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The Fordyce Letter

Straight Talk for the Recruiting Profession


John Howard Torrance-Nesbitt, MBA

John Howard Torrance-Nesbitt has an MBA (in Finance & Management/Diversity). He financed his Graduate studies by working part-time at a New York City Retained Financial Services Executive Search Firm in midtown Manhattan--thus learning the Search business. Between MBA classes, he worked on “Searches” for: FX Traders, Cross Currency Traders (US$, £, SFr, ¥), Portfolio Managers, Interest Rate Swaps, Derivatives, Loan Sales, RM/Corporate Lenders, Assistant Treasurers, etc. He pitched, pre-screened and interviewed both local and offshore candidates from New York, London, and Hong Kong, Australia & across the US. After graduating he completed the MBA Corporate Finance Training Program 1989. Recalling the fun he enjoyed while working in the Executive Search field while in Graduate School, he switched careers (settling in on Professional & University Recruiting & Diversity Recruiting).

Articles by John Howard Torrance-Nesbitt, MBA

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American Employment Law Applies in Foreign Countries



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Several years ago, I was unemployed in London after moving to the U.K. to marry a U.K. citizen.

I quickly noticed an obvious difference in the employment process I encountered in London during my job search as compared to the process on job searches I had conducted in the United States. As a recruitment professional (with major American corporations) all of this seemed very odd and strange to me; I intuitively thought somehow American federal employment law must (or at least should) certainly apply (even in the U.K.) since I was being interviewed and screened for (or seeking to interview with) American firms.

I vowed someday to find out about the international reach and applicability of American employment laws.

After all, as an American living in Britain, I did not have the inherent right to criticize or challenge the employment practices of British firms, I am not British!

However, as a native born American I possess the inalienable right to question, criticize, and challenge the employment practices and behavior of my country’s firms (no matter where they operate)! And I have the absolute right as an American citizen to hold them accountable for their employment behavior even in the U.K. since it was different than what I had experienced in the States.