Yes, dismissal procedures around the world are pretty interesting, and in some cases so much more civilized (or at least bogged down in protocol) than in the US:
"Laws in most countries impose rules on no-cause firings that force companies to pay some sort of severance pay. How much it costs to dismiss a given employee abroad often depends on the person’s final pay rate and length of service, and no-cause termination pay outside the U.S. tends to be highest where pay rates are highest. Severance costs are most expensive when the targeted staff member is long-tenured and highly compensated; these costs are cheapest when the employee is short-tenured and low-paid. But there are exceptions: A few high-wage countries, including Singapore and Switzerland, impose relatively light statutory severance pay obligations. ...
...In France mandatory prefiring procedures begin with a company’s sending a letter in French, via registered mail, to the targeted employee, summoning the individual to a meeting. This is followed by more notices, meetings, waiting periods, internal appeals and papers (also sent by registered mail). Chad and other Francophone African countries impose looser versions of these French-style requirements. Perhaps unexpectedly, even the common-law U.K. requires that businesses adopt in-house multistep dismissal procedures."
https://blog.shrm.org/public-policy/what-to-expect-when-dismissing-employees-outside-the-us