'Kennette Benedict' is the Executive Director of the ''
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists''. Before joining the ''Bulletin'' in October 2005, she had been the Director of International Peace and Security at the
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, where she also served as Senior Advisor to the President. She was responsible for grantmaking on issues of international peace and security including support for efforts to reduce the threat from
weapons of mass destruction, and a $50 million initiative on science, technology, and security. While serving as Director of the International Peace and Security Area, she established and directed from 1992-2002 the Foundation’s Initiative in the Former
Soviet Union and in 2000 established a program of support for higher education in
Nigeria. In her position as Senior Advisor, she worked with MacArthur’s President to review and assess the role of private foundations in the United States and abroad.
Before going to the Foundation in 1987, she taught at
Rutgers University and the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research and teaching focused on organizational decisionmaking, jury decisionmaking, and on women's leadership and American politics. She has also published articles on global governance and on violent conflict. Prior to her academic career, she served in the Massachusetts State Planning agency on law enforcement and criminal justice.
Dr. Benedict is a member of the Board of Trustees of
Oberlin College and the
Compton Foundation and serves on the Advisory Council of the
Stanley Foundation. She co-chaired the
Peace and Security Funders Group from 2003-2005. She has served in a number of consulting and advisory capacities, including as advisor to the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the
University of Minnesota, and the
Center on Effective Philanthropy. She is a member of the
Council on Foreign Relations, the
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, and the
International Institute of Strategic Studies. She received her A.B. from Oberlin College, and her Ph.D. in
political science from
Stanford University.