By
Neil Hodge2026-01-12T21:06:00
Compliance teams will face a range of ongoing challenges in the coming year, as well as greater demands from boards and management for better, wider, and more real-time assurance on an increasing range of risk topics, particularly around emerging technologies.
Experts believe that in 2026, the compliance function will be judged not by whether it has policies in place, but more by whether it can demonstrate its expertise and effectiveness across fast-moving risks such as AI-enabled decision-making, third-party/supply chain exposure, and sustainability disclosures that are increasingly treated like financial statements.
You are not logged in and do not have access to members-only content.
If you are already a registered user or a member, SIGN IN now.
2026-01-28T12:55:00Z By Nathan Eckel CW guest columnist
Most organizational failures are not failures of effort, discipline, or follow-through. They are interpretation failures misdiagnosed as execution problems.
2026-01-06T13:15:00Z By Ruth Prickett
What will be the critical tech issues for compliance in 2026? We asked experts what tech, digital, and cyber issues they believe compliance teams should be focusing on in the year ahead.
2026-01-06T12:00:00Z By Ruth Prickett
AI mistakes can lead to viral news stories and, sometimes, big legal bills. How can compliance managers learn from past mishaps and protect their organizations as AI becomes increasingly integrated into every part of our working lives? We asked experts what compliance should do to make sure AI toes the ...
2026-03-19T14:43:00Z By Tom Fox
A sweeping proposed federal procurement clause would push AI oversight out of policy decks and into compliance operations, vendor management, and real-time control testing.
2026-03-13T15:48:00Z By Tegan Gebert, Chris Audet and Doug Eckstein, CW guest columnists
New Gartner research reveals why traditional risk management is failing to keep pace with modern risks, and outlines how compliance leaders must enable organizational risk owners to build an instinctive Risk Reflex.
2026-03-12T20:37:00Z By Jonny Frank and Michael Costa, CW guest columnists
AI elevates compliance, or exposes it. The technology presents compliance leaders and lawyers with an extraordinary opportunity to elevate their roles, as well as an equally extraordinary risk of accountability when AI fails, misleads, discriminates, hallucinates, or generates unreliable outputs.
Site powered by Webvision Cloud