THE INDISPENSABILITY OF BOARD EVALUATION FOR SUSTAINABLE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

Board evaluation is essential to sustainable corporate governance because it ensures that boards remain effective, accountable, and responsive to changing institutional and stakeholder demands. Many governance failures do not occur suddenly but develop over time when boards become passive, fail to question management or lose clarity in their oversight role. Board evaluation comes in handy to provide a structured way to assess how well boards perform their duties, clarify the boundary between governance and management and identify areas for improvement. By promoting reflection, accountability, and continuous improvement, board evaluation strengthens decision-making, builds stakeholder trust and supports the long-term stability and resilience of institutions.

Recent Posts

Assessing the Principle of Directorial Oversight and Accountability Through the Lens of Re Barings plc (No 5) and Its Relevance to Kenyan Corporate Governance

The collapse of Barings Bank in 1995 remains one of the most significant corporate failures in modern financial history. While the immediate cause of the collapse was the unauthorized derivatives trading conducted by Nick Leeson, the legal significance of Re Barings plc (No 5) lies not in the misconduct of a rogue trader but in the failures of corporate governance that enabled such misconduct to persist undetected. The decision established an important principle of company law and corporate governance that directors may delegate functions, but they cannot delegate responsibility. The case therefore stands as a leading authority on the principle of directorial oversight and accountability.

Understanding Copyright Law through the Lens of Peter Nthei Mwoki & Another v Safaricom PLC & Another [2026]

The law on copyright protects the expression of an idea and not the idea itself. Copyright is automatic upon creation and fixation of an original work in a tangible form. This case discusses the principle of expression of an idea through the lens of the leading case of Peter Mwoki against Safaricom, in which the High Court awarded the former 1.4 billion shillings and a percentage on royalties.

Indefeasibility of Title, Equitable Interests, and the Limits of Registration: Re-examining Root of Title in Kenyan Land Law

A title is only as strong as the story behind it. Registration cannot cure a broken root title, and possession alone cannot perfect ownership without the law.
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