Corporate Governance: In the News - Articles of Interest
(articles published March 18, 2026 – March 25, 2026)
California pushes Scope 3 reporting for $1B firms | ESG News
Climate investors give BP until April 1 to include resolution, threaten court | Reuters
ISS urges investors to reject UniCredit pay report over CEO award | Reuters
EFRAG to engage with large companies on voluntary sustainability reporting standard | ESG Today
AI is reshaping the admin job market | The Wall Street Journal
White House AI policy framework offers little clarity to enterprises | Corporate Counsel
AI oversight tops Glass Lewis 2026 proxy season predictions as pressures mount | Governance Intelligence
Facing DEI pressures, some law firms shield data in latest diversity survey | Reuters
14 risk oversight principles you have not heard before | Corporate Compliance Insights
Liontrust calls for GAM alternatives as managers seek dialogue with board | Investment Week
California weighs approaches to phase in new Scope 3 GHG emissions corporate reporting requirements | ESG Today
Investors consider director votes at US firms omitting shareholder proposals | Responsible Investor
White House calls for minimally burdensome federal AI rules | ESG Dive
Activist investor wants board shakeup at Maryland-based Eagle | American Banker
Larry Fink’s warning: invest or risk getting left behind by AI | The Wall Street Journal
DOJ unveils nationwide policy to boost corporate self-reporting | Governance Intelligence
The board’s role in merger and acquisition oversight | Directors & Boards
Expect an e-delivery rule soon: SEC chair | ThinkAdvisor
Hundreds of companies skipped publishing sustainability reports in 2025 | Trellis
US SEC forming new team to police accounting issues | Reuters
Note: Inclusion in the list above does not signify Society endorsement or agreement with the views or perspectives; rather, articles are included because they are deemed to be of interest or relevance to corporate governance or the corporate governance practitioner/professional. Certain publication sources require a free registration or paid subscription, or have a limit on the number of free articles a reader can access within a certain time period