Ramón
Salaverría Aliaga
Catedrático de Universidad
Departamento académico: (FCOM) Periodismo
Centro académico: Facultad de Comunicación (FCOM)
Organización: Universidad de Navarra
Research group: Digital News Media Research Group
Email: rsalaver@unav.es
Personal web / Curriculum Vitae: https://cientificacvn.unav.edu/cientificacvn/pdfsWeb?id=4...
Doctor by the Universidad de Navarra with the thesis La noticia en los manuales de periodismo evolución del concepto y de las normas redaccionales 1998. Supervised by Dr. José Francisco Sánchez.
Ramón Salaverría is Full Professor of Journalism at University of Navarra and, since 2024, Member of Academia Europæa (MAE). His research focuses on digital journalism and disinformation. Author of over 300 scholarly publications, he is listed in the Stanford University Ranking of the World's most cited researchers. He is also award-winner of the 'Researcher of the Year' prize at the Roblon Awards, which recognizes excellence on media and communication research. He has published research in top-ranked international scientific journals and publishers on communication and journalism. With an extensive career as a leader of research projects, he is currently the principal investigator of Iberifier, the Iberian Digital Media Observatory funded by the European Commission. He is also the International Engagement Editor of Digital Journalism, the highest-impact scientific journal on journalism studies. He chaired the Journalism Studies Section of ECREA (European Communication Research and Education Association), as well as the Committee of Experts on Increasing Resilience of Media (MSI-RES) at the Council of Europe. He is also a member of the Arbitration, Complaints and Ethics of Journalism Commission, the self-regulation body of the news profession in Spain. Salaverría served as visiting researcher at the University of Texas at Austin (USA), as well as a guest professor at a dozen universities in Europe and the Americas. He has delivered keynotes, workshops and training programs in more than 30 countries.