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Lecturers ¡®deeply shocked¡¯ as EU drops lettori compensation case

Commission claim that decades-long discrimination dispute has been resolved described as ¡®incomprehensible¡¯

July 30, 2025
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The European Commission¡¯s decision to close a discrimination case against Italy, part of a long-running dispute concerning unequal treatment of international language lecturers, has been described as ¡°deeply shocking¡± by campaigners.

In 2023, the commission announced it had referred Italy to the Court of Justice of the European Union because the majority of the country¡¯s universities had failed to adequately compensate the impacted lecturers, known as?lettori. This month, however, campaigners learned that the case had been closed, with the commission stating that the ¡°grievances raised¡­had been resolved¡±.

The discrimination case dates back to the 1980s, with the introduction of a law that granted tenure to teaching staff with Italian citizenship while denying it to?lettori, who were instead placed on annual contracts. The law also restricted the salaries of the international lecturers.

The Court of Justice has ruled in favour of the?lettori?on six occasions, determining that Italy breached EU law against discrimination on the basis of nationality. The commission referred Italy back to the court in 2023 after concluding that most universities had not taken the required steps to ¡°reconstruct¡± the careers of the impacted?lettori, including ¡°the adjustment of their salary, seniority and corresponding social security benefits to those of a researcher under a part-time contract¡± as well as the distribution of back payments.

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Earlier this year, the trade unions Associazione Sindacale CEL e Lettori (Asso.CEL.L) and the Federation of Education Workers (FLC CGIL) conducted a survey of?lettori?at almost 40 Italian universities. They sent their findings ¨C namely, that the majority ¡°had not received the sums due to them for career reconstruction¡± ¨C to the commission in March, approximately four months before the case was closed.

Henry Rodgers, a lecturer at Sapienza University of Rome before his retirement and a founding member of Asso.CEL.L, told?Times Higher Education: ¡°We were deeply shocked by this sudden decision to drop the case.¡±

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¡°We would have accepted the ruling of the Court of Justice and their authority to decide on the merits, but now it¡¯s not going to happen,¡± said Rodgers. ¡°My faith in the infringement proceedings is absolutely shattered. It¡¯s a shocking miscarriage of justice.¡±

David Petrie, chair of the Association of Foreign Lecturers in Italy (ALLSI), said he had provided ¡°documented evidence of payslips, pension slips and tax returns of?lettori?still awaiting compensation¡± to the office of commission vice-president Roxana M?nzatu in March.

On the commission¡¯s claim that the discrimination case had been resolved, Petrie said ¡°it is absolutely impossible to give any credence to this statement¡±. ALLSI has written to the commission to call for a stay to the closure of the case, he added.

Lorenzo Picotti, who represents the?British?lettori?Robert Coates and Dermot Costello, said in a statement: ¡°The decision is incomprehensible and should also be criticised on legal grounds. The commission only takes into account the arguments put forward by the Italian government; it does not consider evidence provided by ALLSI and other lecturers, or show that any ¡®useful result¡¯ has been demonstrated at all.¡±

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¡°We are considering what steps to take in response to this unfair decision, including appeals to the European Court of Human Rights,¡± Picotti said.

emily.dixon@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

In an open letter to Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Lettori union Asso. CEL.L pointed out that the miscarriage of justice which occurred in the second of the Commission¡¯s infringement cases against Italy was a direct consequence of the requirement that Italy¡¯s evidence was confidential and could not be disclosed to the Lettori. In that 2006 case the Grand Chamber of the Court of Justice of the European Union spared Italy daily fines of €309, 750 because the Commission depositions did not include evidence from Lettori to dispute Italy¡¯s false claim that it had made the settlements due to Lettori under the terms of a last-minute law it had introduced. Had the Lettori been allowed to see Italy¡¯s evidence, they could easily have disproved it. The imposition of daily fines of that magnitude would quickly have brought to an end a discrimination which persists to this day. To prevent a recurrence of this injustice MEP Michael Mc Namara placed a written question to the Commission in the European Parliament. He asked the Commission to check with the Lettori that the correct settlements due to them under EU law had been made. No such checks were done. The Commission has ignored the results of a national Lettori census. And over 4 months after it was placed MEP McNamara has still not received an answer to his question, though the rules state that such questions must be answered within 6 weeks. There is something deeply disquieting about this case. Why should the evidence of a Member State which has disobeyed 4 clear-cut rulings of the Court of Justice be protected from scrutiny? If the confidentiality requirement of infringement proceedings leads to unjust outcomes, like that of the Lettori case, then clearly it should be scrapped. As Asso.CEL.L pointed out in the open letter to President von der Leyen, the rules of procedure in infringement cases should not take precedence over the Treaty justice the same proceedings were meant to deliver. Robert Barone
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I am deeply concerned about the latest developments. This would be the second time that Italy has pulled the wool over the Commission¡¯s eyes. I am tempted to say:¡¯ I smell a rat¡¯.

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