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Scott Trust initiatives

Scott Trust initiatives

The Guardian15-04-2025

In addition to its core purpose of ensuring the Guardian's financial independence in perpetuity, the Scott Trust has a secondary interest in promoting the causes of freedom in the press and liberal journalism, both in Britain and elsewhere. Today the Scott Trust invests heavily in programmes that promote liberal journalism and support the next generation of journalists.
These initiatives include:
Serving as the principal funder of the Guardian Foundation
Delivering on a long-term programme of restorative justice in light of our publication of the Legacies of Enslavement review into the Guardian's historic links to slavery
Overseeing the Guardian's independent readers' editor
As part of the Scott Trust's dedication to the future of liberal journalism, we are proud to support Guardian, an independent charity that works to promote global press freedom and access to liberal journalism.
The Guardian Foundation works directly with journalists, news organisations, audiences and educators, in schools and across communities to enable change in three priority areas:
News and media literacy - building skills for the next generation by turning classrooms into newsrooms, running interactive workshops, producing lesson plans and training educators
Voice and agency - championing more diverse voices and perspectives in the media through schemes like the Scott Trust Bursary, which assists students who face financial difficulty in attaining the qualifications needed to pursue a career in journalism, and who come from backgrounds that are underrepresented in the media.
Media viability - supporting at-risk independent media to continue their work and engage audiences with fact based journalism
The Guardian Foundation also owns the GNM archive, safeguarding and sharing the rich heritage of Guardian News and Media for the benefit of future generations.
Read more about the Guardian Foundation here.
In 2020, the Scott Trust commissioned an academic review into the founding of the Guardian in 1821 by John Edward Taylor and his financial backers. Following the publication of this full review into the Guardian's historic links to slavery in March 2023, the Scott Trust has committed to the delivery of a 10 year programme of restorative justice.
The components of this programme are:
Building restorative justice partnerships with descendant communities in Jamaica, and the Sea Islands in the US.
Raising awareness of Britain's historical involvement in slavery, its global impact, and the lasting wealth and broader inequality it generates.
Carrying out further academic research aimed at seeking and telling the truth about the Guardian's history, and the wider history of enslavement.
As part of this work, we have supported new reporting roles in the Caribbean, South America, the US, Africa and the UK to increase coverage of underrepresented communities and offer new opportunities; and we are also creating new opportunities for entry-level and mid-career Black journalists.
Read more about the Legacies of Enslavement review and initiatives here.
The Scott Trust directly oversees the work of the Guardian's independent global readers' editor, who is tasked with protecting and nurturing the Guardian's commitment to great journalism, fairness and accountability.
The job of the independent readers' editor is to collect, consider, investigate, respond to and, where appropriate, come to a conclusion about readers' comments, concerns and complaints in a prompt and timely manner.
Read more about the role of the Guardian's readers' editor here.

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