced in cases when the duration of the production process exceeds the permissible length of working day, as well as for the purposes of more efficient use of equipment, or increase of the volume of produced output or rendered services. With the shift work arrangement, each of the groups of employees must undertake the work for a specified length of the working time according to the shift schedule. In this case, the employees’ work is established according to shift schedules, and working hours are usually distributed evenly over the weeks.
Partitioning a Working Day
In work where it appears necessary because of the specific nature of the work, as well as in work with varied intensity during the working day (shift), the working day may be split into parts so that the total length of working time does not exceed the fixed length of the permitted working day. Such partitioning shall be arranged by the employer.
Overtime
Overtime work requires both employer directive and employee consent, involving work beyond established daily hours. Employees in particularly hazardous sectors and other specified categories are exempt from overtime requirements. Overtime is authorised for emergency situations including natural disasters, industrial accidents, military situations, and preventing perishable goods loss, and other stipulated circumstances.
The general limit is four hours over two consecutive working days. In hazardous working conditions, limits are reduced to two hours per shift and two hours over two consecutive days. Time-based employees receive minimum double hourly rates. Piece-rate employees receive full piece-rate wages plus additional payment equivalent to qualified time-based hourly rates.
Employees under the age of 18 are prohibited from overtime work. Pregnant women and mothers with children under the age of 14 or disabled children may only work overtime with written consent.
Minimum Wage
The Labour Code provides that employees have the right to a minimum wage. According to the Presidential Decree dated 23 December 2024, the minimum monthly wage was set at AZN 400 from 1 January 2025.
No government intervention takes place with respect to determining the procedure for and amount of compensation, pay increases, etc, apart from the minimum wage stipulation.
Reward
The 13th-month pay, commonly known as a “13th-month bonus”, constitutes an additional annual remuneration provided to employees, generally amounting to one month’s salary. This compensation is typically awarded at the conclusion of the calendar year or during the holiday season as an additional benefit.
While the legislation does not define a specific bonus such as the 13th-month bonus or performance bonus in a specified rate, it is understood that rewards that can be granted by the decision of the employers to employees who have distinguished themselves in performing their labour functions at a high level of professionalism and in compliance with internal disciplinary rules of the enterprise. Such rewards consist of money or valuables as a gift, additional leave, individual addition to the salary, higher personal insurance, the payment of the cost of sanatorium-resort treatment, and tourist trips.
Severance Pay
When an employment contract is terminated, the employee is paid a severance pay calculated by the employer based on various criteria depending on the grounds for termination.
Supplement
The legislation establishes additional wages for work performed on rest days, voting days, holidays that are not considered working days, and national mourning days, as well as for work performed overtime. For multi-shift work schedules, additional compensation is established at 20% of the employee’s hourly tariff (position) salary for each hour worked during the evening shift, and 40% for each hour worked during the night shift.
According to the Labour Code, there are four types of leave: vacation; social leave; educational and creative leave for continuing education and pursuing scientific research; and unpaid leave.
Vacation
Vacation consists of annual base vacation for employees and additional base vacation granted depending on the nature of production, working conditions, length of service, and family circumstances. Vacation may be taken either together or separately. Base vacation cannot be less than 20 calendar days and equals 30 calendar days for certain categories of employees, including agricultural workers, medical doctors and pharmacists.
Additional base vacation is granted on the basis of various criteria.
The regulation of overall vacation periods is sophisticated, as different professions have varying minimum calendar day requirements established according to occupational categories.
Educational and Creative Leave
Educational and creative leave under the Labour Code provides paid leave for employees pursuing academic and scientific activities while maintaining employment. Creative leave includes up to two months for PhD dissertation completion, three months for DSc work, annual 30-day leave for doctoral students who also work, and up to three months for writing educational materials. Educational leave grants time off for students attending sessions, examinations, and thesis work, with durations ranging from 20 to 40 days for regular academic activities to four months for thesis preparation, depending on education level. Compensation during creative leave is based on regular salary, while educational leave uses average salary calculations.
Social Leave
Maternity and childcare leave under the Labour Code provides comprehensive support for working women and families. Standard maternity leave grants 126 calendar days of paid leave (70 days before birth, 56 days after), extended to 70 days post-birth for complicated deliveries or multiple births. Agricultural workers receive enhanced benefits with 140 days for normal births, 156 days for complicated deliveries, and 180 days for multiple births. Women who adopt children under two months old are entitled to the same 56-day post-birth social leave and additional benefits. Parents or family members caring for children may take partially paid social leave until the child reaches three years of age, with compensation determined by legislation.
Unpaid Leave
Unpaid leave under the Labour Code allows employees time off without pay for family, educational or personal reasons. It includes leave upon employee request for specific circumstances with set durations in a work year (ranging from seven days to one month, or until the person reaches certain age (caring for chronically sick children until they become four years old) depending on the situation, such as fathers during wives’ maternity leave, parents with young children, employees with disabilities, or doctoral students). Leave by mutual agreement between employer and employee cannot exceed six months.
Confidentiality and Non-Disparagement
An employee shall be held financially liable in full if they disclose the employer’s commercial secret; if they cause moral damage by discrediting the employer’s identity, degrading their honour and dignity, or by spreading untrue, slanderous, insulting slander or false information, seriously harming their entrepreneurial activity. This can be specifically regulated through a separate contract between the employer and the employee.
Employee’s Liability
Except for stipulated situations in the Labour Code, the employee is financially liable for the damage caused to the employer up to the amount of one month’s average salary. Whether directly when concluding an employment contract or in the process of employment relations, the employer may conclude a written agreement with employees who have reached the age of 18 who perform work or provide services directly related to the storage, processing, sale, transportation, use, and other operations of the property entrusted to them, stating that they bear full financial responsibility.
An employee shall not be liable for any damage caused to the employer by a natural disaster while performing their job duties. In addition to the actual damage caused by the employee’s action or inaction, the employee shall not be liable for any loss of income or profit that the employer may have received in the future.
Under Azerbaijani law, legislative references to non-competition are limited to provision within the sample employment contract contained in the Labour Code. This provision permits employees to undertake substitute work outside regular working hours or, subject to employer consent, during working hours at additional workplaces, provided such employment does not compete with the primary employer’s business interests.
Notwithstanding the limited statutory framework, employers routinely incorporate non-competition clauses into employment contracts or conclude separate non-competition agreements with their employees. The rationale is to safeguard business interests by restricting employees from participating in competitive activities both during the employment relationship and also following its termination. The clauses usually encompass:
The moment an employer believes an employee has contravened relevant non-competition provisions, standard practice involves issuing a formal demand requiring immediate cessation of the violations and payment of compensation to the employer. Failure to comply with such demands may result in termination of the employment contract by the employer.
Similar to non-compete agreements, non-solicitation provisions prohibit former employees from contacting current clients, customers and suppliers. They serve to hinder employees from recruiting or attempting to recruit employees, service providers or management/supervisory personnel from the employer. It is typical for employers to conclude an agreement that includes both non-compete and non-solicitation clauses because of their shared characteristics.
From the legal interests perspective of employees, such non-solicit agreements or clauses may be considered as restrictive regarding right to employment, therefore leading to questions concerning their legal validity.
After the conclusion of an employment contract, the transfer of information about an employee’s labour activity to other persons is regulated by the laws of the Republic of Azerbaijan “On Personal Data”, and “On Access to Information”, with the exception of the transfer of general information on labour activity to the employer.
Accordingly, personal data transfer to third parties requires written consent from the data subject – in the employment context, the employee. This consent can be provided through written form or via the Electronic Government Information System. The exception covers exceptional cases like the employee’s death and similar situations. Employees can also withdraw their consent in the same way. Once withdrawal is communicated, the effect is immediate, requiring the employer and third parties to cease data transfers immediately. This creates an ongoing obligation for all parties to monitor consent status and respond promptly to withdrawal requests.
The legislation provides three specific categories where data transfers can occur without explicit consent.
International transfers of tax and financial information under treaty-based arrangements cover financial operations data of foreign legal and natural persons operating in Azerbaijan, based on international agreements ratified by Azerbaijan. Such information can be transferred either directly or through competent executive authorities.
The regulatory framework for foreign employees in Azerbaijan can be divided into two groups.
Foreigners Requiring Work Permits
Generally, every able-bodied foreigner who has reached the age of 18 can work in Azerbaijan after obtaining a work permit. A work permit is an official document that allows foreigners to engage in paid labour activity in Azerbaijan. The issuance of this is carried out within the framework of the labour migration quota approved by the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Azerbaijan. The labour migration quota is the maximum number of foreigners who are allowed to engage in paid labour activity in the territory of Azerbaijan during a calendar year.
The legislation establishes seven specific circumstances under which work permit applications must be denied:
Foreigners Exempt From Work Permit Requirements
Legislation provides an extensive list of persons in this regard, including those who have a permanent residence permit in Azerbaijan; those engaged in entrepreneurial activity in Azerbaijan; and those working in diplomatic missions and consulates, in international organisations, etc.
The Cabinet of Ministers retains the authority to implement targeted restrictions on foreign labour migration in specific sectors or industries, taking into account the needs of the domestic labour market.
Overall, foreigners enjoy all labour rights on an equal basis with citizens of Azerbaijan and shall bear the duties corresponding to these rights. With the exception of cases stipulated by law, it is prohibited to restrict the labour rights of foreigners or to establish more favourable rights for them.
Legal entities, individuals engaged in entrepreneurial activities without forming a legal entity, and branches and representative offices of foreign legal entities obtain work permits for foreigners. Applications received for a work permit are considered within the period specified in the Law “On State Duty” in accordance with the amount of state duty paid.
To obtain a work permit, the employer must submit the following documents:
A work permit is issued for a period of one year, and if it is intended to conclude an employment contract for a period of less than one year, then for the same period. The term of the work permit may be extended for no more than one year each time. The exception is in relation to those involved in labour activities in the liberated territories of Azerbaijan: the term of the work permit may be extended for no more than two years each time. In order to extend the term of the work permit, the employer must apply to the State Migration Service with an application at least 30 days before the expiration of the work permit. If the employer fails to pay the state fee for obtaining a work permit within 30 days, as well as if foreigners are refused permission to temporarily reside in Azerbaijan, the State Migration Service cancels the work permit.
Telework or mobile work is not regulated in Azerbaijan. However, there is ongoing work over the regulation of these regimes.
The initial initiative in the field of including the concept of remote work in the legislation is the Action Plan provided for in the “State Program for the Implementation of the National Strategy for the Development of the Information Society in the Republic of Azerbaijan for 2016–2020”. According to that programme, the Ministry of Labor and Social Protection of the Population and the Ministry of Transport, Communications and High Technologies were entrusted with studying world experience in remote work and preparing proposals on its application mechanisms. In a news release dated 2019, it was noted that the concepts of “Remote work – a form of performing labor functions at home using electronic, software and technical means” and “Telework – a form of performing labor functions at home using telecommunications means” would be included in the Labour Code.
The following year, during the expansive spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, in accordance with the decisions adopted by the Cabinet of Ministers, employers were obliged to ensure that employees who were not involved in work worked at home, as well as in the form of remote work or telework, whenever possible. At the beginning of 2022, the Ministry stated the need to adapt the legislation in this area to the requirements of the modern labour market. They also noted that they were working on a draft law on amendments to the Labour Code in this regard and that other articles of the Labour Code would be amended in accordance with the new concepts to be included.
Even though there is still no concrete legal norm regarding these issues, companies grant and organise such work regimes in a manner that they consider appropriate. In practice, they will incorporate provisions concerning mobile work into their employment contracts through mutual agreement with an employee.
The requirements for unpaid leaves are the most similar notion. As mentioned in 1.5 Other Employment Terms, an employee has the right to use unpaid leave in cases where it is necessary to leave work due to the fulfilment of family, household and other social issues, to study, to engage in creative scientific work, as well as due to age or physiological conditions.
Unpaid leave is granted at the request of employees or by mutual agreement of the parties. The maximum period of unpaid leave may not exceed six months.
At the employee’s request, unpaid leave shall be granted within a working year in the following cases and for the specified durations (selected situations):
There are some new developments in the employment sector in Azerbaijan, including the following.
Desk Sharing
Desk sharing has gained traction as companies seek to reduce office rental costs. In Azerbaijan, this practice lacks specific legal regulation and is typically absent from individual employment contracts. Instead, employers implement it as an organisational strategy.
Platform Workers
In recent years, job losses due to the Covid-19 pandemic and the entry of white-collar workers into freelance work have supported the growth of the gig economy. As a result, employees and employers have begun to prefer freelancing over office work, and many daily services have been accessed across platforms. The platform economy creates new business opportunities. However, the emergence of platform work reveals a number of its shortcomings, including frequent violations of the rights of platform workers, and their deprivation of labour rights regulated by labour legislation.
In order to prevent these violations, a number of legal and administrative measures have been envisaged within the framework of the Action Plan for the Prevention of Informal Employment in the Republic of Azerbaijan approved in 2017. In accordance with the Employment Strategy of the Republic of Azerbaijan for 2019–2030, the implementation of complex measures aimed at the prevention of informal employment has been set as a priority. Based on the 2020 Rules for Conducting and Coordinating Control Measures in the Field of Legalization of Informal Employment, monitoring will be carried out in accordance with the directions of action through the unified electronic information resource “Control over Informal Employment”, and responsibility measures will be taken in connection with the detected facts of informal employment. In this context, the List of information systems and resources that require integration into the relevant information resource has already been approved.
Trade unions may be established on a purely voluntary basis, without any discrimination among employees, without prior permission from the employer. Employees may join relevant trade unions and engage in trade union activities to protect their labour, social and economic rights and legitimate interests.
Status of Trade Unions
According to the legislation, a trade union can be divided as follows:
Role of Trade Unions
Roles can be classified on the basis of basic rights conferred upon trade unions.
The representative bodies of employees are trade union organisations that operate on the basis of the charter and relevant legislation, voluntarily formed by employees to protect their labour, social and economic rights and legitimate interests. The fact that this body is a trade union organisation indicates that the roles envisaged in 6.1 Unions apply here as well.
A collective agreement is an agreement concluded in writing between an employer, labour collective or trade union organisation that regulates labour, socio-economic, domestic and other relations. The agreement applies to all employees of the enterprise, including persons hired after the collective agreement enters into force.
The Labour Code provides an extensive list of issues that are considered in the agreement, including:
A collective agreement may be concluded for a period of one to three years. Except for cases of change of ownership of the enterprise or liquidation of the enterprise, organisational and structural changes in the enterprise, termination of the employment contract with the employer, as well as termination of the activities of the trade union organisation, do not lead to the loss of legal force of the agreement.
In the event of a change of ownership of the enterprise, the collective agreement shall remain in force for a period of three months. During this period, the parties shall commence negotiations with a view to concluding a new collective agreement or maintaining the previous one in force, and making additions and amendments to it.
An employment contract may be terminated only on the grounds and in the manner specified in the Labour Code. These grounds are as follows:
The legislation elaborates each of them, establishing various procedures. To prohibit the abuse of power, the Code specifies the grounds regarding termination on the basis of the employer’s initiative:
The employer must justify the necessity of terminating the employment contract.
Redundancy
Priority of some employees in the case of redundancy
When reducing the number of employees or reducing staff, employees with a higher qualification (profession) and level of professionalism required for the performance of labour functions for certain positions are retained. The employer determines the level of professionalism of the employee, by taking into account the improvement of their professional training, acquisition of a new specialty and improvement of their qualification.
The employer gives priority to retaining the following persons in the case of the same qualifications (professions) or level of professionalism:
The law requires employers making redundancies to support certain groups. If an employee is an orphan or deprived of parental care and is laid off due to redundancy, the employer must cover the cost of necessary professional training to help them find a new job at the same or another enterprise.
The rest of the procedures relating to redundancy are set out in 7.2 Notice Periods.
Notice Period and Severance
In the event of a reduction in the number of employees or a reduction in their staff, before the employer terminates the employment contract, the employee must be officially notified by the employer within the following periods, depending on the length of service:
However, following these notice periods is not compulsory because the employer may terminate the contract in the event of a reduction in the number of employees or a reduction in their staff, with the consent of the employee, by paying:
In the case of redundancy, the employment contract of an employee who is a member of a trade union shall be terminated with the prior consent of the trade union operating at the enterprise.
When a contract is terminated due to the liquidation of an enterprise and a reduction in the number of employees or staff, the employee is paid a severance pay in the following amounts, depending on the length of service:
In the event of termination of the employment contract in the case of change of labour conditions and when the employee is called up for military or alternative service, when the employee is unable to perform their job function due to complete loss of working capacity for a continuous period of more than six months, the employer shall pay the employee a benefit in the amount of at least twice the average monthly wage. In the event of termination of the employment contract in connection with the death of the employee, the heirs of the deceased shall be paid a benefit in the amount of at least three times the average monthly wage. In the event of termination of the employment contract in connection with a change in the owner of the enterprise, the employer shall pay the employee a benefit in the amount of at least three times the average monthly wage.
Failure of the employee to fulfil their labour function or obligations under the employment contract, or gross violation of labour duties, serves as one of the grounds for termination of the contract. The Labour Code reflects the situations that fall under “gross violation” as:
Termination of an employment contract on these grounds is permitted provided that the employee intentionally or negligently or carelessly fails to perform their labour function or duty (obligations), resulting in a disruption of the normal harmony of work, production, labour and performance discipline at the relevant workplace, or in any way causing damage to the rights and legally protected interests of the owner, employer, as well as the labour collective (its individual members).
An employee who is a member of a trade union may only be dismissed for serious cause with the prior consent of the trade union operating at the enterprise. To initiate this process, the employer must submit a written, justified request to the trade union. The trade union organisation is then required to provide a written, reasoned decision within ten days of receiving the employer’s request.
In order to ensure more complete regulation of labour relations in the future, the legislation enshrines that the parties must include in the employment contract the circumstances that correspond to the employee’s working conditions. The following additional circumstances may be provided for regarding termination:
Accordingly, where specified by the employment agreement as an additional circumstance of termination, mutual termination agreement of the parties is acceptable.
The legislation stipulates that such circumstances envisaged by the parties shall not contradict the principles of ensuring the rights of the employee and the employer established by the principles of the Labour Code, and they cannot degrade the parties’ honour and dignity by attempting to restrict their rights.
In any case, such termination must be formalised with a reasoned order (disposal, decision) of the employer. When employment contracts concluded in the form of an electronic document are terminated, the employer’s order (disposal, decision) to this effect is signed with an enhanced electronic signature in the electronic information system and placed in the employee’s electronic cabinet created in the information system.
Except in the event of liquidation of an enterprise and the termination of a fixed-term employment contract, in the following cases, the termination of employment contracts by the employer on its own initiative is prohibited:
Grounds for a Wrongful Dismissal Claim
According to the Labour Code, an employee can apply to the court if the employer terminates the labour relationship with the employee by violating the provisions of the Labour Code in the following ways.
Consequences of Claim
Before applying to court regarding individual labour disputes, participation in an initial mediation session is required. When an employment dispute eventually reaches the court, the judge will review the case’s facts and the statement of claim and then take one of the following actions.
Azerbaijan has ratified International Labour Organization Convention No 111 of 1958 on Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation. Thus, discrimination regulated in this Convention is sufficient grounds for an anti-discrimination claim. The Labour Code furthermore specifies and expands such grounds, prohibiting:
Since each party is under obligation to prove their claim with legal grounds, the employee bears the burden of proof for a discriminatory behaviour by the employer.
An employee who has been discriminated against may apply to court with a request to restore their violated right. This implies that the relief will consist of the approval of the grounds on which the employee was discriminated against, namely being appointed to the position they applied for, concluding the employment they were denied.
All civil cases, including labour disputes, are handled electronically through the “Electronic Court” information system. In courts where this system is applied, court proceedings on labour disputes, including sending and receiving applications, complaints and other documents, as well as delivering court documents to the participants, are carried out through an electronic cabinet created in the “Electronic Court” information system. The system uses an enhanced electronic signature and certified electronic signature tools for electronic document circulation.
Participation of the Parties by Videoconference
For the conduct of court proceedings using a videoconference connection system, the court shall issue a writ on its own initiative or based on a reasoned motion of the parties. The grounds for using a videoconference without the direct participation of the person participating in the case, their representative (legal representative), lawyer, witness, expert, specialist, and translator in the courtroom are:
According to the Civil Procedural Code, the technical means used must ensure the quality of sound and image and their real-time transmission to the courtroom, the transparency of the proceedings and compliance with other fundamental principles and conditions, as well as information security. Such court hearings and procedural actions must be videotaped, and a relevant protocol must be drawn up in accordance with the videotape, and the videotape must be attached to the case file on an electronic medium.
Specialised Employment Forums
While there are no specialised courts to deal with labour disputes, the Labour Code regulates special ways for the resolution of collective labour disputes (unlike individual labour disputes). The subject matter of collective labour disputes covers issues relating to collective bargaining agreements and interests of collective members. Parties are employers, employees (labour collective or its part) or trade unions. Resolution through court proceedings of such disputes is not stipulated. However, the following conciliation methods are used.
Class Action Claims
Azerbaijani law does not provide for class action claims; but, as the law stands, the court may already decide to order the joinder of separately filed claims.
Representation in Courts
The law allows individuals with the necessary legal capacity to personally handle their lawsuits. Any employee may file a claim with the court through a representative. The representative can be the employee’s close relative or an attorney whose authority is duly formalised.
As evident, hiring an attorney is not compulsory, but there are exceptions: in cassation and additional cassation proceedings, as well as when a judicial act is reviewed in newly opened cases, the employee shall participate in court sessions only together with a lawyer.
According to the recently adopted Law “On Arbitration”, labour disputes cannot be resolved in arbitration. However, as indicated in 9.1 Litigation, parties to collective labour disputes may agree to solve their issue in labour arbitration in accordance with the Labour Code, which differs fundamentally from the arbitration defined in that Law. Unlike standard arbitration stipulated in the Law, which involves dispute resolution by an arbitration court issuing legally binding decisions, labour arbitration for collective disputes operates through a temporarily established body rather than a formal court process.
The parties may agree in advance on the binding nature of the decisions of the labour arbitration. The term for consideration of the disputes shall not exceed seven business days. The decision of the labour arbitration shall be adopted by a majority vote and shall be formalised in a protocol.
If the parties have agreed in advance on the binding nature of the decisions, the dispute shall be considered definitively resolved by the arbitration decision and the continuation of the dispute shall not be allowed.
To reiterate, individual labour disputes may not be heard in arbitration under the Law “On Arbitration”. However, collective arbitration disputes may be decided by arbitration method enshrined in the Labour Code. No practice of such collective employment dispute arbitration exists.
In accordance with the general rule, the court decides to award the party in whose favour the judgment is rendered a reasonable amount for the costs of assistance provided by an advocate, taking into account the specific circumstances and the information presented, to be recovered from the other party. In cases where the mandatory participation of a lawyer is required, if the persons participating in the case do not have sufficient funds to pay for the advocate’s services, the court, upon the written application of the persons participating in the case, shall ensure the participation of the advocate at the expense of the state.
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