%0 Journal Article %T Occupational pension schemes for part %A Sarah Knoops %J European Journal of Social Security %@ 2399-2948 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1388262718819513 %X Although much attention is given to the newer forms of atypical work, a large percentage of employees still have a ¡®classical¡¯ part-time employment contract.1 Despite long-standing legal protection against discrimination, these part-time workers risk receiving less favourable treatment. This article discusses the principle of non-discrimination in the field of occupational pensions from the perspective of part-time employment. It aims to show the adverse impact that seemingly neutral measures can have on the occupational pensions of part-time workers. By way of illustration, two cases of the Court of Justice of the European Union: the Sch£¿nheit and Becker case (length of service) and the Kleinsteuber case (split pension formula) are examined in detail. It is further argued that, in Kleinsteuber, the CJEU appears to have broadened the possibilities of justifying differential treatment. This tendency could threaten the efficiency of the principle of equal pay and non-discrimination for part-time workers as regards occupational pensions. Finally, the impact of these judgments on Belgian and Dutch occupational pension schemes is examined %K occupational pensions %K discrimination %K equal pay %K part-time %K length of service %K Sch£¿nheit and Becker %K split pension formula %K Kleinsteuber %K Belgium %K the Netherlands %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1388262718819513