Scott was born on 9 October 1962 in Los Angeles. He holds dual Australian and United States citizenship.[3] He is a grandson of Sir Walter Scott AC, who was responsible for the introduction of decimal currency in Australia. His father Brian reviewed the NSW Department of Education in the 1980s.[4]
In 2010, he was appointed to a second five-year term as the ABC's managing director.[9] His time at the ABC was marked by extensive change, including the creation of ABC Me, a digital TV channel for children, and the 24-hour news channel ABC News, as well as a major expansion into digital and on-line technology and an expansion of quality drama.[10][11] Scott has been a strong defender of the value of social media in journalism[12] and skeptical on the capacity of news organisations to charge for content they have previously provided free of charge.[13]
In November 2014, as managing director of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Scott announced that after 55 years, the Collinswood ABC television studios in South Australia would be closed.[14] The announcement, following the 2011 demolition of the ABC TV facility in Perth[15] and the 2012 closure of Tasmania's TV production unit[16] also revealed the end of state based current affairs show 7.30 Report (state editions) - formally Stateline.
Responding to 2014 Liberal government budget cuts of $254 million over 5 years,[17] Mark Scott axed ABC Radio National program Bush Telegraph and five regional radio outposts.[18] In a senate inquiry about the cuts, Scott rejected claims that ABC management was using the Abbott government's cuts as an excuse to pursue unpopular cost-saving initiatives.[19]
In September 2015, Scott announced he would be retiring as managing director and would be leaving the ABC.[20] In December 2015, Michelle Guthrie was announced as Scott's replacement,[21] and took over the role on 2 May 2016.[22]
In June 2016, Scott was appointed secretary of the New South Wales Department of Education. He was responsible for more than 2000 schools and around 49,000 teachers in the state.[23]
Scott is the author of On Us, published in 2019 by Melbourne University Press.[24]
In March 2021, Scott was announced as being appointed the 27th Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sydney, commencing in July 2021.[25] In September 2024, Scott admitted to the Australian Senate that he had failed the university's Jewish students, apologising to them for his mishandling of pro-Palestinian protests that followed the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel.[26]
Awards and honours
On 13 June 2011, Scott was named an Officer of the Order of Australia for distinguished service to media and communications, and to the community through advisory and governance roles with a range of social justice and educational bodies.[27]