Dienst nach Vorschrift
"Dienst nach Vorschrift" describes the deliberate decision to do only what rules and job descriptions explicitly require, with no extra initiative or goodwill. The best English equivalent depends on whether the context is a formal labor dispute or a personal attitude toward work.
1. work-to-rule · labor relations
The standard labor-relations term: employees follow all rules strictly to slow operations, typically as a collective industrial action that stops short of a full strike.
2. doing the bare minimum [informal]
Best suited when describing an individual's attitude of not going above and beyond, rather than a coordinated labor action.
3. malicious compliance [informal]
Emphasizes the subversive angle: rules are followed to the letter precisely to expose their absurdity or to frustrate management's actual intent.
Notes
"Work-to-rule" is a fixed technical term in labor law and sounds more neutral than "malicious compliance", which carries a deliberately provocative connotation. For everyday talk about unmotivated employees, "doing the bare minimum" is the most natural choice. "Quiet quitting" is a related recent coinage but implies a broader psychological withdrawal from one's role, not merely strict rule-following.