A new economy needs a new kind of board.

Diversity on Board curates accomplished Arab and North African women in business, government, civil society and the sciences, and helps organisations across MENA appoint them to executive and advisory boards. As the platform widens, it makes room for youth, the differently-abled and other under-represented talents, and for two stakeholders most boards still leave outside the door: artificial intelligence and nature. A 3BL Associates Think-Do-Tank initiative.

The new condition of governance

The world boards were built for has gone

Three years ago climate sat in the disclosure column, geopolitics was predictable enough to build an 18-month plan, and AI was a line in the IT budget. That world is gone.

What replaced it does not arrive in sequence. Instability, geopolitical fracture, technological acceleration and ecosystem unraveling land together and compound each other. The ecological, social and financial systems directors oversee turn out to be one system seen from different angles: when one buckles, the others feel it.

The frameworks most directors inherited assumed a baseline of stability, and those assumptions are failing. The boards that find their way through can see what is emerging before it announces itself, hold complexity without flattening it, and decide with compassion under genuine uncertainty. We believe that takes three intelligences, working together.

Governing with three intelligences

Who sits in the room shapes what the room can see

Human

Human intelligence

The widest possible range of lived human judgement in the room. This is our founding and continuing work: curating accomplished Arab and North African women, and the region's next generation of under-represented leaders, then helping organisations appoint them.

For the board: composition is the first risk control, not an HR footnote. A board drawn from one kind of life experience has a fixed field of vision and keeps missing the same risks. Widening who governs is the most direct way to widen what a board can foresee.

Arab women board leaders from the Gulf, the Levant and North Africa, seated together
Artificial

Artificial intelligence

AI is now a presence in the room, not a line in the IT budget. Agents can make thousands of decisions before a board even convenes. Knowing what to delegate to a machine, what to question, and what must stay human is now part of the director's job, not a topic for the technology committee.

For the board: govern with AI, not around it. Boards set the terms on which machine decisions are made, hold the line on accountability when models act at speed, and keep human judgement sovereign over the calls that carry moral and strategic weight.

A brain of glowing gold neural pathways held under a steady cupped human hand
Biological

Biological intelligence

Nature has spent 3.8 billion years solving the problems that occupy boardrooms: deciding under uncertainty, building resilience through disruption, coordinating across difference, and thinking in generations rather than quarters. Through our Nature on Board initiative, directors step into the perspectives of mangroves, migratory birds and coral reefs, and learn to govern with, for and as the living systems every business depends on.

For the board: climate and nature are the operating condition, not the disclosure column. Weigh the living world as a stakeholder and you price the risk the silent stakeholders would otherwise carry alone.

MENA ecosystems: Arabian Gulf mangroves and a flamingo, a Red Sea reef, a date palm, a Levantine cedar and North African dunes

A missed opportunity, measured

The case for board diversity widens the aperture, it does not soften the evidence

0%

of GCC board seats are held by women, as of January 2026

0%

of listed companies across the wider MENA region still have all-male boards

0%

the share of MENA's economic gender gap that is closed, the lowest of any world region

The global retreat from diversity commitments makes this work more urgent, not less. Boards narrowing their field of vision now are not adapting to complexity, they are turning away from it.

Sources: GCC Board Gender Index 2026, Aurora50 and Heriot-Watt University; Corporate Women Directors International 2023; World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report 2025.

From human diversity to more-than-human diversity

Who sits in the room, and now what sits in the room

We launched Diversity on Board in 2019 and 2020 as a regional platform connecting high-achieving Arab and North African talent with board opportunities, from a simple observation: who sits in the room shapes what the room can see.

Two years later we launched the Emerging Board Leaders Fellowship, powered by HSBC with KPMG Bahrain as knowledge partner, for people who would lead through transition treated as permanent weather, not a moment to get through. They learned the governance fundamentals that hold regardless of context, and they learned to sit with ambiguity, to treat entangled systems not as a problem to solve but as a reality to navigate.

In 2025 we began widening what diversity on board means. Through Nature on Board we hosted interspecies board simulations at the Qatar National Dialogue on Climate Change and the Dubai Future Forum, where directors stepped into the perspectives of mangroves, migratory birds and coral reefs. They found that when you give nature a voice in strategic decisions, the quality of those decisions changes.

What our fellows taught us

Governance is not about control, it is about stewardship

0

fellows accelerated across three cohorts

Half

now serving on boards

0+

leaders trained across MENA

We watched a generation of leaders discover that the most resilient organisations attend to the health of the systems they depend upon. They hold the long view when everything pressures them toward the short term. That is the same instinct the new economy now demands at scale, across human, artificial and biological intelligence alike.

Meet the fellows

Vision

For boardrooms across the Arab and North African countries to reflect the societies, and the living systems, they serve, and to help build economies that are inclusive, resilient and made to last.

Mission

Widening who, and what, governs across the region, through a curated talent marketplace, practical guidance on putting board diversity to work, and a pipeline of board-ready leaders prepared to govern with humans, with AI, and with nature.

How it works

Open by design

There is no fee to explore Diversity on Board, and no fee to post a board opening. Current board and advisory seats are listed openly on the Opportunities board, so leaders can see what is open and organisations can reach a wider field of candidates.

See open opportunities

A map of the Middle East and North Africa with board-opportunity locations marked across the Gulf, the Levant and North Africa

Why a dragonfly

Panoramic vision, agility, and a life spent becoming

Out of nature's millions of species, the dragonfly is one of very few with near 360-degree vision, and it flies in any direction with rare agility. It is the perfect mark for a board: the panoramic view, the agility to move early, and a creature of the living world. It is also why our sister initiative, Nature on Board, brings that world itself into the boardroom.

Backed by institutions that mean it

Diversity ChampionHSBC
Knowledge PartnerKPMG

Are you on board?

Partner with us, post a board opening, or explore the path to the boardroom.

team@diversityonboard.org