Benton Foundation

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Benton Foundation
標語 The Benton Foundation works to ensure that media and telecommunications serve the public interrest and enhance our democracy
設立年 1981
種類 Nonprofit organization
本部 Evanston, IL, United States
Executive Director Adrianne B. Furniss
重要人物 {{safesubst:#invoke:list|horizontal}}
収入(2015年)
$609,803[1]
費用 (2015年) $999,990[1]
ウェブサイト www.benton.org
テンプレートを表示

テンプレート:Notability The Benton Foundation is a nonprofit organization set up by former U.S. Senator William Benton and his wife, Helen Hemingway Benton. Their son, Charles Benton, served as chairman and CEO until his death in 2015.[2]

The Benton Foundation was the owner of the Encyclopædia Britannica from 1974 until 1996, when it was bought by Jacqui Safra. The formation of the Benton Foundation was announced at the bicentennial banquet for the Britannica in 1968. The mission of the Foundation was re-vamped somewhat in 1981 by Charles Benton, but it has always focused on using media for the public good, particularly for educational purposes.

In recent years, the Foundation has been most famous for its championing of digital access and for demanding public responsibility by mass media. The Benton Foundation has pushed for a national broadband policy at the highest levels of U.S. government. It has also been pushing the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to determine the public interest obligations of digital television broadcasters. Finally, it has sponsored studies that suggest that concentration of media ownership in a few hands is not in the interests of the United States.

Awards

On 9 February 2007, Benton Foundation Chairman and CEO Charles Benton received the Susan G. Hadden Pioneer Award from the Alliance for Public Technology for “pioneering efforts in telecommunications and consumer access.”

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Benton Foundation”. Foundation Center (2016年8月2日). . 22 June 2017閲覧.
  2. Who We Are”. Benton Foundation. . 22 June 2017閲覧.

External links