Academic Technology Approval Scheme


The Academic Technology Approval Scheme is a scheme of the British government for certifying foreign students from outside the EU for entry into the United Kingdom to study or conduct research in certain sensitive technology-related fields. For these students, obtaining an ATAS certificate is a prerequisite for obtaining a visa. The ATAS was introduced on 1 November 2007 to prevent dissemination outside the UK of knowledge and skills that can be used to build and deliver weapons of mass destruction, by ensuring that applicants do not have links to WMD programmes.
Affected students undergo a screening system to validate their reasons for coming to the UK.
According to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the checks will attempt to filter out those students who intentions are adverse to national security. Areas of study at which the ATAS is directed are chemistry, engineering, physics, biophysics, metallurgy and microbiology.
In the earlier "Voluntary Vetting Scheme", some universities were voluntarily reporting suspicious students from certain countries to the government. With the introduction of ATAS, Cambridge University, which had refused to take part in the voluntary system, was required to cooperate with the authorities, too.