Privacy Notice: Applicants for office, membership and employment

Wolfson College is committed to protecting the privacy and security of personal data.

  1. Overview
  2. What is your personal data and how does the law regulate our use of it?
  3. Wolfson College's Contact Details
  4. What personal data we hold about you and how we use it
  5. The lawful basis on which we process your data
  6. Data that you provide to us and the possible consequences of you not providing it
  7. Other sources of your data
  8. How we share your data
  9. How long we keep your data
  10. Your legal rights over your data
  11. Future changes to this privacy notice

1. Overview

This notice explains what personal data Wolfson College holds about applicants for office, senior membership and employment, how we use it internally, how we share it, how long we keep it and what your legal rights are in relation to it. 

This notice also explains the basis on which you are required or requested to provide some personal data to us.  For personal data that we generate about you, or that we receive from others, it explains the source of that data.

There are some instances where we process your personal data on the basis of your consent.  This notice sets out the categories and purposes of data where your consent is needed.

Wolfson College has also published separate notices, which are applicable to other groups and activities.  Those notices may also apply to you, depending on your circumstances, and it is important that you read this privacy notice together with other applicable privacy notices:

  1. Current students
  2. Alumni and Donors (including what financial information we hold about our alumni and how we use it when considering fundraising initiatives)
  3. Archives (which explains what data we hold in our archive)
  4. Security, maintenance and health and safety (including how we use CCTV)
  5. Website and cookies (including how we monitor use of our website)
  6. IT systems (including how we monitor internet usage)

You can access past versions of our privacy notices. Learn more


2. What is your personal data and how does the law regulate our use of it?

"Personal data" is information relating to you as a living, identifiable individual.  We refer to this as "your data".

Data protection law requires Wolfson College, as controller for your data:

  • To process your data in a lawful, fair and transparent way;
  • To only collect your data for explicit and legitimate purposes;
  • To only collect data that is relevant, and limited to the purpose(s) we have told you about;
  • To ensure that your data is accurate and up to date;
  • To ensure that your data is only kept as long as necessary for the purpose(s) we have told you about;
  • To ensure that appropriate security measures are used to protect your data.

3. Wolfson College's Contact Details

If you need to contact us about your data, please contact: Bursar's PA.

Wolfson College's Data Protection Officer is the Bursar, Mr Richard Morin, whose contact details are: Bursar's PA, Sandie Lowe.


4. What personal data we hold about you and how we use it

We may hold and use a range of data about you at different stages of our relationship with you.  We might receive this data from you; we might create it ourselves, or we might receive it from someone else (for example, if someone provides us with a reference about you).

Categories of data that we collect, store and use include (but are not limited to):

  • The contact details that you provide to us, including names, addresses and telephone numbers.
  • The position, role, grade, salary and benefits attaching to the relevant role.
  • Your application paperwork, including the results of any testing.
  • Details of your qualifications and correspondence in relation to them.
  • References received about you.
  • Requests for special arrangements and/or waiver of eligibility criteria, including our consideration and decisions in relation to the same.
  • Communications with you regarding the outcomes of your application.
  • Records of decisions, including relevant committee and panel reports.
  • Details of any relevant criminal convictions or charges that we ask you to declare to us as part of the application process.  Relevant criminal convictions or charges are those that indicate you might pose an unacceptable risk to students or staff.  Further, your role at the College may require that we conduct a Disclosure and Barring Service check, which will provide us with details of any relevant criminal convictions and/or cautions that you have received.
  • Copies of passports, right to work documents, visas and other immigration data.
  • Details of any medical issues and/or disabilities that you have notified to us, including any consideration and decision on reasonable adjustments made as a result.
  • Equality monitoring data.

Further categories of data that we hold in relation to current staff, officer holders and senior members are set out in our Record of Processing Activity.


5. The lawful basis on which we process your data

The law requires that we provide you with information about the lawful basis on which we process your personal data, and for what purpose(s).

Most commonly, we will process your data on the following lawful grounds:

  • Where it is necessary to perform the contract we have entered into with you;
  • Where necessary to comply with a legal obligation;
  • Where it is necessary for the performance of a task in the public interest;
  • Where it is necessary for our legitimate interests (or those of a third party) and your interests and fundamental rights do not override those interests.

We may also use your personal information, typically in an emergency, where this is necessary to protect your vital interests, or someone else's vital interests.  In a small number of cases where other lawful bases do not apply, we will process your data on the basis of your consent.

How we apply further protection in the case of "Special Categories" of personal data

"Special categories" of particularly sensitive personal information require higher levels of protection. We need to have further justification for collecting, storing and using this type of personal information.

The Special Categories of personal data consist of data revealing:

  • racial or ethnic origin;
  • political opinions;
  • religious or philosophical beliefs;
  • trade union membership.

They also consist of the processing of:

  • genetic data;
  • biometric data for the purpose of uniquely identifying someone;
  • data concerning health;
  • data concerning someone's sex life or sexual orientation.

We may process special categories of personal information in the following circumstances:

  • With your explicit written consent; or
  • Where it is necessary in the substantial public interest, in particular:
    • for the exercise of a function conferred on us or anyone else by an enactment or rule of law; or
    • for equal opportunities monitoring;
  • Where the processing is necessary for archiving purposes in the public interest, or for scientific or historical research purposes, or statistical purposes, subject to further safeguards for your fundamental rights and interests specified in law.

We have in place appropriate policy documents and/or other safeguards which we are required by law to maintain when processing such data.

Less commonly, we may process this type of information where it is needed in relation to legal claims or where it is needed to protect your interests (or someone else's interests) and you are not capable of giving your consent, or where you have already made the information public.

Criminal convictions and allegations of criminal activity

Further legal controls apply to data relating to criminal convictions and allegations of criminal activity.  We may process such data on the same grounds as those identified for "special categories" referred to above.

Details of our processing activities, including our lawful basis for processing

Details of the lawful bases we rely on for the processing of the categories of data that we hold in relation to applicants for office, senior membership and employment at Wolfson College are set out in our Record of Processing Activity. Download Record of Processing Activity  Details of retention periods, plus details of parties to whom we transfer data, and on what basis, are available to download. Download Types of Services Undertaken by 3rd Parties


6. Data that you provide to us and the possible consequences of you not providing it

Most data that you provide to us is processed by us in order that we, and you, can comply with obligations imposed by law.  For example:

  • Copies of your passport, right to work, and visa information will be collected by us at the time of your application to enable us to comply with UK Immigration and Visa requirements.  We may be required by law to retain that data, along with related information (such as your application paperwork, short-lists and selection committee papers), even where you are not appointed, until a certain point after the person appointed ceases to be employed by us.
  • If the relevant role requires regular interactions with children or vulnerable adult, we are required by law to carry out a Disclosure and Barring Service check in relation to you.  In accordance with section 124 of the Police Act 1997, DBS certificate information is only passed to those who are authorised to receive it in the course of their duties and, in line with the DBS code of practice, is not kept by us for any longer than is necessary.

Your failure to provide such data may mean that you are unable to take up the relevant role.

Other data that you give to us is provided on a wholly voluntary basis – you have a choice whether to do so.  Examples include:

  • Equality monitoring data, which is requested by the College as part of the equality monitoring that we undertake pursuant to our legal obligations under the Equality Act 2010.
  • Disability and health condition information, which you may choose to provide to us in order that we can take this information into account when considering whether to make a reasonable adjustment.

7. Other sources of your data

Apart from the data that you provide to us, we may also process data about you from a range of sources.  These include:

  • Data that we generate about you when processing your application;
  • Data generated by the University of Oxford, where the role you have applied for is a joint position offered by both Wolfson College and the University;
  • Your previous educational establishments and/or employers if they provide references to us;

Our Record of Processing Activity indicates the sources of each of the various categories of data that we process.


8. How we share your data

We do not, and will not, sell your data to third parties.  We will only share it with third parties if we are allowed or required to do so by law.

Examples of bodies to whom we are required by law to disclose certain data include, but are not limited to:

Organisation

Why?

Home Office;  UK Visas and Immigration

To fulfil our obligations as a visa sponsor

Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS)

Required for certain posts to assess an applicant's suitability for positions of trust or where the post works with vulnerable people or children.

 

 

Examples of bodies to whom we may voluntarily disclose data, in appropriate circumstances, include but are not limited to:

Organisation

Why?

Other Colleges and/or PPH's within the University of Oxford

Where you apply for a role shared between different parts of the collegiate university, we may need to share relevant data for the proper functioning of relevant contracts and services.

 

Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA)

Some information, usually in pseudonymised form, will be sent to the HESA for statistical analysis and to allow government agencies to carry out their statutory functions.

 

Third party service providers

To facilitate activities of Wolfson College.  Any transfer will be subject to an appropriate, formal agreement between us and the processor.

 

Where information is shared with third parties, we will seek to share the minimum amount of information necessary to fulfil the purpose. 

All our third party service providers are required to take appropriate security measures to protect your personal information in line with our policies, and are only permitted to process your personal data for specific purposes in accordance with our instructions.  We do not allow our third party providers to use your personal data for their own purposes.

More extensive information on the categories of recipients of your data is set out in a table. Download Types of Services Undertaken by 3rd Parties

The law provides various further safeguards where data is transferred outside of the EU.

When you are resident outside the EU in a country where there is no "adequacy decision" by the European Commission, and an alternative safeguard is not available, we may still transfer data to you which is necessary for performance of your contract with us.

Otherwise, we will not transfer your data outside the European Union without first notifying you of our intentions and of the safeguards that apply to your data.


9. How long we keep your data

We retain your personal information for as long as necessary to fulfil the purposes we collected it for, including for the purpose of satisfying any legal, accounting or reporting requirements.  

Details of expected retention periods for the different categories of your personal information that we hold are set out in our Record of Processing Activity

Retention periods may increase as a result of legislative changes, e.g. an increase in limitation periods for legal claims would mean that we are required to retain certain categories of personal data for longer.  Any such changes will be reflected in updated versions of our Record of Processing Activity.

Please note that we may keep anonymised statistical data indefinitely, but you cannot be identified from such data.


10. Your legal rights over your data

Subject to certain conditions and exception set out in UK data protection law, you have:

  • The right to request access to a copy of your data, as well as to be informed of various information about how your data is being used;
  • The right to have any inaccuracies in your data corrected, which may include the right to have any incomplete data completed;
  • The right to have your personal data erased in certain circumstances;
  • The right to have the processing of your data suspended, for example if you want us to establish the accuracy of the data we are processing.
  • The right to receive a copy of data you have provided to us, and have that transmitted to another data controller (for example, another University or College).
  • The right to object to any direct marketing (for example, email marketing or phone calls) by us, and to require us to stop such marketing.
  • The right to object to the processing of your information if we are relying on a “legitimate interest” for the processing or where the processing is necessary for the performance of a task carried out in the public interest.  The lawful basis for any particular processing activity we carry out is set out in our detailed table of processing activities. Download Record of Processing Activity
  • The right to object to any automated decision-making about you which produces legal effects or otherwise significantly affects you.
  • Where the lawful basis for processing your data is consent, you have the right to withdraw your consent at any time.  This will not affect the validity of any lawful processing of your data up until the time when you withdrew your consent.  You may withdraw your consent by contacting the College Data Protection Officer, Mr Richard Morin, whose contact details are: Bursar's PA, Margit Kail.

If you wish to exercise any of your rights in relation to your data as processed by us please contact our Data Protection Officer, Mr Richard Morin, whose contact details are: Bursar's PA, Margit Kail.  Some of your rights are not automatic, and we reserve the right to discuss with you why we might not comply with a request from you to exercise them.

Further guidance on your rights is available from the Information Commissioner's Office.  You have the right to complain to the UK's supervisory office for data protection, the Information Commissioner's Office at https://ico.org.uk/concerns/ if you believe that your data has been processed unlawfully.


11. Future changes to this privacy notice

We may need to update this notice from time to time; for example, if the law or regulatory requirements change, if technology changes or to make the University's operations and procedures more efficient.  If the change is material, we will give you not less than two months' notice of the change so that you can exercise your rights, if appropriate, before the change comes into effect.  We will notify you of the change by email.