13th National Public Sector Fraud and Corruption Congress – Draft Agenda
13-14 September 2023, Melbourne
Producing an organisational culture with a strong counter fraud emphasis
- Evaluating if your counter-fraud approach is sufficiently mature for lasting culture change
 - Making your code of conduct easily accessible for employees, leaders, and contractors
 - Developing relationships with each business function as a counter-fraud professional
 - Nominating fraud control representatives on multiple levels of leadership and seniority
 - Prompting reliable feedback from staff on the health of your organisational culture
 
Communicating the significance of fraud and corruption risks to your organisation
- Utilising evidence-based communications techniques in agency-wide awareness campaigns
 - Enabling open dialogue about organisational ethics and employee-employer relationships
 - Targeting active and enthusiastic fraud awareness and diligence in your organisation
 - Discouraging potential fraudsters from ultimately engaging in misconduct
 - Distributing information about active fraud investigations and safe reporting platforms
 
Panel Discussion:
Constructing an effective fraud reporting culture in times of uncertainty
- Building mutual trust within your organisation as a fraud professional
 - Developing reliable fraud reporting systems with increased uptake
 - Navigating concerns around organisational privacy and retaliation
 - Distinguishing your approach to whistleblowing from other organisations
 
Designing fraud and corruption training programs that stick
- Avoiding common mistakes in counter-fraud training initiatives
 - Tailoring your learning and development content to your participants
 - Ensuring that lessons from your training programs reverberate long-term
 - Achieving value for your investment in fraud control training
 - Reviewing fraud knowledge levels regularly in your organisation
 
Marrying fraud and corruption controls with lasting positive outcomes
- Leveraging existing policy, resources, and processes to support new initiatives
 - Developing a clear and enforceable code of conduct familiar to all employees
 - Testing fraud controls rigorously along a pre-established schedule
 - Establishing regularly reviewed policy frameworks and fraud risk tolerance levels
 - Engaging with fraud consultants and regulators, with detailed documentation and reporting
 
Equipping your line management to control integrity and security risks
- Embedding integrity and diligence into standard practice for line managers
 - Mitigating the fraud risks inherent in employee-supervisor relationships
 - Developing targeted counter-fraud training programmes for direct supervisors
 - Building communicative relationships between line managers and senior leadership
 
Preventing fraud and corruption from a risk management perspective
- Utilising contemporary risk management techniques and strategies within fraud control
 - Conducting fraud risk assessments in accordance with industry standards and regulations
 - Designing a dedicated risk management approach for each of your high-risk areas
 - Adapting risk assessment outcomes to guide organisational policy response
 
Conducting effective investigations into potential fraud and misconduct
- Identifying common fraud red flags in your available data
 - Accessing interagency support for complex investigations into misconduct
 - Practicing appropriate interview and intelligence gathering strategies
 - Determining next steps after successfully identifying misconduct in investigation
 
Designing your organisational fraud control strategy for improved detection
- Collecting and storing detailed information from all business functions
 - Utilising tip-offs and protected disclosures to direct further investigation
 - Strengthening your identification outcomes with automated detection testing
 - Applying good sense in discerning between false positives and potential incidents
 
Conducting modern counter-fraud data analysis in practice
- Centring key principles in the sampling of organisational data
 - Navigating confidentiality restrictions and other barriers to access
 - Conducting a typical data analysis for fraud control outcomes
 - Detailing each step of the data analysis process for a fraud control professional
 
Minimising organisational vulnerability to cybersecurity breaches
- Collaborating with IT professionals to defend against modern digital threats
 - Promoting a cyber aware culture throughout the organisation
 - Implementing software and policies to reduce risk of cyber attacks
 - Designing a cybersecurity system with minimal disruption to business functions
 - Minimising the fallout following a successful breach of your cybersecurity
 
Developing advanced cybersecurity strategies in a climate of insecurity
- Considering the lessons learnt from recent data breaches in major organisations
 - Identifying the typical motivations and behaviours of digital fraudsters
 - Rebuilding your organisation after a serious cybersecurity incident
 - Designing your business structure around modern cybersecurity principles
 
Improving counter-fraud and anticorruption interagency collaboration
- Approaching other agencies to develop collaborative counter-fraud strategies
 - Minimising siloing of intelligence and fraud control techniques in the public sector
 - Contacting specialist agencies to facilitate your interagency fraud control strategy
 - Intercepting fraudsters across jurisdictions, industries, and networks
 
Determining appropriate disciplinary consequences for internal fraudsters
- Establishing a ‘zero tolerance’ expectation for fraudulent conduct in your organisation
 - Designing organisational policy and employee contracts for compliant disciplinary responses
 - Balancing the severity of punishment with mitigating factors and offender wellbeing
 - Managing broader workforce reactions to post-fraud disciplinary measures
 
Determining the significance of Artificial Intelligence in the modern counter-fraud landscape
- Comparing the threats and advantages of AI technology for fraud professionals
 - Identifying the limitations of current AI technology for professionals and belligerents
 - Utilising artificial intelligence in systematic analysis of large datasets
 - Navigating the ethical risks of AI technologies with regular process reviews
 - Forecasting the role of AI in the future of fraud and corruption
 
Confronting corruption and fraud risks throughout the procurement process
- Embedding distributed accountability processes in procurement and accounting
 - Improving fraud controls around value for money and tender bidding
 - Refining invoicing and record-keeping procedures to aid investigations
 - Conducting regular audits of procurement controls and records
 - Identifying achievable ‘first steps’ to transform procurement fraud risk management
 
Utilising modern technology in the management of public sector fraud and corruption
- Preventing fraud with sophisticated identification and security
 - Leveraging data analysis and automated testing software to detect fraud risks
 - Empowering your investigations with case management and fact-finding tools
 - Anticipating steps to recover funds and discipline offenders with management technologies
 - Defending against advanced fraudsters utilising similar technology in attacks
 
Evaluating the common characteristics of the modern fraudster
- Contrasting historic fraud with fraudulent conduct today
 - Concentrating fraud risk management strategies around typical motivators of misconduct
 - Embedding behavioural red flags in fraud detection strategies
 - Formulating fraud investigatory actions based on standard offender responses
 
Evaluating the role of the new National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC)
- Assessing the role of the new federal regulator in state jurisdictions
 - Evaluating the investigative powers of the NACC by law
 - Identifying the appropriate regulatory body for a given incident
 - Developing organisational fraud control processes in a new regulatory environment
 
Achieving executive buy-in for adequate fraud control resourcing and support
- Presenting the business case for fraud and corruption controls
 - Developing cost-efficient and evidence-based proposals for fraud programs
 - Outlining the importance of fraud control efficiently to senior leaders
 - Demonstrating visible investment in fraud control to deter would-be offenders