英国对有犯罪记录申请人的高等教育政策:大学是否“禁止这个盒子”?

Charlotte Brooks
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了响应《数据保护法》(2018年)的引入,大学和学院招生服务(UCAS)不再要求非监管学位的申请人在大学申请中披露未使用的定罪。UCAS申请只是招生过程的一个阶段,但在其他阶段,申请人的犯罪历史信息也可能被要求提供。本文报告了对143所大学犯罪记录政策的分析结果,以探讨申请人的披露是否、如何以及为什么在本科录取过程中被使用。调查结果显示,103所院校继续强制要求申请不受监管学位的学生披露其未支出的犯罪记录。如果他们决定申请大学,这一要求可能会给相当一部分人带来挑战。大学政策经常证明使用强制性犯罪记录披露是合理的,以支持“保护程序”或作为他们的??对员工和学生有责任。然而,大学政策没有提供任何证据或解释,表明要求申请人自我披露未动用的犯罪记录有效地支持了这些目标。因此,本文对大学对有犯罪记录的申请人的做法的合理性提出了质疑。
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Higher education policies for applicants with criminal records in the United Kingdom: Are universities ‘banning the box’?
In response to the introduction of the Data Protection Act (2018), the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) no longer require applicants to non-regulated degrees to disclose unspent convictions on their university applications. The UCAS application represents just one stage of the admissions process, but there are other stages where applicants′ criminal history information can be requested. This paper reports the findings from an analysis of 143 university criminal record policies to explore if, how and why applicants′ disclosures are used within the undergraduate admissions process. Findings indicate that 103 institutions continue to make it compulsory for applicants to non-regulated degrees to disclose their unspent criminal record. This requirement has the potential to create challenges for a substantial proportion of the population, should they decide to apply to university. University policies often justify the use of compulsory criminal record disclosures to support `safeguarding procedures´ or as part of their ???duty of care towards staff and students???. Yet university policies provide no evidence or explanation to suggest that asking applicants to self-disclose their unspent criminal records effectively supports these aims. Consequently, this paper calls into question the rationalities universities use to justify their practices towards applicants with criminal records.
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