Be at the heart of actionFly remote-controlled drones into enemy territory to gather vital information.

Apply Now

Vacancy for Data Analyst (Developer) at The National Archives UK

Digital Preservation Coalition
City of London
3 weeks ago
Create job alert

Vacancy for Data Analyst (Developer) at The National Archives UK

Vacancy for Data Analyst (Developer) at The National Archives UK

14 May 2025

London, England

Fixed Term

Job summary

Legislation.gov.uk is a vital resource that has transformed public access to legislation in the UK and has put the statute book into the hands of millions of people who need to read, quote or cite legislation.

The National Archives, in its capacity as the King’s Printer of Acts of Parliament, the King’s Printer for Scotland and the Government Printer for Northern Ireland, has statutory obligations to register, publish, and make available in print, legislation produced by the UK and Scottish Parliaments, the Welsh Senedd, the Northern Ireland Assembly, and the Governments of the four nations. These statutory obligations are managed by the Legislation Services team at The National Archives. We are responsible for legislation.gov.uk, the official home of enacted and revised UK legislation and the only comprehensive free-to-use source of updated UK legislation.

Open data is at the heart of our legislation services. The legislation data we curate and create is a valuable public asset, comprising document data in XML, graph-based data in RDF, and website usage data. The National Archives holds an increasing volume of rich metadata about legislation, including amendment and application data, bibliographic information as well as exhaust data from our publishing processes and website operations.

The team is committed to improving and developing this service, particularly our data offering. We are looking for a data developer to join the Legislation Services Team and grow their data skills. Your focus will be on improving the underlying legislation data, enhancing it and creating new datasets from the text of the legislation. You will also investigate how the legislation data can be organised and delivered in such a way that increases the accuracy of re-use and the ability of AI to consume the data in a meaningful way. You will be contributing to a service used by a wide range of users, including data re-users, who derive insights from legislation. These include academics and researchers, and those developing innovative products, services and applications in Law Tech.


#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Vacancy for Web Archiving Data Analyst and Crawl Engineer at The National Archives (UK)

Data Analyst

Power BI Developer / Data Analyst

Consumer Data Analyst

Data Analyst: Finance & Partnerships London

Data Analyst: Finance & Partnerships

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Machine Learning Recruitment Trends 2025 (UK): What Job Seekers Need To Know About Today’s Hiring Process

Summary: UK machine learning hiring has shifted from title‑led CV screens to capability‑driven assessments that emphasise shipped ML/LLM features, robust evaluation, observability, safety/governance, cost control and measurable business impact. This guide explains what’s changed, what to expect in interviews & how to prepare—especially for ML engineers, applied scientists, LLM application engineers, ML platform/MLOps engineers and AI product managers. Who this is for: ML engineers, applied ML/LLM engineers, LLM/retrieval engineers, ML platform/MLOps/SRE, data scientists transitioning to production ML, AI product managers & tech‑lead candidates targeting roles in the UK.

Why Machine Learning Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

Machine learning (ML) has moved from research labs into mainstream UK businesses. From healthcare diagnostics to fraud detection, autonomous vehicles to recommendation engines, ML underpins critical services and consumer experiences. But the skillset required of today’s machine learning professionals is no longer purely technical. Employers increasingly seek multidisciplinary expertise: not only coding, algorithms & statistics, but also knowledge of law, ethics, psychology, linguistics & design. This article explores why UK machine learning careers are becoming more multidisciplinary, how these fields intersect with ML roles, and what both job-seekers & employers need to understand to succeed in a rapidly changing landscape.

Machine Learning Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Machine Learning Department

Machine learning is now central to many advanced data-driven products and services across the UK. Whether you work in finance, healthcare, retail, autonomous vehicles, recommendation systems, robotics, or consumer applications, there’s a need for dedicated machine learning teams that can deliver models into production, maintain them, keep them secure, efficient, fair, and aligned with business objectives. If you’re hiring for or applying to ML roles via MachineLearningJobs.co.uk, this article will help you understand what roles are typically present in a mature machine learning department, how they collaborate through project lifecycles, what skills and qualifications UK employers look for, what the career paths and salaries are, current trends and challenges, and how to build an effective ML team.