Salway has held several other positions at University College London: elected non-professorial representative on the Academic Board 2002–05 and since 2006, elected non-professorial member of the Academic Committee 2004–05, elected non-professorial member of Council since 2006, non-professorial member of the Nominations Committee since 2007, member of the Academic Committee Sub-Committee on Probation since 2008, and non-professorial member of the Governance Committee since 2009.
In 2010 the Volterra database was used by Corcoran and Salway to identify previously unknown fragments of the Gregorian Code. The "Fragmenta Londiniensia" are seventeen pieces of parchment estimated to date from AD400, the document having been cut up and re-used as book-binding material. This is the first original evidence yet discovered of the Gregorian Codex.[4][5][6][7][8]
Salway, R.W.B. (2004), "Sea and river travel in the Roman itinerary literature", in Talbert, Richard J A; Brodersen, Kai (eds.), Space in the Roman world : its perception and presentation, Antike Kultur und Geschichte, Bd. 5, Lit Verlag, ISBN978-3-8258-7419-3, OCLC54928851
Salway, Benet (2006), "Equestrian prefects and the award of senatorial honours from the Severans to Constantine", in Kolb, Anne (ed.), Herrschaftsstrukturen und Herrschaftspraxis : Konzepte, Prinzipien und Startegien der Administration im römischen Kaiserreich : Akten der Tagung an der Universität Zürich, 18.-20.10.2004, Akademie Verlag, pp. 111–135, ISBN3-05-004149-8, OCLC77548180
Salway, Benet (2007), "The perception and description of space in Roman itineraries", in M. Rathmann (ed.), Wahrnehmung und Erfassung geographischer Räume in der Antike (in German), von Zabern, pp. 181–209, ISBN978-3-8053-3749-6, OCLC163094706
University of London. Institute of Classical Studies; Salway, Benet (2007), "Constantine Augoustos not Sebastos", in Drinkwater, J.F.; Salway, Benet (eds.), Wolf Liebeschuetz reflected, Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, Supplement; 91, Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, pp. 37–50, OCLC223208528
^Jack, Malcolm (28 January 2010). "Cracking the codex: Long lost Roman legal document discovered". The Independent. These fragments are the first direct evidence of the original version of the Gregorian Code. Our preliminary study confirms that it was the pioneer of a long tradition that has extended down into the modern era and it is ultimately from the title of this work, and its companion volume the Codex Hermogenianus, that we use the term 'code' in the sense of 'legal rulings'.