An activist shareholder put forward a resolution at the Walt Disney Company’s annual shareholder meeting on March 9 that sought to require the company to make more disclosures about what it is doing to gauge the impact of its activities on the human rights situation in countries like China. The measure was introduced by the National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC), a Virginia-based advocacy group, in light of “Disney’s longtime cozy relationship with the communist government of China, which has been credibly accused of slavery, torture, and genocide,” according to a Wednesday statement. The group also accused the company of “complicity in China genocide.” The resolution, which failed, sought to bind Disney to issue an annual report regarding its monitoring of the human rights impacts of its business in foreign markets, including China. The Walt Disney Company’s ability and willingness to pull out of a market, even a very large …