Philip rutnam biography

          A former senior Treasury official, Sir Philip Rutnam's career also includes working in corporate finance at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, a period as Private.

        1. A former senior Treasury official, Sir Philip Rutnam's career also includes working in corporate finance at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, a period as Private.
        2. Philip Rutnam - Permanent Secretary and Race Equality Champion in the Home Office - Black History Month
        3. Sir Philip McDougall Rutnam, KCB (born 19 June ) is a British former civil servant who served as Permanent Under-Secretary of State at the Home Office from until his resignation on 29 February
        4. Former Home Office permanent secretary Sir Philip Rutnam has reached a substantial settlement with the government following his resignation.
        5. Sir Philip Rutnam's resignation as Permanent Secretary of the Home Office, and his legal action for constructive unfair dismissal is.
        6. Sir Philip McDougall Rutnam, KCB (born 19 June ) is a British former civil servant who served as Permanent Under-Secretary of State at the Home Office from until his resignation on 29 February!

          Philip Rutnam

          British civil servant (born 1965)

          Sir Philip McDougall Rutnam, KCB (born 19 June 1965) is a British former civil servant who served as Permanent Under-Secretary of State at the Home Office from 2017 until his resignation on 29 February 2020.

          Prior to this, he was the Permanent Secretary at the Department for Transport for five years and also Acting Permanent Secretary at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in 2010.[1]

          Rutnam is currently Chair of the National Churches Trust, the UK's national conservation charity for churches, chapels and meeting houses.[2] He is also Chair of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research[3] and a Council Member of the University of Surrey.[4] He was previously a Non-Executive Director of Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust,[5] where he chaired the partnership with the University of Oxford to redevelop the Warneford Hospital site as Oxford's new centre for