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Trident, technology and democracy

Web version of Notes for the panel input from Dr Stuart Parkinson, Scientists for Global Responsibility for a Demos seminar, held in London on 30th March 2006

Democratising military technologies

The material in this talk is largely drawn from SGR’s report Soldiers in the Laboratory

  1. Scale of military involvement in UK science and technology

  2. Openness of military involvement

  3. Implications for technology/ security debates

  4. Some recommendations

1. Scale of military involvement in UK science and technology

Annually, the Ministry of Defence spends

UK is world’s second largest government funder of military R&D

Military industry

Military industry also very influential in setting agenda for science and technology budgets – both within MoD and DTI – through advisory committees (which also influence civil agenda)

In last few years, several military-university collaborative schemes have been set up

These are in addition to existing military funding of university work including the Joint Grants Scheme which is run jointly with the Research Councils.

Military industry also funds teaching, eg BAE Systems has large involvement in Dept of Education and Skills specialist schools programme

UK military and foreign policy has close links with US military and foreign policy (eg Trident, Iraq war, Mutual Defence Agreement etc) hence US military funding of UK SET.

Military has major involvement in emerging technologies

2. Openness of military involvement

It’s hard to compile details of military involvement in science and technology due to lack of openness.

National security obviously reduces openness – especially serious if treaty obligations are involved, eg recent US-UK sub-critical nuclear weapons test

Most MoD funded science and technology takes place in industry and is therefore subject to commercial confidentiality restrictions (often with national security restrictions).

Most MoD R&D contracted through Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) and QinetiQ – MoD retains no central record of its spending in universities. (Indeed the webpages on DTCs, DARPS, ToEs have been taken down.)

A lot of military projects have civil sector funding partners (DTI, Research Councils etc), so civil money is directed towards military ends but is not classified as military in government statistics.

Universities can often be reluctant to say who’s funding many of their projects (military or civil) – perhaps due to worry over possible controversy – we have been refused information on several occasions. With Freedom of Information Act coming into force, we are now asking again! Current progress – both universities and government departments are very slow to respond and information can be commercially restricted

Advisory committees involved in decisions on military technology – role/membership sometimes not clear

3. Implications for technology/ security debates

4. Some recommendations

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