Now more than ever, we need to be asking - is it right?
Clare Payne is a leading voice on ethics and trust.
She tracks trends and writes about their implications in her monthly Ethical Lens' column in The Australian Financial Review and writes across a range of business publications. Clare draws from her experience as an employment lawyer and her time managing the Integrity office of a global investment bank.
Current work
Clare holds positions of EY Fellow for Trust and Ethics and Fellow of The University of Melbourne. Prior to the global financial crisis, Clare's paper titled, Ethics or Bust' was awarded the inaugural Ethics & Trust in Finance Prize by the Observatoire de la Finance, Geneva. She then founded The Banking and Finance Oath, a Hippocratic-type oath for those working in banking and finance.
Previous experience
Author: Clare is the author of two books, A Matter of Trust – The Practice of Ethics in Finance' and One – Valuing the Single Life'.
Awards: Clare's insights and experience into the power of the individual to make a difference and challenge the status quo are nothing short of remarkable. She has been recognised as a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and an Australian 100 Women of Influence'.
Clare is also an accomplished marathon swimmer, having swum solo around New York City, a distance of 46 kilometres and is the only person to have swum from Coogee Beach to the Sydney Opera House, a swim recorded in the International Swimming Hall of Fame.
Talking Points
For Love & Money - Women's lives have changed significantly, but what's next?
Clare Payne provides new insight to the lives of women, from navigating love to managing their money. Drawing from her book One Valuing the Single Life and her essay titled She Will Have Her Sway, Clare presents some surprising facts about the way we're living and paints a picture of a future we might not have expected.
For Love & Money - Women's lives have changed significantly, but what's next?
Girl Power - Women, anything but weak
What does it mean to be a leader of our time, what qualities matter? Clare focuses in on the power of endurance. As a former marathon swimmer who swam solo around New York City (46 kilometres) whilst holding a position as a lawyer at Macquarie Bank, Clare presents the power of female endurance. Covering ocean swimming to a career focussed on ethics in finance, Clare gives a personal insight to values at work, the need for determination and believing that every individual can make a difference. Girl Power - Women, anything but weak
Clare will draw on her book A Matter of Trust and her Meanjin essay, She Will Have Her Sway.
Endurance, good things can take time
Sprinters are rare and overnight successes rarer. The reality is that some things in life will just take time. As a former marathon swimmer who swam solo around New York City whilst holding a position as a lawyer at Macquarie Bank, Clare presents the power of endurance. Covering ocean swimming to a career focussed on ethics in finance, Clare gives a personal insight to values at work, the need for determination and believing the individual can make a difference.
Endurance, good things can take time
She Will Have Her Sway: How the rise of women's wealth is creating a more ethical world
Clare tracks the rise of women's wealth and the implications for our world. How women save, spend and invest will shape our world for good. Learn more about the future that's already underway.She Will Have Her Sway: How the rise of women's wealth is creating a more ethical world
This talk is based on Clare's long-form essay She Will Have Her Sway' and other commentary published in the Australian Financial Review.
A Matter of Trust The Practice of Ethics in Finance
Clare covers the crucial role of finance in creating a better world and the power of every individual to contribute.A Matter of Trust The Practice of Ethics in Finance
This talk is based on Clare's book, A Matter of Trust The Practice of Ethics in Finance', written with Paul Kofman, Dean, Faculty of Business and Economics, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne University Publishing, 2018
One Valuing single life
The rise of single people and everything outside of the nuclear family norm is the greatest unspoken demographic shift of our time. Clare presents the demographic facts, outlining the implications and calls on us all to re-think what makes for a good adult life.One Valuing single life
This talk is based on Clare's book, One Valuing the Single Life', Melbourne University Publishing, 2018.
Tobacco-Free Investment for a Tobacco-Free World
We live in what the World Health Organisation describes as the tobacco epidemic. Addressing investment in tobacco has been a missing piece in tobacco control, until now. Learn about the role of finance in creating a better world, free of tobacco.
Tobacco-Free Investment for a Tobacco-Free World
Mind Your Words How the language of business is skewing our moral compass
The language of business talks of cost-benefit-analysis rather than what is right, resources rather than people and economic drivers rather than ethical dilemmas. It's loaded with acronyms, abstractions and war references. Often it's devoid of the language of ethics allowing us to ignore our moral compass all together. Mind Your Words How the language of business is skewing our moral compass
Clare highlights the common uses of language that can undermine ethics and provides a practical insight into how we can incorporate the language of ethics in our work lives. In this presentation Clare draws on her published work titled, Limited Language, Big Blind Spots'.
Video
Clare Payne - World Congress of Accountants
Clare Payne is a leading voice on ethics and trust. She tracks trends and writes about their implications in her monthly 'Ethical Lens' column in The Australian Financial Review and writes across a range of business publications. Clare draws from her experience as an employment lawyer and her time managing the Integrity office of a global investment bank.Clare Payne - Graduate Occasional Address - University of Melbourne
"Endurance" Leading Ethics Author Clare Payne addresses the graduating students from the Faculty of Business and Economics, and Melbourne School of Engineering. Clare Payne is a leading voice on ethics and trust. She tracks trends and writes about their implications in her monthly 'Ethical Lens' column in The Australian Financial Review and writes across a range of business publications. Clare draws from her experience as an employment lawyer and her time managing the Integrity office of a global investment bank.Clare Payne Presents at NAOS Insights Evening
Clare Payne is a leading voice on ethics and trust. She tracks trends and writes about their implications in her monthly 'Ethical Lens' column in The Australian Financial Review and writes across a range of business publications. Clare draws from her experience as an employment lawyer and her time managing the Integrity office of a global investment bank.