These pages provide information about recent developments at or relevant to the ILLC. Please let us know if you have material that you would like to be added to the news pages, by using the online submission form. For minor updates to existing entries you can also email the news administrators directly. English submissions strongly preferred.
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23 - 24 September 2024, Symposium On Dialogical Reason, Delft (the Netherlands)
This event is devoted to the relation between dialogue and rationality. The aim of the event is to bring together philosophers, artists, historians, logicians, social scientists and mathematicians to discuss this theme. There will be keynote lectures by Catarina Dutilh Novaes, Reza Negarestani, Ray Brassier and Mahault Albarracin.
We are looking for submissions on dialogue and rationality in dialogical logic (Lorenzen and Lorenz 1978), game-theoretical semantics (Hintikka and Sandu 1997), formal dialectics (Barth and Krabbe 1982), inferentialism (Brandom 1994), pragma-dialectics (van Eemeren & Grootendorst 2004), ludics (Girard 2001) and games in logic (van Benthem 2001).
21 July - 4 August 2024, Course "Logic as a Tool for Modelling", Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The course "Logic as a tool for modelling" is part of the VU Amsterdam's summer school. The aim of the course is to introduce participants to the study of various types of logic as a versatile tool for elegantly modelling diverse phenomena. The overarching theme in the handling of applications is the notion of categories and categorisation. The course starts by discussing classical logic, through both semantics and syntax, as well as applications in the social sciences, addressing agency, and information flow. Then it focuses on various theories of categorization from Aristotle's classical perspective to modern prototype and exemplar theory and introduces logical formalisms that encompass these various views. The last part delves into formal linguistics, where words are categorized based on their role in sentence formation.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
21 July - 4 August 2024, Course "Logic as a Tool for Modelling", Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The course "Logic as a tool for modelling" is part of the VU Amsterdam's summer school. The aim of the course is to introduce participants to the study of various types of logic as a versatile tool for elegantly modelling diverse phenomena. The overarching theme in the handling of applications is the notion of categories and categorisation. The course starts by discussing classical logic, through both semantics and syntax, as well as applications in the social sciences, addressing agency, and information flow. Then it focuses on various theories of categorization from Aristotle's classical perspective to modern prototype and exemplar theory and introduces logical formalisms that encompass these various views. The last part delves into formal linguistics, where words are categorized based on their role in sentence formation.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
21 July - 4 August 2024, Course "Logic as a Tool for Modelling", Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The course "Logic as a tool for modelling" is part of the VU Amsterdam's summer school. The aim of the course is to introduce participants to the study of various types of logic as a versatile tool for elegantly modelling diverse phenomena. The overarching theme in the handling of applications is the notion of categories and categorisation. The course starts by discussing classical logic, through both semantics and syntax, as well as applications in the social sciences, addressing agency, and information flow. Then it focuses on various theories of categorization from Aristotle's classical perspective to modern prototype and exemplar theory and introduces logical formalisms that encompass these various views. The last part delves into formal linguistics, where words are categorized based on their role in sentence formation.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
21 July - 4 August 2024, Course "Logic as a Tool for Modelling", Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The course "Logic as a tool for modelling" is part of the VU Amsterdam's summer school. The aim of the course is to introduce participants to the study of various types of logic as a versatile tool for elegantly modelling diverse phenomena. The overarching theme in the handling of applications is the notion of categories and categorisation. The course starts by discussing classical logic, through both semantics and syntax, as well as applications in the social sciences, addressing agency, and information flow. Then it focuses on various theories of categorization from Aristotle's classical perspective to modern prototype and exemplar theory and introduces logical formalisms that encompass these various views. The last part delves into formal linguistics, where words are categorized based on their role in sentence formation.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
29 July - 9 August 2024, ESSLLI 2024 Student Session, Leuven, Belgium
The Student Session of the 35th European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) will take place at ESSLLI 2024, on 29 July - 9 August 2024 in Leuven, Belgium. This is an excellent opportunity for students to receive valuable feedback from expert readers and to present their work to a diverse audience.
3 - 5 February 2025, Indian Conference on Logic and its Applications, Kolkata, India
The Indian Conference on Logic and its Applications (ICLA) is the primary conference of the Association for Logic in India (ALI). It is a forum for bringing together researchers from a variety of fields in which formal logic plays a significant and often foundational role: Mathematics, Computer Science, Philosophy, Linguistics and Cognitive Science. A special feature of ICLA is the inclusion of studies in systems of logic in the Indian tradition, as well as historical research on logic. Details of the previous ICLA 2023 can be found at https://icla2023.iiti.ac.in, and those of the earlier editions of the conference at the ALI website.
The upcoming ICLA 2025 is the 11th edition of the conference and will take place at the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI) Kolkata during February 3 -- 5, 2025.
All dates below are AoE (Anywhere on Earth).
- Deadline for abstract of submission: Aug 11, 2024
- Submission deadline: Aug 15, 2024
- Rebuttal period: Sep 23 -- Sep 28, 2024
- Notification to authors: 18 Oct, 2024
6 - 8 February 2025, 7th Asian Workshop on Philosophical Logic (AWPL 2025), Kolkata, India
The 7th Asian Workshop on Philosophical Logic will be held on 6-8 February 2025 at the Department of Philosophy, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India. The Asian Workshop on Philosophical Logic (AWPL) is a series of events initiated by a group of Asian logicians. Its first instalment took place at JAIST in Japan in 2012. The workshop's primary goal is to promote awareness, understanding, and collaboration among researchers in philosophical logic and related fields. It emphasises the interaction between philosophical ideas and formal theories. AWPL 2025 will happen just after ICLA 2025, which would be held at Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, India, during February 3-5, 2025. The Association for Logic in India (ALI) will be a co-organizer for this workshop.
Topics of interest include (but are not restricted to): Algebraic logic; Chinese logic; Constructive logic; Decision Theory; Formal epistemology; Game Theory; Greek logic; Indian logic; Inductive logic; Logics of belief change; Logics of conditionals; Modal, temporal, epistemic and deontic logics; Nonmonotonic logics; Relevance and other non-classical logics; Philosophy of language; Philosophy of mathematics; Philosophy of Science; Proof Systems, Quantum logic; Vagueness; as well as their applications in: Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science; Computer Science; Law; Linguistics; Mathematics; Social Sciences.
All submissions should present original works that have not been previously published. Submissions should be written in English and follow the LNCS template. Please prepare your submission as a PDF file with a maximum of 12 pages, including the reference list, appendixes, acknowledgements, etc. Submissions should be sent electronically via EasyChair by the corresponding author within the specified deadline. It is expected that at least one of the authors will attend the workshop and present the accepted work. After the workshop, selected submissions will be invited to revise and resubmit for the post-conference proceedings, which will be published in the "Logic in Asia" series.
Submission deadline: 15 September, 2024.
Notification of acceptance: 20 October, 2024.
Workshop dates: 6-8 February, 2025.
19 - 23 August 2024, 15th International Conference on Advances in Modal Logic (AiML 2024), Prague, Czech Republic
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting the state of the art in modal logic and its various applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences. AiML 2024 will be co-located with the 21st International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS 2024).
19 - 23 August 2024, Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS), Prague, Czechia
Since 1994, the RAMiCS conference series has been the main venue for theory surrounding relation algebra. Theoretical aspects include semigroups, residuated lattices, semirings, Kleene algebras, quantales and other algebras; their connections with program logics and other logics; their use in the theories of automata, concurrency, formal languages, games, networks and programming languages; the development of algebraic, algorithmic, category-theoretic, coalgebraic and proof-theoretic methods for these theories; their formalisation with theorem provers.
Applications include tools and techniques for program correctness, specification and verification; quantitative and qualitative models and semantics of computing systems and processes; algorithm design, automated reasoning, network protocol analysis, social choice, optimisation and control.
19 - 23 August 2024, 15th International Conference on Advances in Modal Logic (AiML 2024), Prague, Czech Republic
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting the state of the art in modal logic and its various applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences. AiML 2024 will be co-located with the 21st International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS 2024).
19 - 23 August 2024, Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS), Prague, Czechia
Since 1994, the RAMiCS conference series has been the main venue for theory surrounding relation algebra. Theoretical aspects include semigroups, residuated lattices, semirings, Kleene algebras, quantales and other algebras; their connections with program logics and other logics; their use in the theories of automata, concurrency, formal languages, games, networks and programming languages; the development of algebraic, algorithmic, category-theoretic, coalgebraic and proof-theoretic methods for these theories; their formalisation with theorem provers.
Applications include tools and techniques for program correctness, specification and verification; quantitative and qualitative models and semantics of computing systems and processes; algorithm design, automated reasoning, network protocol analysis, social choice, optimisation and control.
19 - 23 August 2024, 15th International Conference on Advances in Modal Logic (AiML 2024), Prague, Czech Republic
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting the state of the art in modal logic and its various applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences. AiML 2024 will be co-located with the 21st International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS 2024).
19 - 23 August 2024, Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS), Prague, Czechia
Since 1994, the RAMiCS conference series has been the main venue for theory surrounding relation algebra. Theoretical aspects include semigroups, residuated lattices, semirings, Kleene algebras, quantales and other algebras; their connections with program logics and other logics; their use in the theories of automata, concurrency, formal languages, games, networks and programming languages; the development of algebraic, algorithmic, category-theoretic, coalgebraic and proof-theoretic methods for these theories; their formalisation with theorem provers.
Applications include tools and techniques for program correctness, specification and verification; quantitative and qualitative models and semantics of computing systems and processes; algorithm design, automated reasoning, network protocol analysis, social choice, optimisation and control.
19 - 23 August 2024, 15th International Conference on Advances in Modal Logic (AiML 2024), Prague, Czech Republic
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting the state of the art in modal logic and its various applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences. AiML 2024 will be co-located with the 21st International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS 2024).
19 - 23 August 2024, Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS), Prague, Czechia
Since 1994, the RAMiCS conference series has been the main venue for theory surrounding relation algebra. Theoretical aspects include semigroups, residuated lattices, semirings, Kleene algebras, quantales and other algebras; their connections with program logics and other logics; their use in the theories of automata, concurrency, formal languages, games, networks and programming languages; the development of algebraic, algorithmic, category-theoretic, coalgebraic and proof-theoretic methods for these theories; their formalisation with theorem provers.
Applications include tools and techniques for program correctness, specification and verification; quantitative and qualitative models and semantics of computing systems and processes; algorithm design, automated reasoning, network protocol analysis, social choice, optimisation and control.
19 - 23 August 2024, 15th International Conference on Advances in Modal Logic (AiML 2024), Prague, Czech Republic
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting the state of the art in modal logic and its various applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences. AiML 2024 will be co-located with the 21st International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS 2024).
19 - 23 August 2024, Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science (RAMiCS), Prague, Czechia
Since 1994, the RAMiCS conference series has been the main venue for theory surrounding relation algebra. Theoretical aspects include semigroups, residuated lattices, semirings, Kleene algebras, quantales and other algebras; their connections with program logics and other logics; their use in the theories of automata, concurrency, formal languages, games, networks and programming languages; the development of algebraic, algorithmic, category-theoretic, coalgebraic and proof-theoretic methods for these theories; their formalisation with theorem provers.
Applications include tools and techniques for program correctness, specification and verification; quantitative and qualitative models and semantics of computing systems and processes; algorithm design, automated reasoning, network protocol analysis, social choice, optimisation and control.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
26 - 28 August 2024, Seventh Philosophy of Language and Mind Network Conference (PLM7), Prague
PLM is a European network of centers devoted to the Philosophy of Language and Mind. PLM was founded in 2010 and organizes international conferences, workshop and master classes taught by leading experts in the field.
5 November 2024, The International Workshop on Reconfigurable Transition Systems: Semantics, Logics and Applications
Reconfigurable Transition Systems (RTS) are dynamic relational structures (graphs) that evolve along its execution, in the sense that their accessibility relation, their set of nodes or their labelling change when their edges are crossed. These structures have proven to be suitable to compactly represent complex reactive and reconfigurable behaviours. Namely, the ability of reacting or readapting under the influence of certain events is a very distinctive feature of many diverse situations and objects. An autonomous vehicle that changes its route due to a new strike occurring, the behaviour of a software component after a memory disposal, or a DNA mutation as the result of a viral infection, are different examples that witness the importance of modelling about changes in a determined situation. Practical user cases have aroused the interest of the logic community in the study of variants of RTS, by developing formal methods to properly reason about such situations.
Full papers and short presentations are invited on original and unpublished research on various aspects of Formal Methods for Reconfigurable Systems. System Descriptions are both allowed as full papers or short presentations. You are requested to submit your research paper using Easy Chair.
Accepted Full Papers will be included in the workshop programme and will appear in the workshop pre-proceedings as well as in the LNCS volume. Short presentations will be included in the pre-proceedings. Pre-proceedings will be available online before the Workshop. Extended versions of selected contributions will be published in a special issue of the Journal of Applied Logics.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
26 - 28 August 2024, Seventh Philosophy of Language and Mind Network Conference (PLM7), Prague
PLM is a European network of centers devoted to the Philosophy of Language and Mind. PLM was founded in 2010 and organizes international conferences, workshop and master classes taught by leading experts in the field.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
26 - 28 August 2024, Seventh Philosophy of Language and Mind Network Conference (PLM7), Prague
PLM is a European network of centers devoted to the Philosophy of Language and Mind. PLM was founded in 2010 and organizes international conferences, workshop and master classes taught by leading experts in the field.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.
25 August - 1 September 2024, 14th International School on Rewriting (ISR 2024), Obergurgl, Austria
Term rewriting is a powerful model of computation that underlies much of declarative programming and which is heavily used in symbolic computation in mathematics, theorem proving, and protocol verification. The 14th International School on Rewriting takes place in Obergurgl, Austria. The School is aimed at master and PhD students, researchers and practitioners interested in the study of rewriting concepts and their applications.
It offers three parallel tracks, taught by well-known experts:
- Track A: comprehensive introduction to first-order term rewriting, lecturer: Aart Middeldorp
- Track B: comprehensive introduction to type theory and lambda calculus, lecturers: Herman Geuvers and Niels van der Weide
- Track C: advanced courses on - Interoperability of Proof Systems using Lambdapi lecturer: Frederic Blanqui - Randomized Programming and Rewriting lecturer: Ugo Dal Lago - Tools in Rewriting lecturer: Nao Hirokawa - Termination and Complexity in Higher-Order Term Rewriting lecturer: Cynthia Kop - SAT/SMT Solving and Applications in Rewriting lecturer: Sarah Winkler.