ACAS process

Sample Lens brief: ACAS disciplinary and grievance process

Structured Lens brief showing how ACAS passages can sit beside selected tribunal decisions without becoming fact-pattern comparables.

Tribuno provides Employment Tribunal research assistance and legal information only. It does not provide legal advice, representation, or guaranteed outcome prediction.

Research question

Which ACAS process passages are relevant to a grievance investigation and appeal chronology?

Synthetic scenario for demonstration: the user wants to inspect grievance investigation and appeal process guidance beside selected ET decisions.

Source trail

Each source has a role, reason and check

The sample shows the level of source visibility a professional user should expect before relying on any generated prose.

L1ACAS Lens

Code passage on disciplinary or grievance handling

Process guidance context

Used to anchor the process question before comparing tribunal decisions.

Check before use

Check the current ACAS source and keep the passage separate from ET comparables.

L2ACAS Lens

Guidance passage on investigation and appeal steps

Implementation context

Used to support a practical checklist for investigation, hearing, and appeal sequence.

Check before use

Confirm whether the guidance passage applies to the process being reviewed.

S1ET decision

Selected decision used for factual comparison

Fact-pattern comparable

Used to compare how a tribunal reasoned about a similar workplace process.

Check before use

Read the tribunal reasoning before mapping the guidance point to the factual comparison.

Comparison matrix

The useful part is what each source supports and what it does not prove

A sample should show comparison logic, not just a polished paragraph.

Sample comparison matrix for Sample Lens brief: ACAS disciplinary and grievance process
IssueSourcesWhat the sample supportsProfessional useCheck before use
Guidance versus comparable decisionL1S1The sample keeps ACAS guidance and ET reasoning side by side but labelled differently.Helps a user explain the role each source family plays in a memo.Do not cite ACAS material as if it were a tribunal finding.
Appeal processL2S1The guidance source frames process expectations; the ET decision shows how similar facts were reasoned about.Supports a structured appeal-process review.Confirm whether the appeal facts and the guidance passage line up.
Promotion boundaryL1L2Only selected Lens findings should be promoted into memo context and visibly labelled.Prevents a memo from becoming a loose bundle of guidance snippets.Promote only passages that actually support the drafted point.

Memo extract

Generated prose stays behind the source trail

The sample extract is written as cautious research assistance. It keeps labels close to the claim they support.

Research view

L1L2S1

The sample Lens brief would identify ACAS process guidance and then test whether selected tribunal decisions show similar or distinguishable facts. The source-family labels remain visible throughout the extract.

Promotion boundary

L1L2

A memo should promote only the passages needed for the specific research question and should explain whether a cited point comes from guidance context or tribunal reasoning.

Review checks

What a professional should check before using a real memo

The sample is useful only if it makes the user's source-checking work clearer.

01

Keep source families separate

Use Lens labels for guidance and `S` labels for ET decisions.

02

Check source date and context

Procedure and workplace guidance can change and must be checked before use.

03

Use Lens promotion deliberately

Promote only selected passages into memo context.

Important limits

This sample shows structure, not advice

It does not advise on a real matter, predict an outcome, estimate an award, or replace source checking and professional judgement.

Illustrative source labels

The public labels demonstrate source-family separation and are not live citations to ACAS or tribunal sources.

Guidance is not a tribunal finding

ACAS material should be checked as workplace-practice context and kept separate from fact-pattern comparables.

Current source text must be checked

A real report should verify the latest ACAS wording, source date and relevance to the process being reviewed.

Professional judgement required

Use the sample as workflow proof only, not as legal advice or process certification.

Use samples to decide whether Tribuno fits your research workflow.

Workspace access is available by request. Start with sample or synthetic matters where possible.