
Roberto Savio |
An internationally renowned
expert in communications issues, Roberto Savio has founded
numerous news and information projects, always with
an emphasis on the developing world: Inter Press Service
(IPS) news agency, the pioneering Technological Information
Pilot System (TIPS), the network of national information
systems for Latin America and the Caribbean (ASIN),
the Latin American features service ALASEI and the Women's
Feature Service. He is now IPS President Emeritus.
Born in Rome, Savio is an Italian/Argentine citizen.
He studied Economics at the University of Parma, and
post-graduate courses in Development Economics with
Gunnar Myrdal, as well as History of Art and International
Law in Rome.
He started his professional career as a research assistant
in International Law at the University of Parma.
Active as an international officer with Italy's National
Students Association and with the Young Christian Democrats,
Savio was responsible for the Christian Democratic Party's
relations with developing countries before becoming
international press chief for Italian Prime Minister
Aldo Moro.
His career in the news media began with Italy's daily
Il Popolo and he went on to become Director for News
Services for Latin America with RAI, Italy's national
broadcaster. After the 1973 coup d'etat in Chile, Savio
left Italian politics to pursue journalism. He received
a number of awards for TV documentaries, including the
national Italian journalism award, the St. Vincent award.
He has also produced five films, two of which were presented
at the Venice and Cannes film festivals, and published
several books, the latest of which is Verbo America,
dealing with the cultural identity of Latin America.
In 1964, he established Inter Press Service (IPS)
, a non-profit cooperative of journalists and experts
specialising in global communications for development.
IPS grew to become the world's fifth-largest news agency,
providing daily balanced, in-depth and analytical coverage
of the development process. It also offers communication
services to improve South-South and South-North exchange
and executes projects with international partners to
open up communication channels to all social sectors.
IPS has been recognised by the United Nations, holding
NGO consultative status (category I) with ECOSOC. With
the strengthening of the process of globalisation, IPS
has dedicated itself to the global issues, and has become
the press agency of the global civil society: it has
more than 30,000 NGOs that subscribe to its services,
and several million readers of its online services.
Since 1973, Savio has been a consultant on information
and communication issues for many developing countries,
designing the National Information Systems Network (ASIN)
for Latin America and the Caribbean and the UNESCO-supported
Latin American Features Service (ALASEI). He is the
founder and managing director of the Technological Information
Pilot System (TIPS)
, a major U.N. project to implement and foster technological
and economic cooperation between developing countries.
He was also instrumental in setting up the Women's Feature
Service (WFS), initially an IPS service, now an independent
NGO with headquarters in New Delhi. He has also been
actively involved in promoting exchanges between regional
information services, such as between ALASEI and the
Organisation of Asian News Agencies (OANA) and between
the Pan-African News Agency (PANA) and the Federation
of Arab News Agencies (FANA).
Savio has been actively involved at the technical level
with international communication issues, introducing
the Development Press Bulletin Service Tariff in UNESCO's
International Commission for the Study of Communication
Problems (the MacBride Commission).
He has also worked closely in the field of information
and communication with a variety of international organisations,
such as UNDP, UNEP, UNFPA, UNICEF and UNITAR. After
several years of being a member of the governing council
of the Society for International Development (SID),
the oldest international organisation of the civil society
on development, he has been elected Secretary General
for three terms, and is now the Secretary General Emeritus,
with Enrique Iglesias as Chair..
Since October 1999 he has served as Senior Adviser for
Strategies and Communication to the Director General
of the International Labour Organisation. Also since
that date he has been on the Board of Training Centre
for Regional Integration of Latin America
In 2000, he worked as Consultant for Internal Communications
Strategy to Ms. Catherine Bertini, Executive Director
of World Food Programme for a year.
He is President of Indoamerica, an Argentine NGO that
promotes education in areas suffering social breakdown,
in poor areas of Argentina.
He has been part of the International
Committee of the World Social Forum since it was
established in 2001, and elected as Coordinator of the
"Media, Culture and Counter-Hegemony" thematic
area at the WSF 2003.
He is co-founder of Media
Watch International, based in Paris, of which he
is Secretary General, and founded the Internet service,
Othernews,
which distributes daily analysis on international issues,
particularly the themes of global governance and multilateralism,
to several thousand of policy-makers, and leaders of
civil society.
He is also Chairman of the Board
of the Alliance for a New Humanity, an international
foundation established in Puerto Rico, that since 2001
is promoting the culture of Peace. Its board has among
others, the thinker Deepak Chopra, the Spanish judge
Balthazar Garzon, the Nobel Prizes Oscar Arias and Betty
Williams and the philanthropists Ray Chambers and Solomon
Levis.
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