How we process your personal data
Here at Arbetsförmedlingen we want you to feel confident that we process your personal data securely. The purpose of this page is to give you comprehensive information about how we process your personal data. This page contains information about what personal data are, how we process them and what rights you have.
General information about personal data
Personal data are all the information that can be connected in any way to a living person. For example, name and personal identity number, but also information that can only be connected to a person indirectly, such as user name, registered address and IP address.
We process personal data for various purposes and in various parts of our operations. We need to do this in order to fulfil our assignment to match jobseekers and vacancies, but also in order to comply with our role as a government agency and employer. Arbetsförmedlingen, as data controller, is responsible for processing your personal data in the correct way and in accordance with laws and regulations.
The personal data that are processed by us are managed in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation and the Swedish Act containing supplementary provisions to the EU General Data Protection Regulation. These laws give you greater protection as an individual when government agencies and companies process your personal data. Our processing of personal data is also governed by an act and ordinance that only apply to Arbetsförmedlingen. These are normally referred to as register legislation.
General Data Protection Regulation (imy.se) (in Swedish)
Public Access to Information and Secrecy Act (2009:400) (riksdagen.se) (in Swedish)
When, how and why we process your personal data
In order for us to be allowed to process your personal data there needs to be what are known as legal grounds. Legal grounds are, for example, when the processing takes place within the scope of us exercising our official authority or conducting tasks that are in the public interest. We process the majority of personal data under this legal ground. However, we can also process personal data if there are legal requirements or agreements with the registered person that require personal data to be processed.
We only process personal data for specific purposes. We process the personal data of employers, jobseekers, suppliers and employees so that we are able to deal with cases, evaluate our activities, conduct supervision and conduct our labour market policy activities in other ways. We can also process personal data for reasons that are of benefit to society such as for archival purposes in the public interest, statistical or historical research purposes.
Below we describe how your personal data is processed in some common situations.
Where your personal data comes from and who we share it with
Most data is collected directly from those who are registered. This happens, for example, when you register or report your activities. Sometimes we receive information about you from other actors. For example, we receive civil status records from the Swedish Tax Agency (Skatteverket) and information about attendance at planned activities from our private providers.
In certain cases we need to share your personal data with other actors. Sometimes that is done so that our activities can be run in the best possible way. But sometimes we share personal data if the data are needed for the recipient’s activities. This applies for certain listed actors, namely:
- The Swedish Social Insurance Agency (Försäkringskassan)
- The Swedish Board of Student Finance (Centrala studiestödsnämnden)
- Unemployment insurance funds
- The Swedish Tax Agency (Skatteverket)
- The Swedish Unemployment Insurance Inspectorate (Inspektionen för arbetslöshetsförsäkringen)
- The Swedish Enforcement Authority (Kronofogdemyndigheten)
- Social welfare committees
- The Swedish Migration Agency (Migrationsverket)
- Our private providers
We also need to share data with other actors if we are obliged to do so by law. This primarily applies with regard to other government agencies.
Since we are a government agency, we are also obliged to adhere to the principle of publicity to official documents. The principle means that the Swedish Public Employment Service must release information from public documents if someone requests to see them if the information is public. If the information is covered by confidentiality, we will not release it. Confidentiality is governed by the Publicity and Confidentiality Act (2009:400). In the activities of the Swedish Public Employment Service, the regulations in chapter 28, §§ 11, 12 and 12a apply.
How long is your personal data stored?
The personal data we process is often included in public documents. This means that, in many cases, we must, by law, store personal data for a certain amount of time. The main rule is that jobseekers’ personal data and documents that contain personal data about jobseekers have to be removed from our computer systems no more than three years after the case has been concluded. After this, the personal data are separated and can be used to produce statistics for another ten years. Public documents about jobseekers are then, by law, archived for use in future research and are then made available to Arbetsförmedlingen’s administrators.
Your rights
This section only discusses your rights in relation to processing of your personal data. If you would like to access a public document you should instead use the below form. If you are unhappy with a decision you have received from us, or if you have other feedback about our administration of a case or our activities, you can contact us using the link below.
Form for accessing public documents (in Swedish)
Comments about our activities (in Swedish)
Request a register extract
Those who are registered have a right to receive information about which personal data we process and why we process them. You receive this information in what is known as a register extract. The extract will be sent within a month of you requesting it.
Right to rectification and to supplement incomplete personal data
If you think that we have registered inaccurate personal data about you, it is possible to ask us to rectify the data. This also means that you have a right to supplement personal data that is incomplete with data that is relevant given the purpose of the personal data processing. The contents of completed public documents cannot be amended as a rule but we always examine individual cases.
Right to erasure
In some limited cases, those who are registered have the right to have their personal data removed from our registers. This right only applies in certain individual cases when data for example have been processed unlawfully or when erasure is required in order to comply with a legal obligation. The main rule is that the contents of completed public documents cannot be amended, but we always conduct a review in each individual case.
Right to restriction of processing
In certain cases you may have the right to request that the processing of your personal data be restricted. Restriction means that the data is marked so that, in future, these can only be processed for certain restricted purposes. The right to restriction of processing applies in cases such as when you are of the opinion that the data is inaccurate and you have requested rectification. In such cases you can also request that the processing of the data be restricted while the accuracy of the data is being investigated.
Right to object
In certain cases, you can object to our processing of your personal data. The right to object applies, for example, when the personal data is processed in order to carry out a task in the public interest as part of the exercise of official authority or when profiling is taking place. However, the right to object does not apply to processing that is permitted in accordance with our register statutes.
Right to data portability
Those who have submitted their personal data have, in certain cases, the right to access and use this personal data elsewhere, for example in another social media service. We may be obliged to facilitate such a transfer of personal data when this is technically possible. One prerequisite is that we are processing the personal data with support of your consent or in order to comply with an agreement made with you.
Request erasure, register extract, rectification or information about personal data
If you have comments or complaints about our processing
Contact our data protection officer
If you have questions or comments about our personal data processing you can contact our data protection officer. The role of the data protection officer is to check that the General Data Protection Regulation is complied with by, for example, carrying out checks and by distributing information.
E-mail address: dataskyddsombud@arbetsformedlingen.se
Telephone: +46 771-60 00 00
Visitors’ address: Elektrogatan 4, Solna
Postal address:
Arbetsförmedlingen
Dataskyddsombud
113 99 Stockholm
Contact the Swedish Authority for Privacy Protection (Integritetsskyddsmyndigheten)
You can also contact the Authority for Privacy Protection to make a complaint, if you have any feedback or if you are unhappy about the way we process your personal data.
Contact the Swedish Authority for Privacy Protection (imy.se) (in Swedish)