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MoD sought sensitive children’s data for possible recruitment drive

RT | June 6, 2015

The UK Ministry of Defense (MoD) has been blocked from accessing highly sensitive data on school students, including how rich their parents are and their academic record, which they sought to better inform them of military career opportunities.

The MoD made a request to the National Pupil Database (NPD) last year, according to the magazine Schools Week.

A spokesman for the MoD insisted to Schools Week that the request was an “error” made by someone “outside the Army’s recruitment branch.”

However, Forces Watch, a campaign group that scrutinizes recruitment in the military, said the fact that the request had been denied showed “how inappropriate the MoD’s use of the data was.”

The information the MoD was trying to get hold of is not easy to access; it is labeled Tier 1 and includes school children’s most personal details.

As well as ethnicity and address, the database includes descriptions of pupils’ academic records and special educational needs, as well as how often they were absent from school and if they receive free school meals, an indication of how wealthy their parents are.

Applying to the NPD for such information is a complex and time consuming process. An applicant must answer 20 security questions and enter encryption details into their computer. For Tier 1 data, applicants must say exactly why they need this information and why they are unable to use less sensitive information.

A final decision on whether information will be released is made by senior Department of Education (DfE) staff on the Data Management Advisory Panel.

The news that the MoD had made a request surfaced after all NPD requests were released under transparency laws. Since 2012, only 9 out 460 requests have been refused.

“We only disclose information from the NPD for the purpose of conducting research and analysis that will promote the education or well-being of children in England,” A DfE spokesperson said.

While the MoD said that the request was an “error,” the release from the NPD listed the reason for their request.

[The request was] “To determine if we can use targeted messaging to better inform young people of the career opportunities open to them in the Army (Regular and Reserve) so that their decisions about seeking a full or part time job are better informed,” according to the transparency release.

However an MoD spokesperson insisted that the request was not in line with army’s recruitment policy.

“We can confirm that a request was made in error to the DfE for access to elements of the NPD by an individual who worked outside the Army’s recruitment branch. This is not in line with Army policy and the request has been halted,” they said.

However, Owen Everett from Forces Watch said that the army is struggling to recruit new soldiers.

“That the MoD have now attempted to obtain this vast database of school students’ personal data in an attempt to improve Army recruitment, at a time when Army recruitment continues to be struggling, and when the armed forces policy of recruiting 16 and 17 year-olds is shortly to be challenged in a judicial review, is no coincidence,” he said.

Everrett also pointed out that many teenagers from poorer backgrounds and less wealthy areas of the country end up joining the army because they have no other prospects of full time employment and are, thus, particularly overrepresented in the infantry. In Afghanistan infantry soldiers had a far greater risk of being killed and injured in action.

June 6, 2015 - Posted by | Militarism | ,

5 Comments »

  1. So only the UK military look at schools and no other country in the world does this.

    The rest of the worlds military are never looking for rising talent or those best suited for their needs then.

    I suppose the radical armies of the world also never look at the children as possible recruits.

    Wow.

    Like

    Comment by thoughtfullyprepping | June 7, 2015 | Reply

    • Nobody has said that this is unique to the UK. Have a look at the related articles linked above.

      Like

      Comment by aletho | June 7, 2015 | Reply

  2. But is it right?

    Like

    Comment by am | June 7, 2015 | Reply

    • Recruiting minors is fundamentally immoral. So is amassing privileged information about individuals which can be used to manipulate or worse. Military recruitment is highly associated with high rates of burn out, suicide, alcoholism, etc… this reflects the moral injury that recruiters sustain. Many volunteer for combat tours to escape their recruitment duties.

      Like

      Comment by aletho | June 7, 2015 | Reply

      • Agree totally. To simply say that other governments do this cannot make doing it right for the UK and is moving the focus to an irrelevant place, imo.

        Like

        Comment by am | June 7, 2015 | Reply


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