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Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making



SES Ethics Workshop



Enhancing ethical culture through

ethical decision-making









www.ethics.qld.gov.au

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

Contents

Purpose ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3

Why the workshop guide and resources were developed............................................................................................................................................ 3

How the workshop guide and resources were developed............................................................................................................................................ 4

How to use this guide.................................................................................................................................................................................................. 4

Guide Structure........................................................................................................................................................................................................... 5

Resources and Readings ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 6

SES Ethics and Ethical Decision-Making Workshop Concept Map ............................................................................................................................. 8

Topic 1: Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................................................. 10

Topic 2: Strategy ....................................................................................................................................................................................................... 12

Topic 3: Structure...................................................................................................................................................................................................... 14

Topic 4: Culture ........................................................................................................................................................................................................ 16

Topic 5: What happens when things go wrong – ethical failure ................................................................................................................................. 18

Topic 6: Introduction to ‘in practice’ section ............................................................................................................................................................... 20

Topic 7: Structure in practice .................................................................................................................................................................................... 22

Topic 8: Culture in practice ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 24

Topic 9: Strategy in practice ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 26

Topic 10: Conclusion ................................................................................................................................................................................................ 28

List of Slides ............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 30









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Purpose

This ethics and ethical decision-making workshop guide and resources for SES Officers has been developed by the Public Service Commission to

support the government’s integrity and accountability reforms and to uphold the Public Service Commission’s responsibilities to enhance ethical

culture and ethical decision-making in the public sector.



The workshop guide and resources will be provided as a package to assist public service agencies to deliver ethics and ethical decision-making

workshops to their SES officers.





Why the workshop guide and resources were developed

On 6 August 2009, the Queensland Government released the discussion paper Integrity and Accountability in Queensland to prompt public

discussion on integrity and accountability issues. In response to the submissions received, the Queensland Government developed a program of

integrity reform, including both legislative and administrative improvements, aimed at ensuring that Queensland stays at the forefront of open and

accountable government.



The reform program identifies four key principles as underpinning a robust integrity and accountability framework. They are:

 strong rules - clear rules and standards, balancing proscription with positive values and aspirations, so that an exemplary standard of

conduct is aspired to;

 strong culture - strong leadership, training and awareness and a conscious dedication to ethical values;

 strong scrutiny - transparent government processes, strong scrutiny mechanisms, strong agency cultures leading to enhanced internal

scrutiny; and

 strong enforcement - a range of enforcement mechanisms and disciplinary measures in which processes are accessible and outcomes

prescribed, as well as effective public interest disclosure mechanisms.



The government recognises that a robust integrity system requires a public sector culture that emphasises strong leadership, training and

awareness and a conscious dedication to ethical values.









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The examples set by leaders throughout the political sphere and the public sector are important in building and fostering a strong ethical culture.

Leaders must communicate the importance of ethical decision-making in the workplace and they must promote ethical behaviour in their day-to-day

actions and decisions.



Appropriate training is required to ensure all public officials are fully aware of the way that their ethical obligations should be reflected in their

conduct. All new employees are required to undertake Code of Conduct training. In addition to this, the government is introducing mandatory annual

training in ethical decision-making for the public sector.





How the workshop guide and resources were developed

This workshop combines materials and approaches from the CEO Ethics Workshop and the Ethics and Ethical Decision-Making Training Program

developed in consultation with Queensland public service agency representatives nominated through the Queensland Public Sector Ethics Network.





How to use this guide

The workshop guide establishes training objectives and core messages for training for SES Officers in ethics and ethical decision-making.



In developing workshops for delivery, agencies should incorporate material that will assist participants to relate the core messages to their roles and

to meet the workshop objectives, including:

 Ensuring all essential core message areas are covered;

 Incorporating agency examples and materials that are relevant to the agency and the participants receiving the training; and

 Using the tools provided and resources referred to that are relevant to the agency and the participants receiving the training.



Agency training developers and facilitators should flexibly tailor workshops to best assist their audience to meet the workshop objectives.









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Guide Structure

The workshop guide starts from the position that compliance on its own is an inadequate response to ensuring integrity and accountability and that

the embedding or institutionalising of ethics within an agency culture is required to consistently ensure ethical outcomes.



The workshop guide and resources:

• Explore a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture, from the perspective of the government integrity and

accountability regime.

• Case studies are then used to explore what happens when things go wrong.

• Participants are then asked to explore the 3 conceptual framework elements in practice to identify their accountabilities and the steps they

will take to promote ethical culture in their agency. This aspect of the workshop includes the application of ethical decision making tools to

ethical dilemma scenarios.



The Guide contains:

 Topics – these structure the workshop and provide a process to assist SES Officers to develop a conceptual ethics framework from which to

plan their responsibilities for enhancing ethical culture, as well as providing them with practical information about their responsibilities in

applying the public sector ethics to ethical dilemmas.

 Objectives – 4 learning outcomes for training participants.

 Core message areas – to implement the objectives and under which core content is developed.

 Core message content and discussion – ideas to guide content delivery to achieve the workshop objectives.

 Related PowerPoint slides – these have been created to communicate the conceptual ethics framework. Agency-specific material will need

to be used and may require creation of additional slides by the agency.

 Related resources for ethics trainers and advisors – a list of relevant service-wide documents has been included that may be useful to refer

to for additional background and/or for referring employees to.

 Resources for incorporating agency focus – indicates the types of documents that may be relevant for supporting agency-specific material.

 Resources and readings list - for both facilitators and participants.









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Resources and Readings



Background Integrity and accountability reforms  Government Response to Integrity and Accountability in Queensland, 2009

Senior officer Legislation  Public Service Ethics Act 2004 (amended 2010)

accountabilities  Public Interest Disclosure Act 2010

 Public Service Act 2008 (amended 2010)

 Integrity Act 2009

Directives  Directive 2/09 Employment Separation Procedures

 Directive 22/09 Gifts & Benefits and related policy

 Directive 3/10 Declaration of Interests and related policy

Policy  Disclosure of previous employment as a lobbyist

Other documents  Premier’s Communiqué: Interaction between ministerial staff and public servants

 Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public Service

 Queensland Public Service Charter

Support Ethical Decision Making  PSC 1,2,3,GO Ethical Decision making Tool

materials  Ombudsman’s Good Decisions Workshop (resource available with workshop)

Public Interest Disclosure  Guide Managing a Public Interest Disclosure Program

Integrity  Integrity Information Sheet 1: Integrity Issues and the Integrity Commissioner

Planning and embedding  Performance Management Framework

 CMC Integrity Framework

 Capability and Leadership Framework, in particular Capability 4









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Relevant Ethics and leadership  P Shergold: Ethics and the Changing Nature of Public Service, 1996

articles  A. Cameron: Tone at the Top 2007

 Transparency International Australia, Global Corruption Report 2009: Corruption and the Private

Sector

 Kimber et al: Theorising Ethical Dilemmas Faced by Senior Public Servants: An Excursion into

Australian Public Sector Ethic 2003

Case studies  G.B Adams and D.L Balfour: Ethical Failings, Incompetence, and Administrative Evil – Lessons

from Katrina and Iraq in R.W Cox (ed) Ethics and Integrity in Public Administration 2009

 G. Casali & G. Day: Treating an unhealthy organisational culture: the implications of the

Bundaberg Hospital Inquiry for managerial decision making in Australian Health Review, 2010, 34

 D. Lenihan: AWB: How the System Let us Down in Public Administration Today April- June 2007

 J. Agius SC: The Cole Inquiry into Certain Australian Companies and the UN Oil for Food

Programme: Lessons for Government in Australian Institute of Administrative Law Forum, 2007









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SES Ethics and Ethical Decision-Making Workshop Concept Map



Topics Strategy Structure Culture

Introduction What happens when things go wrong – ethical failure Conclusion

Structure in practice Culture in practice Strategy in practice



Objective Core message area Rationale for objective

1. SES have Queensland’s Our leaders require an understanding of the direction of the government’s integrity and accountability

demonstrated integrity and reforms, how this impacts on their accountabilities and the support available to them to meet those

an accountability accountabilities.

understanding reforms

of the Integrity

The mandatory ethics training being implemented across the public service aims to enhance public

and

Queensland public service ethical culture through employee behaviour. Ethical culture is built through shared

Accountability

sector ethics understanding and values. Public service leaders have a key role in establishing the benchmark for

regime in

ethical culture in their agency.

Queensland



2. SES have Applying ethics to It is essential that public service leaders identify ethical dilemmas and apply ethical judgement in

applied the decisions and actions resolving them because this is appropriate behaviour, and because research demonstrates that

public sector employee engagement and their ethical behaviour are impacted by their perception of the ethics of

ethics to ethical agency leaders.

dilemmas

Ethical leadership is demonstrated through formally championing ethics in their agency, setting the

benchmark for ethical behaviour, and by exercising ethical judgement in responding to ethical

dilemmas.









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Objective Core message area Rationale for objective

3. SES have Planning to enhance Public service leaders are responsible for promoting an organisational culture that values high ethical

developed a ethical culture standards and behaviour. Promoting ethical culture should be integrated into all SES activities

conceptual through leadership including the planning, implementation and reporting cycle for organisational performance

framework for management. By integrating ethical culture into their role, SES Officers are:

their leadership  Leading a high performance culture;

of ethical

practice and  Leading business direction and being accountable for achieving performance results for the

culture in their Queensland community;

agencies  Being a role model for performance management.

through:

4. SES have Leading ethical  Setting the strategic direction and managing priorities for achieving agency goals;

committed to culture enhancement  Leading public service planning and manage performance at a whole-of-government level;

action as

 Demonstrated commitment to the right way to do business, which will be critical to agency and

champions of

employee successful delivery of outcomes.

ethical practice

and culture Queensland Government Performance management Framework – A Guide for Executive

within their Managers

agencies and

across Implementing the government’s integrity and accountability reforms requires actively promoting and

government being seen to lead the development and enhancement of ethical culture.









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Topic 1: Introduction



Objective 3. SES have developed a conceptual framework for their leadership of ethical practice and culture in their agencies

Core message Planning to enhance ethical culture through leadership

area

Instructions for CEOs should be requested to provide an expression of commitment by participating in workshops provided to their executive

trainers management team. Workshops below this level should similarly be supported by members of the agency executive

management team.



Explain the background (integrity and accountability reforms) and the structure (strategy – structure – culture) of the

workshop to participants and communicate the reform emphasis of taking a positive expression of the principles and values

that underpin effective public service.

Content and This workshop has been developed to support the government’s integrity and accountability reforms, in particular to enhance

discussion ethical culture and ethical decision-making in the public service. Mandatory ethics training, being implemented across the

public service, aims to enhance public service ethical culture through employee behaviour. Ethical culture is built through

shared understanding and values and the reforms seek to promote positive expression of the principles and values that

underpin effective public service. Public service leaders have a key role in establishing the benchmark for ethical culture in

their agency.



The workshop will assist SES in understanding SES accountabilities under the integrity and accountability reforms. It

provides a conceptual framework to assist SES in implementing your responsibilities for promoting organisational culture that

values high ethical standards and behaviour. It includes case studies and scenarios to explore the impact of ethics (or their

lack) on public administration and outcomes for the community.



Compliance or Culture

‘Because efficient and legitimate institutions can be used for constructive or destructive purposes, public affairs professionals

need to develop and nurture a critical, reflexive attitude toward public institutions, the exercise of authority, and the culture at



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large’

Adams and Balfour 2009

This workshop starts from the position that compliance on its own is an inadequate response to ensuring integrity and

accountability and that the embedding or institutionalising of ethics within an agency culture is required to consistently

ensure ethical outcomes.



The workshop:

• Explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture, from the perspective of the

government integrity and accountability regime.

• Case studies are then used to explore what happens when things go wrong.

• Participants are then asked to explore the 3 conceptual framework elements in practice to identify their

accountabilities and the steps they will take to promote ethical culture in their agency. This aspect of the workshop

includes the application of ethical decision making tools to ethical dilemma scenarios.



Related slides Related resources Agency resources

1. Cover slide  Quotes, provided with this training workshop,

2. Conceptual framework: compliance or placed around walls

culture

3. Objectives

4. Introducing the framework









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Topic 2: Strategy



Objective 1. SES have demonstrated an understanding of the Integrity and Accountability regime in Queensland

Core message Queensland’s integrity and accountability reforms

area

Instructions for Take participants through the government’s integrity and accountability framework. This section provides an overview of the

trainers key integrity and accountability reforms. How these relate to SES Officer accountabilities is explored later in the workshop.

Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores ‘Strategy’, being the government’s integrity and accountability reforms.



The government expects the highest standards of integrity and accountability from everyone in public office and has put in

place an integrity and accountability framework with a program of reforms under four key principles:

 Strong rules - clear rules and standards balancing proscription with positive values and aspirations so that an

exemplary standard of conduct is aspired to;

 Strong culture - strong leadership, training and awareness and a conscious dedication to ethical values;

 Strong scrutiny - transparent government processes, strong scrutiny mechanisms, strong agency cultures leading to

enhanced internal scrutiny;

 Strong enforcement - a range of enforcement mechanisms and disciplinary measures in which processes are

accessible and outcomes prescribed. Effective public interest disclosure mechanisms.

Government Response to Integrity and Accountability in Queensland 2009



The reforms that are most relevant sector-wide are listed in the slides, with details about these included in the slide notes.

Details about the other reforms can be obtained from the response paper: http://www.premiers.qld.gov.au/community-

issues/open-transparent-gov/integrity-and-accountability-review.aspx







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Related slides Related resources Agency resources

5. Strategy  Government Response to Integrity and Incorporating Agency Focus

6. Integrity and accountability reforms Accountability in Queensland 2009  Agency policies and procedures

7. Reforms – strong rules

8. Reforms – strong culture

9. Reforms – strong scrutiny

10. Reforms – strong enforcement









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Topic 3: Structure



Objective 1. SES have demonstrated an understanding of the Integrity and Accountability regime in Queensland

Core message Queensland’s integrity and accountability reforms

area

Instructions for Take participants through the integrity and accountability regime, focusing on how the agencies listed:

trainers • Oversight integrity and accountability in the Queensland Public Service; and

• Support they can offer SES Officers.

Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores ‘Structure’, being the regime that oversights integrity and accountability in the Queensland.



The agencies provide support and advice in following areas:

Crime and Misconduct Commission - http://www.cmc.qld.gov.au

Combats major crime, raises public sector integrity and protects witnesses. Offers a range of services including research,

advice, intelligence and surveillance.

Public Service Commission – http://www.psc.qld.gov.au

Supports the ongoing development of employees across the sector, acknowledging that a positive workplace culture is a key

driver of staff retention, corporate innovation and high performance.

The PSC incorporates the Ethics Advisory Service, which gives agencies and employees from across the sector a central

point to access ethics-related information and training resources for the Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public Service

and public interest disclosures. Contact: 1300 038 472 . www.ethics.qld.gov.au

Queensland Integrity Commissioner - http://www.integrity.qld.gov.au/

Provides advice on integrity and ethics issues, including conflicts of interest, to Ministers, Members of Parliament, senior

public servants, maintains the lobbyists register and monitors lobbyists conduct.

Queensland Audit Office - http://www.qao.qld.gov.au

Assesses public service financial management to enhance public sector accountability .



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Queensland Ombudsman's Office - http://www.ombudsman.qld.gov.au

An independent complaints investigation agency which ensures public agencies (state government departments and bodies

and local councils) act fairly and make the right decisions for Queenslanders. Assists public agencies to improve their

decision-making and administrative practice for the benefit of the community.

Office of the Information Commissioner - http://www.oic.qld.gov.au/

Responsible for providing information and assistance to Queensland government agencies to promote access to

government-held information and protect people’s personal information held by government.

Related slides Related resources Agency resources

11. Structure  Government Response to Integrity and Incorporating Agency Focus

12. Map of integrity regime Accountability in Queensland, 2009  Agency policies and procedures









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Topic 4: Culture



Objective 1. SES have demonstrated an understanding of the Integrity and Accountability regime in Queensland

Core message Queensland public sector ethics

area

Instructions for To uphold public sector ethics we need to know what the public sector ethics are and what they mean.

trainers Discuss the relevance of ethics to public service using the quote from Peter Shergold.



Explore the Public Sector Ethics Act 1994 (PSEA) principles and the underpinning values for each principle and clarify their

meaning. Further information can be obtained from the resource document: What do the Queensland Public Sector Ethics

Principles Mean?



The final slide in this set can be used to highlight the contribution of the public sector ethics to achieving outcomes for the

public.



Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores ‘Culture’, outlining the government’s commitment to enhancing ethical culture to support a robust

integrity and accountability framework.



Peter Shergold AM, former Public Service Commissioner Australian Public Service argues that the nature of the public

service makes ethical behaviour a requirement:

… the bottom line accountability for public servants is ethical (did I meet the public purpose as efficiently, effectively,

equitably and openly as possible?) whereas for the private employees it is economic (did my work contribute to company

profits and shareholder dividends?)

P Shergold: Ethics and the Changing Nature of Public Service, 1996







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The government integrity and accountability reforms emphasise the importance of enhancing ethical culture through strong

leadership, training and awareness, and a conscious dedication to ethical values. New public sector ethics principles and

values are established in the amended Public Sector Ethics Act 1994. The principles and values embody the ethics that

underpin effective serving of the public. Ethics should be the way we do our public service business of delivering government

priorities to deliver outcomes for Queenslanders. The Ethics in Practice diagram represents how outcomes for

Queenslanders are achieved in the public service through ethical behaviour, implementing government priorities and

services.



Related slides Related resources Agency resources

13. Culture  Public Sector Ethics Act 1994 Incorporating Agency Focus

14. Public sector ethics principles  Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public  Agency values

15. Principle 1 Integrity and impartiality Service  Agency Code of Conduct Standard

16. Principle 2 Promoting the public good of Practice

17. Principle 3 Commitment to the system  Agency/ occupationally relevant

of government examples/ scenarios

18. Principle 4 Accountability and

transparency

19. Ethics in practice - diagram









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Topic 5: What happens when things go wrong – ethical failure



Objective 2. SES have applied the public sector ethics to ethical dilemmas

Core message Applying ethics to decisions and actions

area

Instructions for Use case studies to explore what happens when ethical culture and practice are found wanting.

trainers

Three well known case studies are included with a brief overview of what happened and the outcomes.



Agencies are encouraged to use at least one case study form their own agency and highlight the ethical lessons that

emerged, using the public sector ethics. If using a case study focusing on an individual, explore the lessons that emerged

about how the agency systems handled the situation. Case studies should be de-identified.



Content and Any work environment and role has risks: both situations in which there are temptations to act unethically and situations that

discussion comprise an ethical dilemma, where we must exercise ethical judgement to determine the right thing to do. These situations

may be created or affected by norms (practices and unwritten rules), both positive and negative, that operate in the

workplace.



Having explored the integrity and accountability framework, the workshop now uses case studies to explore what happens

when ethical culture and practice are wanting.



The included case studies:

 Responding to Hurricane Katrina;

 Reconstructing Iraq; and

 The AWB, DFAT and the Oil for Food Programme.







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Related slides Related resources Agency resources

20. What happens when things go wrong?  G.B Adams and D.L Balfour: Ethical Failings, Incorporating Agency Focus

21. Ethical failure – Hurricane Katrina Incompetence, and Administrative Evil – Lessons  Agency values

22. Ethical failure – Reconstruction of Iraq from Katrina and Iraq in R.W Cox (ed) Ethics and

 Agency Code of Conduct Standard

Integrity in Public Administration 2009

23. Insert agency example of Practice

 D. Lenihan: AWB: How the System Let us Down in

Public Administration Today April- June 2007  Agency policies and procedures

 J. Agius SC: The Cole Inquiry into Certain  Agency/ occupationally relevant

Australian Companies and the UN Oil for Food examples/ scenarios

Programme: Lessons for Government in

Australian Institute of Administrative Law Forum,

2007









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Topic 6: Introduction to ‘in practice’ section



Objective 3. SES have developed a conceptual framework for their leadership of ethical practice and culture in their agencies

4. SES have committed to action as champions of ethical practice and culture within their agencies and across government

Core message Planning to enhance ethical culture through leadership

area Leading ethical culture enhancement

Instructions for Advise participants that the workshop will now explore their role in upholding ethics in their agency, using the conceptual

trainers framework: Strategy – Structure - Culture.



This time the workshop commences with Structure, then explore Culture and ends with looking at Strategy: giving SES

Officers the opportunity to focus on identifying actions they will commit to in order to uphold their ethical responsibilities as

leaders in the agency.

Content and Compliance or Culture

discussion ‘Because efficient and legitimate institutions can be used for constructive or destructive purposes, public affairs professionals

need to develop and nurture a critical, reflexive attitude toward public institutions, the exercise of authority, and the culture at

large’

Adams and Balfour 2009



This workshop starts from the position that compliance on its own is an inadequate response to ensuring integrity and

accountability and that the embedding or institutionalising of ethics within an agency culture is required to consistently

ensure ethical outcomes.



The workshop will now help SES to explore your role in upholding ethics in this agency, using the conceptual framework:

Strategy – Structure - Culture. This time the workshop commences with Structure, then explores Culture and ends with

looking at Strategy: actions SES identify and will commit to in order to uphold SES ethical responsibilities as leaders in the

agency.





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Related slides Related resources Agency resources

24. Putting the conceptual framework into

practice









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Topic 7: Structure in practice



Objective 1. SES have demonstrated an understanding of the Integrity and Accountability regime in Queensland

Core message Queensland’s integrity and accountability reforms

area

Instructions for Take participants through the new SES Officer accountabilities under the government’s integrity and accountability reforms

trainers referring to relevant agency policy, procedures and examples.

Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores putting ‘Structure’ into practice, focusing on new SES Officer accountabilities under the government’s

integrity and accountability reforms.



Accountabilities

SES accountabilities based on the integrity and accountability reforms are established in legislation, directives and policy.



Code of Conduct: A new Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public Service comes into effect from 1 January 2010.

As our senior leaders, Chief Executive and Senior Executive Service (SES) Officers have responsibility to visibly

demonstrate and uphold the principles and values of the Public Sector Ethics Act 1994 that are reflected in the Code of

Conduct. Chief Executive and SES officers’ roles are to promote an organisational culture that values high ethical standards

and behaviour.



Ethics training: The Queensland Government’s integrity and accountability reforms identified ethical decision-making as an

important aspect of a strong ethical culture. Annual training in ethics and ethical decision-making is now mandatory for all

public service employees. This commenced with a workshop for CEOs held in October 2010. This has been cascaded to

SES Officers in the form of this workshop. Training for all officers is planned.

Related slides Related resources Agency resources

25. Structure in practice  Government Response to Integrity and Incorporating Agency Focus



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26. Reform accountabilities for SES Accountability in Queensland, 2009  Agency values

27. Reform accountabilities for SES  Directive 2/09 Employment Separation Procedures  Agency Code of Conduct Standard

28. Reform accountabilities – Code of  Directive 22/09 Gifts & Benefits and related Policy of Practice

Conduct  Directive 3/10 Declaration of Interests and related  Agency policies and procedures

29. Reform accountabilities – Ethics Policy  Agency/ occupationally relevant

training  Disclosure of previous employment as a Lobbyist examples/ scenarios

 Premier’s Communiqué: Interaction between

ministerial staff and public servants

 Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public Service

 Queensland Public Service Charter

 Integrity Information Sheet 1: Integrity Issues and

the Integrity Commissioner









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Topic 8: Culture in practice



Objective 2. SES have applied the public sector ethics to ethical dilemmas

Core message Applying ethics to decisions and actions

area

Instructions for Take participants through the slides in this section and then ask them to work through ethical dilemmas in small groups.

trainers

The ethical dilemmas are to be generated by the agency. Use:

 Participant-relevant examples/ scenarios to explore dealing with ethical dilemmas: situations where the ‘answer’ is

not clear cut and ethical judgement is needed;

 Your agency ethical decision making tool or the PSC 1,2,3,GO Ethical Decision Making Tool;

 the Code of Conduct, applying the ethics principles in the first instance and then the values and standards of conduct

to clarify the principles;

 Ask participants to explain how they used the principles to form their decision;

 Ask participants to identify the impact of their decision in terms of the ethics principles, both positive and negative

impacts; and

 Assist participants to identify appropriates sources of advice.

Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores putting ‘Culture’ into practice, focusing on the application of ethical decision making tools to ethical

dilemma scenarios.



Ethical decision-making

Making ethical decisions is not just about applying rules. Increasingly we are asked to decide what should be done, to make

our own decisions, in situations where the answer is not clear. The public sector ethics principles can guide us in identifying

what we should do in these situations.





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Advice

Seeking good advice is central to making an impartial and appropriate ethical decision. It is difficult to get perspective in

isolation nor can you give yourself independent ethics advice. Clarify the issues and options for resolution by talking to

someone independent who you respect.



Related slides Related resources Agency resources

30. Culture in practice  Public Sector Ethics Act 1994 Incorporating Agency Focus

31. Ethical standards in the public sector  Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public  Agency values

32. Ethical decision-making Service  Agency Code of Conduct Standard

33. Ethical decision-making model -  PSC 1,2,3,GO Ethical Decision Making Tool of Practice

diagram  Ombudsman’s Good Decisions Program  Agency policies and procedures

34. Ethics advice  Crime and Misconduct Commission Prevention  Professional codes/ ethics/ values

Program  Occupational groupings: interests/

values

 Agency/ occupationally relevant

examples/ scenarios









Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 25

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

Topic 9: Strategy in practice



Objectives 3. SES have developed a conceptual framework for their leadership of ethical practice and culture in their agencies

4. SES have committed to action as champions of ethical practice and culture within their agencies and across government

Core message Planning to enhance ethical culture through leadership

area Leading ethical culture enhancement

Instructions for Slides in this section include questions to prompt participants to consider their role in leading ethical culture. Participants

trainers should be encouraged to begin to translate their responses into planning for implementation beyond this training workshop.

Content and This workshop explores a conceptual framework of 3 elements: Strategy – Structure – Culture

discussion This section explores putting ‘Strategy’ into practice, focusing on identifying actions SES will commit to in order to uphold

SES ethical responsibilities as leaders in the agency.



SES officers are to promote an organisational culture that values high ethical standards and behaviour by:

• Openly demonstrating conscious commitment to ethics by communicating the importance of ethical decision-making

in the workplace, and promoting ethical behaviour in day-to-day actions;

• Ensuring employees have access to training in the operation of this Code and in ethical decision-making more

broadly, making the Code meaningful for all employees.

Code of Conduct for the Queensland Public Service



Promoting ethical culture should be integrated into all SES activities including the planning, implementation and reporting

cycle through:

 Setting the strategic direction and managing priorities for achieving agency goals;

 Leading public service planning and manage performance at a whole-of-government level;

 Demonstrated commitment to the right way to do business, which will be critical to agency and employee successful

delivery of outcomes.





Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 26

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

Queensland Government Performance management Framework – A Guide for Executive Managers

Related slides Related resources Agency resources

35. Strategy in practice  Queensland Government Performance Incorporating Agency Focus

36. Exploring Leadership Management Framework – A Guide for Executive  Agency values

Managers

37. Discussion questions  Agency Code of Conduct Standard

38. Discussion question of Practice

39. Performance commitment  Agency policies and procedures

 Professional codes/ ethics/ values

 Occupational groupings: interests/

values

 Agency/ occupationally relevant

examples/ scenarios









Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 27

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

Topic 10: Conclusion



Objective 4. SES have committed to action as champions of ethical practice and culture within their agencies and across government

Core message Leading ethical culture enhancement

area

Instructions for Participants should explore how they can integrate ethical behaviour into their day to day activities. The Capability &

trainers Leadership Framework can be used.



Content and Ethical culture is built through shared understanding and values and the reforms seek to promote positive expression of the

discussion principles and values that underpin effective public service. Public service leaders have a key role in establishing the

benchmark for ethical culture in their agency.



Ethics are not something to be brought out from time to time; acting with integrity is something Queenslanders expect from

the public servants at all times of every day.



What will it mean in your role to show conscious dedication to ethics, every day, in all things?



Identify how you will meet Capability and Leadership Framework, Capability 4: Displays personal drive & integrity







Related slides Related resources Agency resources

40. Conclusion  Queensland Public Service Code of Conduct Incorporating Agency Focus

 Capability & Leadership Framework  Agency values

 Agency Code of Conduct Standard

of Practice





Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 28

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

 Agency policies and procedures

 Professional codes/ ethics/ values

 Occupational Groupings: interests/

values

 Agency/ occupationally relevant

examples/ scenarios









Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 29

Ethics &

Ethical

Decision

SES Training Program – Facilitators’ Guide

Making

List of Slides

Topic 1: Introduction Topic 2: Strategy Topic 3: Structure

1. Cover slide 5. Strategy 11. Structure

2. Conceptual framework: compliance or culture 6. Integrity and accountability reforms 12. Map of integrity regime

3. Objectives 7. Reforms – strong rules

4. Introducing the framework 8. Reforms – strong culture

9. Reforms – strong scrutiny

10. Reforms – strong enforcement

Topic 4: Culture Topic 5: What happens when things go wrong – Topic 6: Introduction to ‘in practice’ section

13. Culture ethical failure 25. Putting the conceptual framework into practice

14. Public sector ethics principles 20. What happens when things go wrong?

15. Principle 1 Integrity and impartiality 21. Ethical failure – Hurricane Katrina

16. Principle 2 Promoting the public good 22. Ethical failure – Reconstruction of Iraq

17. Principle 3 Commitment to the system of 23. Ethical failure – the recurring themes

government 24. Insert agency example

18. Principle 4 Accountability and transparency

19. Ethics in practice – diagram

Topic 7: Structure in practice Topic 8: Culture in practice Topic 9: Strategy in practice

26. Reform accountabilities for SES 30. Culture in practice 35. Strategy in practice

27. Reform accountabilities for SES 31. Ethical standards in the public sector 36. Exploring Leadership

28. Reform accountabilities – Code of Conduct 32. Ethical decision-making 37. Discussion questions

29. Reform accountabilities – Ethics training 33. Ethical decision-making model – diagram 38. Discussion question

34. Ethics advice 39. Performance commitment

Topic 10: Conclusion

40. Conclusion









Guideline www.ethics.qld.gov.au 30


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