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Criminal Records in Sweden. Regulation of Access to Criminal Records and the use of Criminal Background Checks by Employers.

Abstract
This thesis examines the regulation of access to criminal records in Sweden and the actual and potential use of criminal background checks by employers in hiring processes. In recent years, more and more Swedish employers have been required by law to check their job applicants’ criminal records. In a parallel process, also the number of enforced subject access requests has increased considerably in that same period. The aim of this thesis is to analyse and explain these two trends and consider their implications for future use of criminal records in Sweden and elsewhere. The analysis draws upon government documents, newspaper articles, interviews with employers using enforced subject access, and interviews with union and employer organization representatives, with the aim of capturing the vocabularies of motive that were evoked and put to use in attempts to justify and legitimize either access restrictions or the extended use of criminal records data in hiring decisions. In Paper I, I examine how subject access, indirect employer access, and the notion of privacy have been understood and defined throughout the history of the Swedish Criminal Records Registry, and how practices and policies in the area have evolved over time. In Paper II, I investigate how employers who use individuals’ right to subject access as a means for obtaining copies of their criminal record account for their practice, and how unions and employer associations have responded to the adoption of it. In Paper III, I challenge the ‘governmentality’ tradition in criminology and the way the use of criminal record checks is interpreted within it. As an alternative way of formulating and understanding the issue, I propose that it be looked at from a symbolic perspective. In Paper IV, my analysis utilizes the perspective of the sociology of scandals to help develop a better understanding of function creep in the area of data protection. This I do through an examination of the process leading, first, to the introduction of mandatory vetting of childcare workers and teachers in Sweden in 2001, and, then, to the inclusion later on of also other employer categories in the scope of the relevant legislation. Based on these analyses, I argue that the changes in the access to individuals’ criminal records reflect the state’s way of governing the interpretation of the criminal records database. Whether actors are denied or allowed access to information contained in the criminal history record database depends on the prevailing cultural representations regarding notions such as ‘privacy’, ‘data protection’, ‘databases’, ‘sensitive information’, and ‘power’. Moreover, I argue that the function creep in the use of criminal history data in Sweden can be initially explained by the occurrence and publicity of scandals that highlight the vulnerability of a group of dependents, making it defensible to resort to privacy-intrusive methods such as criminal record checks, with the continuing function creep then being made possible by a changing moral landscape that, following the initial amendment, renders the method morally more defensible among the policy makers and the public at large.
Parts of work
Paper I Backman, Christel (2011) Regulating Privacy: Vocabularies of Motive in Legislating Right to Access to Criminal Records in Sweden. In S. Gutwirth, Y. Poulette, P. De Hert, and R. Leenes (eds.), Computers, Privacy and Data Protection: An Element of Choice. London: Springer. ::doi::10.1007/978-94-007-0641-5_6
 
Paper II Backman, Christel (2011) Vocabularies of Motive among Employers Conducting Criminal Background Checks. Acta Sociologica 54 (1):27-44. ::doi::10.1177/0001699310392601
 
Backman, Christel (2012) Criminal Reocrds: Governing Symbols. In Transformations of the Swedish Welfare State, edited by B. Larsson, M. Letell and H. Thörn. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
 
Paper IV Backman, Christel (2012) Mandatory Criminal Record Checks in Sweden: Explaining Function Creep through Scandals and Moral Position Taking. Unpublished manuscript.
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Sociology ; Sociologiska institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 30 mars 2012, kl. 13.15, Hörsal Sappören, Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskap, Sprängkullsgatan 25
Date of defence
2012-03-30
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/28834
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskap
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Thesis frame (2.546Mb)
gupea_2077_28834_3.pdf (173.6Kb)
Date
2012-03-05
Author
Backman, Christel
Keywords
Criminal records
criminal background checks
surveillance
function creep
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-979397-5-1
ISSN
1650-4313
Series/Report no.
Göteborg Studies in Sociology No.
50
Language
eng
Metadata
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