James C. Bennett
James C. Bennett has served as President and Chairman of the Board of
Internet Transactions Transnational since its founding in April 1997.
ITTI
is an international venture developing virtual private networks for
high-value Internet transactions in a high-trust environment. He is also
a member of the Board of Directors of
XCOR Aerospace of Mojave,
California.
Jim served as President and Director of Advanced Technology Holdings,
Inc., ITTI’s former parent corporation, between 1995 and 1998. He has
been professionally active in high technology and international
communications and trade since 1978, when he joined the
Sabre
Foundation’s programs for international trade and space development,
heading that organization’s World Space Center, which specialized in
organizing training and applications programs in space-related
technologies for developing nations. That work lead to the founding of
the Free Zone Authority Services, Inc., a consulting group specializing
in free trade zone management services, which later merged to form The
Services Group, Inc. He served as a Director of FZAS (The
Services Group) until 1989.
In 1980, he cofounded Space Enterprise Consultants, the first
consulting firm devoted entirely to commercial space development. SEC
reviewed a wide range of potential space commercial activities and served
a number of customers in the commercial space field. This consulting
practice was continued by Jim on an individual basis following
the disbanding of the organization and expanded to non-space
high-technology areas in 1991.
In 1981, work performed by SEC led to the founding of
Arc Technologies,
Inc. (later known as Starstruck, Inc.) an early private space-launch
venture, which successfully conducted a launch test of its Dolphin rocket
in 1984. he served at Arc as Vice President, Government Affairs,
and was responsible for, among other things, negotiating the first
license for the launch of a commercially-developed rocket in the United
States. In addition, he was a central participant in the writing
and passage of the
Commercial Space Launch Act, the legal charter for
private space activities in the U.S. He served four terms on the
board of directors of that company.
In 1985, Jim cofounded
American Rocket Company, which developed
the unique, non-explosive hybrid rocket engine as a commercial project.
As Vice President, External Affairs of AMROC, he gained one of
the first launch permits issued by the Department of Transportation. From
1989 to 1990, he served as President of AMROC, and from 1985 to
1988 he served on its board of directors. AMROC’s technology was
acquired
by
Space Development Corporation, where it formed the basis for the
engine used by
Burt Rutan’s
SpaceShipOne in its pioneering private manned
flight to space.
After leaving American Rocket, he served as a consultant to a
number of clients in the space, communications, and other technology
enterprises, specializing in international on-line communications and
commercial space development. His clients have included the Mackinac
Foundation, American Rocket Company, Booz, Allen & Hamilton, The Services
Group, Inc., Weaver Aerospace Company, Astrotech Space Operations, L.P.,
a subsidiary of Westinghouse, Gateway Ventures, Ltd., World Cities
Organization, Inc., The Space and Automation Research Center of the
Environmental Research Institute of Michigan, Lockheed Space Operations
and Sverdrup Technologies, Inc. on contract to the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration, and Econ, Inc. on contract to the US Air Force,
and to the United Space Alliance, the Lockheed Martin-Boeing North
American joint venture, the current contract operator of the Space
Shuttle for NASA.
Jim has been writing and speaking on technological developments
and public policy issues for the past decade. He wrote a weekly column,
The Anglosphere Beat, for United Press International between 2000 and
2003. His book
The Anglosphere Challenge: Why The English-Speaking
Nations Will Lead the Way in the Twenty-First Century was
published in
October 2004. He is the Author of
two public policy studies on space, technology and international
cooperation issues for the
Reason Foundation. He was a member of the
White House Task Force on Space Commercialization in 1983. He has given
testimony before the
U.S. House of Representatives and the California
legislature, and served on U.S. Secretary of Transportation
Andrew Card’s
Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee from 1992 to
1994.
Jim is an Adjunct Senior Fellow of the
Hudson Institute, and is a
contributor to two books from Hudson, including 2020 Forecast and
the
best-selling The Re-Emerging Japanese Superstate in the Twenty-First
Century (Tokuma Shoten, Tokyo, 2002, in Japanese). He has served as a
Director of the
Foresight Institute, Palo Alto, California since 1986,
when that group was established to examine implications of emerging
technology, emphasizing molecular nanotechnology. In 1991 he also was
named a founding Director of the related
Institute for Molecular Manufacturing in Palo Alto. He is the
founding president and Director of
the recently-formed
Anglosphere Institute of Alexandria, Virginia, of
which Lady Margaret Thatcher and Robert Conquest have consented to be
Patrons. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the
World Cities Organization. He is a member of the Board of Advisors for the
National Space Society, a public interest group promoting the
development of
space, having previously served as a member of its Board of Directors. He
is a member of the Board of Governors of the Los Angeles-based
Organization for the Advancement and Settlement of
Space.
Read his
blog!
Listen
to Jim on
Fast Forward Radio!