When children need protection from their own history

Putting children’s services online raises a number of issues that simply don’t apply to adults, many of them relating to access: who could and who should access a child’s information?

The security of children’s data is paramount for sound child protection reasons.

By reasons of age, immaturity and the predilections of some in our society, children are far more vulnerable than most adults. Corrupt disclosure or unauthorised access to information about a child can compromise her physical safety, the more so if indications of being an ‘easy target’, such as having a history of abuse, can be gleaned from records. Even the mere fact that a child has used mental health services or attended a GUM clinic can put her at enhanced risk.

It is also possible for a child who needs to be hidden to be traced through corrupt disclosure.

This has already happened where, for example, abusive ex-spouses have used local contacts within council departments to find the new address of their family. Some families have had to leave an area and move several times to ensure that they cannot be found.  Any national system would make it far easier to trace them.

There are also occasions when it is vital for an adopted or fostered child’s well-being that her natural parents cannot locate her.

Quite apart from child protection considerations, children also have the same ECHR rights as adults, including the Article 8 right to a private life. The Joint Committee on Human Rights has just reminded the Government of this very forcefully in its scrutiny of the Children Bill, which proposed a database of all children, plus widespread information-sharing amongst ‘professionals’, without the knowledge and consent of child or parents.

The JCHR warns that the provisions appear to create a situation where there is “no meaningful content left to a child’s Article 8 right to privacy and confidentiality in their personal information.” Should the Bill go through in its present form, an Article 8 challenge is an absolute certainty.

 
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