The role of General Counsel has evolved at pace in the past few years. Once seen as “the lawyer in the room”, GCs are now expected to be forward-thinkers guiding businesses through everything from sustainability to cybersecurity and diversity initiatives. The pandemic has only accelerated this shift, with legal teams front and centre in companies’ response to the crisis.
Global uncertainty reached a peak during Covid-19, according to The Economist’s Intelligence Unit’s World Uncertainty Index, and further shocks should not be downplayed given risks stemming from rising geopolitical and trade tensions. Fresh challenges including the renewed fight against climate change and rapid digitalisation compound this ever-changing environment, with in-house lawyers likely to maintain – if not increase – their strategic role in organisations.
Attendees at Economist Impact’s 18th General Counsel Summit in London discussed these and other challenges lying ahead for GCs at leading corporations.
Download A&M's perspective on the outcomes from the event.
Download
RELATED INSIGHTS
Shareholder activism adapts and evolves to be a growing force across Continental Europe.
AI Technology Export Enforcement: 5 Signals Companies Cannot Afford to Miss
April 7, 2026
AI export enforcement is accelerating, bringing tougher penalties, expanding liability, and increased oversight. This article outlines five recent enforcement signals that should prompt an immediate compliance review.
The White House’s AI Legislative Framework and the Unsettled Future of State AI Laws
April 3, 2026
This article examines the Trump administration’s March 20, 2026, “National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence Legislative Recommendations” and the central governance question it raises: Will Congress create a national AI standard that displaces portions of the current state-law patchwork?
Crypto Clarity: The Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crypto Assets
April 1, 2026
A&M’s Disputes and Investigations experts examine the SEC’s interpretative release from March 17, 2026, including its crypto asset taxonomy and its treatment of digital commodities, stablecoins, tokenized securities, and certain crypto-related activities. They also explore what this guidance could mean for the continued expansion of crypto asset trading in the United States.
Uncovering Missing Information in Liquidation – A Forensic Accounting Perspective
February 25, 2026
This insight outlines several practical approaches from a forensic accounting perspective to uncover and identify missing assets, reconstruct records, and uncover information during liquidation.