Governance

Objects clause

Formal definition

In governance, Objects clause refers to an operating term used for conducting external reviews, meeting constitutional duties, and addressing internal audit recommendations to maintain governance oversight.

What this actually means for you

Use Objects clause to guide live decisions: test procedures against industry maturity scales, track remedial actions, and comply with core document powers, with ownership and reporting agreed before board and committee decisions.

Example: At the next review checkpoint, Objects clause is used in practice like this: the audit committee logs audit responses and trustee officers review governing documents to verify delegation powers. Accountabilities are captured in team templates, reporting packs, and operating checklists.

Related guides and whitepapers

Read deeper guidance and implementation detail connected to this term.

Working With Lived Experience Advisors - abstract artwork
guide
Governance,  Culture,  Operations

A grounded guide to working well with lived experience advisors in UK charities: paid, supported, respected, given real authority. Practical practice and policy.

Succession Planning for Charity Leaders - abstract artwork
guide
Leadership,  Governance,  Strategy

A practical succession planning guide for UK charity chief executives, chairs, trustees and specialists. Proportionate, written down, refreshed annually.

An EDI Policy That Staff Actually Use - abstract artwork
guide
Governance,  Operations,  Culture

How to write a UK charity EDI policy that staff and trustees actually use: structure, length, operational hooks, and the governance that keeps it alive.

Environmental Sustainability for Small Charities - abstract artwork
guide
Governance,  Operations,  Strategy

A grounded sustainability guide for small UK charities: where to start, what is proportionate, what counts as greenwashing, and the governance that makes it real.