International workforce management has always required employers to navigate legal complexity across borders. Employment law, immigration, global mobility, workplace privacy, consultation, pay transparency and crisis response all remain critical parts of the international employer agenda.

The nature of that agenda, however, is now changing. These issues continue to raise important legal or compliance questions, while also signalling a broader shift in how international workforces are being designed, governed and led.

For employers operating across jurisdictions, compliance remains the starting point, but the wider strategic risk is to understand what legal and regulatory change reveals about the workforce, and what organisational capabilities employers need to build in response.

That was the central theme of the Future of Work Hub’s lunchtime session at this year’s Managing an International Workforce conference. Drawing on the findings of our Future@Work 2026 report, we explored four signals shaping tomorrow’s international workforce: the shift from confidence to capability, from mobility to workforce design, from AI adoption to workforce governance, and from reaction to resilience.

Together, they point to a clear conclusion: international workforce management is becoming less about responding to isolated issues, and more about building the capabilities employers need to adapt across borders.

From confidence to capability

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From mobility to workforce design

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From AI adoption to workforce governance

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From reaction to resilience

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Five questions for international employers

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