Javier Bauluz (1960, Spain) is a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for news photography in 1995 with the Associated Press in Rwanda and the Journalism and Human Rights Award in 2006 and 2017, among many others. He is a photographer and journalist mostly covering human rights issues.   He also has worked for Reuters and Staff and published his work in The New York Times, El País. Magazine de La Vanguardia, El Mundo, Time, Univision, BBC and Aljazeera, among others. He covered the wars in Central America in the late 1980s, Pinochet’s last years in power, the first Palestinian Intifada, war in Bosnia 1992-1995, the Rwanda crisis and waves of migration to Spain and Europe since 1996. and the Asturian Miners. He has also produced in-depth reports and documentaries from Latin America, Africa and the Near East. After photographing Christmas 1992 in Sarajevo, he organized a humanitarian aid campaign and with several volunteers transported the convoy from Asturias to the Bosnian hospital in Mostar. His last works are about the actual crisis #SOSNicaragua, the Migrant Caravan in front of Trump wall,  the Migrants in Spain's borders and "Seeking Refuge for my children". He has addressed several national and international seminars, workshops, masterclasses and was a professor of photojournalism at Madrid’s IE University and at Barcelonas´s Pompeu Fabra University and other universities. He is the director of the International Festival of Photojournalism of Gijón, Spain, since 1997, and directed the International Photojournalism Workshop at Oviedo University during 15 years with more than 250 students. He was one of the promoters of the 2008 Declaration on Journalism and Human Rights. He founded Human Journalism (Periodismo Humano), a professional journalism media focused on human rights and has directed it since 2010. https://javierbauluz.photoshelter.com