[apologies for x-posting]
FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS
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LARP
Language models And RePresentations
September 8 - September 9, 2025, Gothenburg, Sweden
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https://gu-clasp.github.io/LARP/index.html
Invited speakers
----
Dan Roth, University of Pennsylvania and Oracle
Vaishak Belle, University of Edinburgh
Moa Johansson, Chalmers University of Technology
Important dates
----
- Submission deadline (archival): UPDATED! May 5, 2025
- Notification of acceptance (archival): June 20, 2025
- NEW!!! Commitment deadline for pre-reviewed ACL ARR submissions: July 31, 2025
- Submission deadline (non-archival): August 1, 2025
- Notification of acceptance (non-archival): August 8, 2025
- Camera ready (archival): August 8, 2025
- Camera ready (ARR Commitments): August 15, 2025
- Registration deadline: TBA
- Conference: September 8–9, 2025, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Language models And RePresentations (LARP) brings together researchers that explore how information is structured, encoded and used in computational language systems. We encourage submissions on both neural (sub-symbolic) and discrete (symbolic) representations from the fields of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence or their intersection.
The conference is organised by the Centre for Linguistic Theory and Studies in Probability (CLASP, https://gu-clasp.github.io/), University of Gothenburg. The conference will be held between September 8 and 9 in Gothenburg, Sweden (on-site and hybrid).
Topics of interest
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We hope to see innovative work that considers neural and symbolic learning and processing in terms of different modelling perspectives. Papers are invited on the following topics as they relate to natural language:
- Neuro-symbolic integration: novel hybrid frameworks combining symbolic representations with neural network learning for enhanced reasoning and natural language processing
- Explainable machine learning: techniques that allow for better interpretability, transparency, and explainability of neural, symbolic and neuro-symbolic architectures
- Logical constraints in neural networks: methods that use logical structures (e.g., knowledge bases, ontologies) for post-hoc or inherent explainability
- Automated reasoning systems providing human-interpretable rationales for decisions
- Symbolic planning and control in neural workflows
- Application-driven scenarios (robots, autonomous systems) showcasing benefits of symbolic approaches
- Techniques that integrate symbolic representations into text or multimodal generation
- Approaches that enforce domain knowledge, consistency, or adherence to constraints in text and/or multimodal generation
- Fine-tuning and in-context learning strategies that incorporate logical or rule-based knowledge
This list is illustrative but is not intended to be exhaustive.
Submission Requirements
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**Archival track**
Archival track will feature the following types of submissions to appear in conference proceedings: we accept long papers (max 8 pages) and short papers (max 4 pages). Long and short papers must describe substantial, original, and unpublished research. Supplementary materials, appendices, a section on limitations and ethical concerns do not count towards the page limit. Archival accepted papers will be published in the 2025 ACL Anthology as a CLASP Conference Proceedings. Papers should be electronically submitted via the OpenReview system at https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/Conference. Submissions should be .pdf files and use the LaTeX or Word templates provided for ACL submissions (https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). Archival submissions must be anonymous. Please make sure that you select the right track when submitting your paper. Contact the organisers if you have questions.
**NEW!!! ARR Commitment**
We accept papers that have been pre-reviewed via ACL Rolling Review<https://aclrollingreview.org/>. You are welcome to submit the link to your ARR submission. The linked submission must include both the reviews and the meta-review. Both the submission and its reviews will be evaluated by the programme committee for their relevance to the conference topic. To submit, please visit https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/ARR_Commitment.
**Non-archival track**
At the time of submission, authors may indicate that their paper should be considered for the non-archival track. The format for non-archival submissions is the same for both long and short papers as it is for the archival submissions. Non-archival papers will not undergo the peer review process. They will be evaluated by the programme committee for clarity and content relevance before the decision by the PC is made. Non-archival papers do not need to be anonymous. If accepted, they are to be published on the conference website and presented as posters.
**Poster abstracts**
We invite researchers to submit abstracts in the above areas of interest. Abstract submissions are non-archival. This is a great opportunity to get feedback on work in progress or to present previously published work to a new audience. The deadline for abstract submission is the same as for non-archival papers. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by August 8, 2025. Abstract submissions should be .pdf files and use the LaTeX or Word templates provided for ACL submissions (https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). Abstracts should not exceed 2 pages (supplementary materials, appendices, a section on limitations and ethical concerns are not included) and be submitted via OpenReview system at https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/Conference. The acceptance decision on abstracts will go through the same procedure as papers for the non-archival track. Accepted abstracts will be presented as posters.
Concurrent Submissions
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Papers that have been or will be submitted to other conferences or publications must indicate this at submission time using a footnote on the title page of the submissions. We will not accept publications or presentation papers that overlap significantly in content or results with papers that will be (or have been) published elsewhere.
Authors of papers accepted for presentation at LARP must notify the program chairs by the camera-ready deadline as to whether the paper will be presented. All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the Proceedings.
Camera Ready Versions
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Camera ready versions must be deanonymised. Archival submissions get 1 more page to address comments from reviewers: long papers can be maximum up to 9 pages, short papers can be maximum up to 5 pages.
Organisers
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LARP is organised by the Centre for Linguistic Theory and Studies in Probability (CLASP, https://gu-clasp.github.io/) at the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science (FLoV), University of Gothenburg. CLASP focuses its research on the application of probabilistic and information theoretic methods to the analysis of natural language. CLASP is concerned both with understanding the cognitive foundations of language and developing efficient language technology. We work at the interface of computational linguistics/natural language processing, theoretical linguistics, and cognitive science.
For practical inquiries, send an email to larp2025(a)flov.gu.se<mailto:larp2025@flov.gu.se>.
*Extended submission deadline: 25 May 2025*
RANLP 2025
RECENT ADVANCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
Hotel “Cherno More” Varna, Bulgaria
https://ranlp.org/ranlp2025/
Summer School on Deep Learning and LLMs for NLP: 3-5 September 2025 (Wednesday-Friday)
Tutorials: 6-7 September 2025 (Saturday-Sunday)
Main Conference: 8-10 September 2025 (Monday-Wednesday)
Workshops and shared tasks: 11-13 September 2025 (Thursday-Saturday)
We are pleased to announce that the 15th biennial RANLP conference will take place in September 2025 at the Black Sea city of Varna. In addition to the conference programme of competitively peer-reviewed papers reporting on the recent advances of a wide range of Natural Language Processing (NLP) topics, the conference features keynote talks by leading experts in NLP. Poster and demo sessions will be held at the conference exhibition area. The conference will be preceded by three days of summer school on Deep Learning and LLMs for NLP (3-5 September 2025) and two days of tutorials (6-7 September 2025). Post-conference specialised workshops as well as shared tasks covering timely NLP topics will be held on 11, 12 and 13 September 2025. A Student Research Workshop will run in parallel to the main conference. The Student Research Workshops (now the 9th edition) have become active discussion fora for young researchers.
As from RANLP 2009, the papers accepted at RANLP and the associated workshops are included in the ACL Anthology. The RANLP proceedings are indexed by SCOPUS and DBLP. The SCOPUS SJR of RANLP proceedings is 0,299 (2023). After 2017, all accepted papers have DOI numbers.
CHAIR OF THE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Ruslan Mitkov (Lancaster University, UK and University of Alicante, Spain)
CHAIR OF THE ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Galia Angelova (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria)
The Programme Committee members are distinguished NLP experts from all over the world. The list of PC members will be announced on the conference website in due course.
INVITED SPEAKERS
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS at the RANLP 2025 conference (in alphabetical order):
* Eneko Agirre (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
* Roberto Navigli (Sapienza University of Rome, Italy)
* Anna Rogers (IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Further keynote speakers will be announced soon.
TUTORIAL LECTURERS (in alphabetical order):
* Ekaterina Artemova (Toloka.AI, Germany)
* Burcu Can Buglalilar (University of Sterling, UK)
* Tharindu Ranasinghe and Damith Premasiri (Lancaster University, UK)
* Anna Rogers and Max Müller-Eberstein (IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
SUMMER SCHOOL LECTURERS and TEACHING ASISTANTS
(in alphabetical order):
* Maram Alharbi (Lancaster University, UK)
* Ekaterina Artemova (Toloka.AI, Germany)
* Isuri Nanomi Arachchige (Lancaster University, UK)
* Burcu Can Buglalilar (University of Sterling, UK)
* Salmane Chafik (Mohammed VI Polytechnic University, Morocco)
* Ernesto Luis Estevanell (University of Alicante, Spain)
* Hansi Hettiarachchi (Lancaster University, UK)
* Alexander Mikheev (Daxtra Technologies, UK)
* Andrei Mikheev (Daxtra Technologies, UK)
* Damith Dola Mullage (Lancaster University, UK)
* Max Müller-Eberstein (IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
* Tharindu Ranasinghe (Lancaster University, UK)
The 3rd RANLP SUMMER SCHOOL ON DEEP LEARNING and LARGE LANGUAGE MODELS for NLP will take place on 3-5 September 2025. The programme integrates 3 days of intensive lecturing in the morning and practical sessions in the afternoon. The following topics will be covered: NLP/DL Foundation, LLM Foundation and LLM Applications. More details will be published at https://ranlp2025-summer-school.github.io/
RANLP TUTORIALS 6-7 September 2025
RANLP-25 plans 4 half-day tutorials, each with duration of 185 minutes, distributed as follows: 45 min presentation + 20 min break + 45 min presentation + 30 min coffee break + 45 min presentation. The tutorial titles are:
* Ekaterina Artemova: LLM-generated text detection
* Burcu Can Buglalilar: From Large to Small: Building Affordable Language Models with Limited Resources
* Tharindu Ranasinghe and Damith Premasiri: Legal NLP in the LLM era
* Anna Rogers and Max Müller-Eberstein: Studying Generalization in the Age of Contamination
Further information will be published at https://ranlp.org/ranlp2025/index.php/tutorials
POST-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS and SHARED TASKS, 11-13 September 2025:
The following eight WORKSHOPS have been accepted and Calls for Papers have been distributed:
* The first Interdisciplinary Workshop on Observations of Misunderstood, Misguided and Malicious Use of Language Models (OMMM 2025), organised by Piotr Przybyła, Matthew Shardlow, Clara Colombatto and Nanna Inie
* The first Workshop on Ethical Concerns in Training, Evaluating and Deploying Large Language Models (EthicalLLMs 2025), organised by Damith Premasiri, Tharindu Ranasinghe and Hansi Hettiarachchi
* The first Workshop on Natural Language Processing and Language Models for Digital Humanities (LM4DH 2025), organised by Isuri Nanomi Arachchige, Francesca Frontini, Ruslan Mitkov and Paul Rayson
* From Rules to Language Models: Comparative Evaluation of NLP Methods (R2LM 2025), organised by Alicia Picazo-Izquierdo, Ernesto Luis Estevanell-Valladares, Ruslan Mitkov and Raúl García Cerdá
* Advancing NLP for Low-Resource Languages (LowResNLP 2025), organised by Ernesto Luis Estevanell-Valladares, Alicia Picazo-Izquierdo, Tharindu Ranasinghe, Besik Mikaberidze, Simon Ostermann, Daniil Gurgurov, Philipp Müller, Kurt Micallef, Claudia Borg, Michal Gregor and Marián Šimko
* The 8th Workshop on Challenges and Applications of Automated Extraction of Socio-political Events from Text (CASE 2025), organised by Ali Hürriyetoglu, Hristo Tanev, Surendrabikram Thapa, Vanni Zavarella and Erdem Yörük
* The First International Workshop on Gaze Data and Natural Language Processing (Gaze4NLP 2025), organised by Cengiz Acartürk, Jamal Nasir, Çağrı Çöltekin and Burcu Can Buğlalılar
* Beyond English: Natural Language Processing for all Languages in an Era of Large Language Models (GlobalNLP 2025), organised by Sudhansu Bala Das, Pruthwik Mishra, Alok Singh, Shamsuddeen Hassan Muhammad and Asif Ekbal
The following five SHARED TASKS have been accepted and Calls for Participation have been disseminated:
* PolyHope-M: Bridging Hope Speech Detection Across Multiple Languages, organised by Fazlourrahman Balouchzahi, Sabur Butt, Maaz Amjad, Luis Jose Gonzalez-Gomez, Abdul Gafar Manuel Meque, Helena Gomez-Adorno, Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi, Grigori Sidorov, Thomas Mandl, Ruba Priyadharshini and Saranya Rajiakodi
Task website - https://www.codabench.org/competitions/5635/
* Multilingual Coreference Resolution, organised by Vijay Sundar Ram, Pattabhi RK Rao and Sobha Lalitha Devi
Task website - https://www.codabench.org/competitions/5759/
* Sentiment Analysis on Arabic Dialects in the Hospitality Domain: A Multi-Dialect Benchmark, organised by Maram I. Alharbi, Salmane Chafik, Ruslan Mitkov and Saad Ezzini
Task website - https://ahasis-42267.web.app/
* Multi-Domain Detection of AI-Generated Text (M-DAIGT), organised by Salima Lamsiyah, Saad Ezzini, Abdelkader El Mahdaouy, Hamza Alami, Abdessamad Benlahbib, Samir El Amrany, Salmane Chafik and Hicham Hammouchi
Task website - https://ezzini.github.io/M-DAIGT/
* Identification of the Severity of the Depression in Forum Posts, organised by Isuri Anuradha, Hasintha Hewawasam, Deshan Koshala Sumanathilaka, Ruslan Mitkov, Paul Rayson and Saad Ezzini
Task website - https://www.codabench.org/competitions/5894/
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS, POSTERS, DEMOS TO RANLP-2025
The submissions will be handled by the conference management software START. For further instructions, please follow the submission information at the conference website at https://ranlp.org/ranlp2025/. The reviewing process will be anonymous. Double submission is acceptable, but authors will be asked to declare it at the time of submission. Submissions will be reviewed by at least three members of the Programme Committee. Authors of accepted papers will receive guidelines regarding how to produce camera-ready versions of their papers for inclusion in the proceedings. All RANLP papers have DOI numbers assigned. The full conference proceedings will be uploaded on the ACL Anthology.
RANLP publishes Regular papers 8 pages (with 30 min oral presentation), Short papers 6 pages (with 20 min oral presentation), and Poster/Demo papers 4 pages (with presentation in a poster or demo session). Additional pages are allowed for references only.
RANLP-2025 aims to provide early notification of acceptance to authors and presenters who need visa to enter Bulgaria. We invite early submissions of authors’ names and paper abstracts, in order to plan quick reviewing. Access to the conference management software will be available as from 1 April 2025.
IMPORTANT DATES
Conference abstracts submission: 11 May 2025 (strongly recommended, to facilitate review planning)
Conference papers submission: 25 May 2025
Conference papers acceptance notification: 4 July 2025
Camera-ready versions of the conference papers: 31 July 2025
Workshop paper submission deadline (suggested): 6 July 2025
Workshop paper acceptance notification (suggested): 31 July 2025
Workshop paper camera-ready versions (suggested): 30 August 2025
Workshop camera-ready proceedings ready (suggested): 8 September 2025
RANLP Summer School on Deep Learning in NLP: 3-5 September 2025
RANLP tutorials: 6-7 September 2025 (Saturday-Sunday)
RANLP conference: 8-10 September 2025 (Monday-Wednesday)
RANLP workshops and Shared Tasks presentations: 11-13 September 2025 (Thursday-Saturday)
VENUE
RANLP 2025 will be held at the conference facilities of Hotel “Cherno More” (http://www.chernomorebg.com<http://www.chernomorebg.com/> ) in Varna, the largest city on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast. The event venue is centrally located at the entrance of the Sea Garden and offers excellent conference facilities.
The city is a major tourist destination with flights to/from the Varna International Airport. It is also known for its Archaeological Museum, which features the oldest gold treasure in the world (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varna_Necropolis). The conference organisers will arrange a visit to Provadia-Solnitsata, the oldest salt-production and urban centre in Europe (5600 - 4350 BC, https://provadia-solnitsata.com/en/ ) which is located 50 km from Varna.
THE TEAM BEHIND RANLP-25
Galia Angelova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Chair Organising Committee)
Ruslan Mitkov, University of Lancaster, UK and University of Alicante, Spain (Chair Programme Committee)
Nikolai Nikolov, Bulgarian Association for Computational Linguistics, Bulgaria
Tharindu Ranasinghe, Lancaster University, UK (Workshops Chair and Shared tasks Co-Chair)
Saad Ezzini, KFUPM, Saudi Arabia (Sponsorship Chair and Shared tasks Co-Chair)
Maria Kunilovskaya, Saarland University, Germany (Publication Chair)
Preslav Nakov, MBZUAI, Abu Dhabi, UAE
Ivelina Nikolova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Kiril Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Workshops Co-Chair)
Petya Osenova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Workshops Co-Chair)
Best Regards
Tharindu Ranasinghe
First call for papers Sixth Workshop on Resources for African
Indigenous Language (RAIL)
Co-located with DHASA 2025
https://sadilar.org/rail-2025/
RAIL Workshop date: 10 November 2025
DHASA Conference dates: 10-14 November 2025
Venue: CSIR International Convention Centre.
The sixth RAIL workshop website: https://sadilar.org/rail-2025/
DHASA website: https://digitalhumanities.org.za/
The sixth Resources for African Indigenous Languages (RAIL) workshop
will be co-located with the Digital Humanities Association of Southern
Africa (DHASA) 2025 conference at the CSIR International Convention
Centre in Pretoria, South Africa, on 10 November 2025. The RAIL
workshop is an interdisciplinary platform for researchers working on
African indigenous languages resources such as natural languages
processing (NLP) tools, Human Language Technologies (HLT), data
collections, and annotations. This workshop aims to foster a
scientific community of practice that focuses on computational
linguistic tools and data that are designed for or applied to the
indigenous languages of Africa.
Many African languages are under-resourced while only a few are
considered to be somewhat better resourced. These languages often share
interesting properties such as writing systems, making them different
from most high-resourced languages. From a computational perspective,
these languages lack enough corpora to undertake high level development
of NLP and HLT tools, which in turn impedes the development of African
languages in these areas. During previous workshops, it was noted that
the problems and solutions presented were not only applicable to
African languages but were also relevant to many other low-resource
languages across the world. Because these languages share similar
challenges, this workshop provides researchers with opportunities to
work collaboratively on issues of language resource development and
learn from each other.
The RAIL workshop has several aims. First, the workshop brings together
researchers who work on African indigenous languages, forming a
community of practice for people working on indigenous languages.
Second, the workshop aims to reveal currently unknown or unpublished
existing resources (corpora, NLP tools, and applications), resulting in
a better overview of the current state-of-the-art, and also allows for
discussions on novel, desired resources for future research in this
area. Third, it enhances sharing of knowledge on the development of
low-resource languages. Finally, it enables discussions on how to
improve the quality as well as availability of the resources.
The workshop has “Language resources in the age of large language
models” as its theme, but submissions on any topic related to
properties of African indigenous languages (including related non-
African languages) may be accepted. Suggested topics include (but are
not limited to) the following:
* Digital representations of linguistic structures
* Descriptions of corpora or other data sets of African indigenous
languages
* Building resources for (under-resourced) African indigenous languages
* Developing and using African indigenous languages in the digital age
* Effectiveness of digital technologies for the development of African
indigenous languages
* Revealing unknown or unpublished existing resources for African
indigenous languages
* Developing desired resources for African indigenous languages
* Improving quality, availability and accessibility of African
indigenous language resources
Submission requirements:
We invite papers on original, unpublished work related to the topics of
the workshop. Submissions, presenting completed work, may consist of up
to eight (8) pages of content plus additional pages of references. The
final camera-ready version of accepted long papers are allowed one
additional page of content (up to 9 pages) so that reviewers’ feedback
can be incorporated. Papers should be formatted according to the DHASA
style sheet which is provided on the Journal of the Digital Humanities
Association of Southern Africa website
(https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/about). Reviewing is
double-blind, so make sure to anonymise your submission (e.g., do not
provide author names, affiliations, project names, etc.) Limit the
amount of self citations (anonymised citations should not be used). The
RAIL workshop follows the DHASA submission requirements.
Please submit papers in PDF format (the submission link will be
available soon). Accepted papers will be published in proceedings
linked to the DHASA conference.
Important dates:
Submission deadline: 14 July 2025
Date of notification: 16 September 2025
Camera ready copy deadline: 24 October 2025
Workshop: 10 November 2025
DHASA conference: 10 November 2025-14 November 2025
Organising Committee
Rooweither Mabuya, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
(SADiLaR), South Africa
Muzi Matfunjwa, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
(SADiLaR), South Africa
Mmasibidi Setaka, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
(SADiLaR), South Africa
Menno van Zaanen, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
(SADiLaR), South Africa
--
Prof Menno van Zaanen menno.vanzaanen(a)nwu.ac.za
Professor in Digital Humanities
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
https://www.sadilar.org
________________________________
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*CALL FOR PAPERS: Language Resources and Evaluation Journal- Special Issue
on Machine Translation for Low-Resource Languages*
https://link.springer.com/collections/gbdgacbgbg
*Guest Editors:*
- Atul Kr. Ojha (Insight Research Ireland Centre for Data Analytics,
DSI, University of Galway, Ireland)
- Chao-Hong Liu (Industrial Technology Research Institute, Potamu
Research Ltd.)
- Ekaterina Vylomova (University of Melbourne, Australia)
- Flammie Pirinen (UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø)
- Jonathan Washington (Swarthmore College, USA)
- Nathaniel Oco (De La Salle University, Philippines)
- Xiaobing Zhao (Minzu University of China)
Machine translation (MT) technologies have been improved significantly in
the last decade using neural MT (NMT) approaches. However, most of these
methods rely on the availability of large parallel data for training the MT
systems, resources which are not available for the majority of language
pairs. Hence, current technologies often fall short in their ability to be
applied to low-resource languages. Developing MT technologies using
relatively small corpora still presents a major challenge for the MT
community. In addition, many methods for developing MT systems still rely
on several natural language processing (NLP) tools to pre-process texts in
source languages and post-process MT outputs in target languages. The
performance of these tools often has a great impact on the quality of the
resulting translation. The availability of MT technologies and NLP tools
can facilitate equal access to information for the speakers of a language
and determine on which side of the digital divide they will end up. The
lack of these technologies for many of the world's languages provides
opportunities both for the field to grow and for making tools available for
speakers of low-resource languages.
In the past few years, several workshops and evaluations have been
organized to promote research on low-resource languages. NIST has been
conducting Low Resource Human Language Technology evaluations (LoReHLT)
annually from 2016 to 2019. In LoReHLT evaluations, there is no training
data in the evaluation language. Participants receive training data in
related languages but need to bootstrap systems in the surprise evaluation
language at the start of the evaluation. Methods for this include pivoting
approaches and taking advantage of linguistic universals. The evaluations
are supported by DARPA's Low Resource Languages for Emergent Incidents
(LORELEI) program, which seeks to advance technologies that are less
dependent on large data resources and that can be quickly pivoted to new
languages within a very short amount of time so that information from any
language can be extracted in a timely manner to provide situation awareness
to emergent incidents. There are also the Workshop on Technologies for MT
of Low-Resource Languages (LoResMT), Special Interest Group on
Under-resourced Languages (SIGUL), Workshop on Resources and Technologies
for Indigenous, Endangered and Lesser-resourced Languages in Eurasia
(EURALI), the Workshop on Deep Learning Approaches for Low-Resource Natural
Language Processing (DeepLo). AfricaNLP, TurkLang, Conference on Machine
Translation (WMT), and International Conference on Spoken Language
Translation (IWSLT) workshop, which provide a venue for sharing research
and working on research and development in this field.
This topical collection solicits original research papers on MT
systems/methods and related NLP tools for low-resource languages in
general. LoReHLT, LORELEI, LoResMT, SIGUL, EURALI, DeepLo, WMT, and IWSLT
participants are very welcome to submit their work to the special issue.
Summary papers on MT research for specific low-resource languages, as well
as extended versions (>40% difference) of published papers from relevant
conferences/workshops, are also welcome.
Topics of the special issue include, but are not limited to:
* Research and review papers on MT systems/methods for low-resource
languages
* Research and review papers on pre-processing and/or post-processing NLP
tools for MT
* Word tokenizers/de-tokenizers for low-resource languages
* Word/morpheme segmenters for low-resource languages
* Use of morphological analyzers and/or morpheme segmenters in MT
* Multilingual/cross-lingual NLP tools for MT
* Review of available corpora of low-resource languages for MT
* Pivot MT for low-resource languages
* Zero-shot MT for low-resource languages
* Fast building of MT systems for low-resource languages
* Re-usability of existing MT systems and/or NLP tools for low-resource
languages
* Machine translation for language preservation
* Techniques that work across many languages and modalities
* Techniques that are less dependent on large data resources
* Use of language-universal resources
* Bootstrap-trained resources for the short development cycle
* Entity, relation- and event-extraction
* Sentiment detection in MT
* MT Summarisation
* Processing diverse languages, genres (news, social media, etc.) and
modalities (text, speech, video, etc.)
* Speech Translation for low-resource languages
* Multimodal MT for low-resource languages
* MT models using LLMs for low-resource languages
* Generative AI models for low-resource languages
* Evaluation metrics and datasets for low-resource languages
For further information on this initiative, please refer to
https://link.springer.com/collections/gbdgacbgbg
*IMPORTANT DATES*
May 26, 2025: Expression of interest (EOI) via this form:
https://forms.gle/QqeqxZgGfsxP6rZ77
August 26, 2025: Paper submission deadline
December 05, 2025: Revised papers due
March 2026: Publication
* SUBMISSION GUIDELINES*
Authors should follow the "Instructions for Authors
<https://link.springer.com/journal/10579/submission-guidelines> (
https://link.springer.com/journal/10579/submission-guidelines)" on the LRE
journal website <https://link.springer.com/journal/10579>.
Thanks,
Atul
First call for papers DHASA Conference 2025
https://dh2025.digitalhumanities.org.za
Theme: The role of humanities in digital humanities and artificial
intelligence
The Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa (DHASA) is
pleased to announce its fifth conference, focusing on the theme The
role of humanities in digital humanities and artificial intelligence.
In a region where the field of Digital Humanities is still relatively
underdeveloped, this conference aims to address this gap and foster
growth and collaboration in the field. The conference offers an
opportunity for researchers interested in showcasing their work in the
broad field of Digital Humanities to come together. By doing so, the
conference provides a comprehensive overview of the current state-of-
the-art in Digital Humanities, particularly within the Southern Africa
region. As such, we welcome submissions related to Digital Humanities
research conducted by individuals from Southern Africa or research
focused on the geographical area of Southern Africa in the broad sense.
Furthermore, the conference serves as a platform for information
sharing and networking among researchers passionate about Digital
Humanities. By bringing together experts working on Digital Humanities
in Southern Africa or with a focus on Southern Africa, we aim to
promote collaboration and facilitate further research in this dynamic
field. In addition to the main conference, affiliated workshops and
tutorials will be organised, providing researchers with valuable
insights into novel technologies and tools. These supplementary events
are designed for researchers interested in specific aspects of Digital
Humanities or seeking practical information to enter or advance their
knowledge in the field.
The DHASA conference welcomes interdisciplinary contributions from
researchers in various domains of Digital Humanities, including, but
not limited to, language, literature, visual art, performance and
theatre studies, media studies, music, history, sociology, psychology,
language technologies, library studies, philosophy, methodologies,
software and computation, AI, and more. Our goal is to cultivate an
inclusive scientific community of practice within Digital Humanities.
Suggested topics include the following:
* The role of AI in digital humanities, the role of Digital Humanities
in shaping AI, and the broader role of the humanities in both AI and DH
projects;
* Digital archives and the preservation of marginalised voices;
* Intersectionality and the digital humanities: exploring the
intersections of race, gender, sexuality, culture, and class in digital
research and activism;
* Activism and social change through digital media: how digital
humanities tools and methodologies can be used to promote inclusion;
* Engaging marginalised communities in the creation and use of digital
tools, resources, and AI;
* Exploring the role of digital humanities in decolonising knowledge
and promoting indigenous perspectives;
* The ethics of data collection and analysis in digital humanities and
AI research;
* The role of digital humanities and AI in promoting inclusive and
equitable pedagogy;
* Digital humanities and inclusion in the context of African and global
perspectives and international collaborations;
* Critical approaches to digital humanities and inclusion: examining
the limitations and possibilities of digital tools and methodologies in
promoting inclusion; and
* Collaborative digital humanities projects with non-profit
organisations, community groups, and cultural institutions;
* Development of digital and AI tools for supporting digital
humanities;
* Novel utilisation of digital and AI tools for performing digital
humanities research;
* The role of digital humanities in the classroom: reimagining literacy
and AI fluency
* Digital humanities data and project management;
* The role of librarians in the digital humanities project;
* Any other digital humanities-related topic that serves the Southern
African community.
Submission Guidelines
The DHASA conference 2025 asks for three types of submissions:
* Long papers: Authors may submit long papers with a maximum of 8
content pages and unlimited pages for references and appendices. The
final versions of accepted long papers will be granted an additional
page (leading to a total of up to 9 content pages) to incorporate
reviewers' comments. Long papers accepted for the conference will be
presented in 30-minute time slots (which includes 10 minutes for
questions).
* Short papers: Authors may submit short papers with a maximum of 5
content pages and unlimited pages for references and appendices. The
final versions of accepted short papers will be allowed an extra page
(leading to a total of up to 6 content pages) to accommodate reviewers'
comments. Short papers accepted for the conference will be presented in
15-minute time slots (which includes 5 minutes for questions).
* Executive summaries: Authors can submit an executive summary for work
in progress, limited to 1 page. Executive summaries accepted for the
conference will be presented as posters during a dedicated poster
presentation slot.
All accepted long and short paper submissions that are presented at the
conference will be published in the JDHASA journal, see
https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa. In addition, the executive
summaries for the poster presentations will be published in a book of
executive summaries before the conference.
We particularly encourage student submissions where the first author is
a student.
All submissions should adhere to the ACL style guide:
https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html
Submissions should be submitted in PDF format. Submissions that do not
adhere to the prescribed style guide will be rejected.
Follow this link to go to the submission platform:
https://dh2025.digitalhumanities.org.za/submission/
Authors are encouraged to upload their datasets to the SADiLaR
repository: https://repo.sadilar.org/. In case of difficulties
uploading the datasets, please reach out to Benito Trollip
(benito.trollip(a)nwu.ac.za).
Important dates
Submission deadline: 14 July 2025
Date of notification: 16 September 2025
Camera-ready copy deadline: 24 October 2025
Conference: 10 November 2025 – 14 November 2025
Conference venue: CSIR ICC, Pretoria, South Africa
Co-located events
Several co-located events are currently being prepared, including
workshops and tutorials. These will be updated on the conference
website.
Organising Committee
Aby Louw, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Andiswa Bukula, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
Avi Moodley, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Franco Mak, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Franziska Pannach, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Ilana Wilken, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Johannes Sibeko, Nelson Mandela University
Juan Steyn, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
Laurette Marais, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Marissa Griesel, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
Menno van Zaanen, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
Privolin Naidoo, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Sthembiso Mkhwanazi, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
--
Prof Menno van Zaanen menno.vanzaanen(a)nwu.ac.za
Professor in Digital Humanities
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
https://www.sadilar.org
________________________________
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________________________________
Journal Natural Language Processing
(formerly Journal of Natural Language Engineering)
*** Second Call for Special Issue Proposals ***
In recent years the area of Natural Language Processing (NLP) has enjoyed unprecedented developments since the emergence of Deep Learning and, lately, Large Language Models. At the same time, NLP is following the trend of many other areas in becoming highly specialised, with a number of application-orientated and narrow-domain topics emerging or growing in importance. These developments, often coinciding with a lack of related literature, necessitate and warrant the publication of specialised volumes focusing on a specific topic of interest to the NLP research community.
The Journal Natural Language Processing (formerly Journal of Natural Language Engineering), which features six 160-page issues per year and has had its impact factor increase yearly, invites proposals for special issues on a competitive basis covering any topics in applied NLP which have emerged as important recent developments and have attracted the attention of a number of researchers. The Journal Calls for Proposals for special issues have resulted in high-quality outputs and this year we look forward to another successful competition.
Proposals on topics covering a variety of methods, tasks, resources and applications from Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, Speech and Language Processing, Text Analytics and related areas are eligible. Special issues on timely NLP topics such as latest language models including Large Language Models/Generative AI, are welcome.
Special issue proposals may be based on a successful workshop or a body of work associated with a particular group or section of the community. In the case of papers previously submitted to workshops, the Guest Editors will not be able to re-use previous workshop reviews. In addition, the call for papers of the accepted proposals must be open to all interested parties and all authors will be given equal treatment; in the case of proposals based on previous workshops, submissions cannot be limited to workshop participants only. Prospective proposers are also encouraged to consult the successful Journal columns "Industry Watch" and "Emerging Trends" for additional inspiration.
Interested parties have the option of preliminary feedback by emailing expressions of interest accompanied by a brief description of the intended special issue to the Executive Editor (Ruslan.Mitkov(a)ua.es). He will give a brief indication of whether the topic is appropriate to the Journal. In the case of initial positive feedback, the prospective Guest Editors will be asked to submit a proposal for a special issue that will be reviewed by the Editors of the Journal and by other members of the Journal Editorial Board.
The proposal for a special issue should include a brief outline of the field and rationale as to why it is important to launch a special issue on the particular topic of interest at the current time. It should include a relevant literature survey (related previous special issues, volumes, workshop and conference proceedings) and should explain the added value of the proposed special issue against the background of other relevant or competing publications and volumes (if applicable). It is desirable that evidence for the estimate of expected submissions to the special issue be provided and justified. The proposals should also include a tentative Guest Editorial Board. It is desirable that at least one (preferably two) of the members of the Guest Editorial Board is on the Editorial Board of the Journal Natural Language Processing. The proposal should also include a tentative time-scale for the production of the special issue (the time-scale committed to in the proposal should be adhered to, if the proposal is accepted), and information about the prospective Guest Editors such as relevant experience, publications etc.
Time-scale
- Deadline for submission of special issue proposals:
28 April 2025 (proposals to be emailed to Ruslan.Mitkov(a)ua.es with a copy to NLP(a)cambridge.org)
- Notification of acceptance/rejection:
19 May 2025
- Calls for papers related to the successful proposals (at least 2 calls are recommended):
7 June 2025 first call
July-September 2025 second (and third call, if applicable)
Once the special issue is approved and launched, Guest Editors are expected to adhere to the same reviewing and acceptance standards as regular issues of the Journal. In particular, each submission needs to be reviewed by three members of the Guest Editorial Board or other experts in the field. To ensure geographical diversity and balance, and to avoid over-reliance on the same reviewers, each submission must not be reviewed by three experts from the same country, and no single reviewer should evaluate more than two submissions. If the Executive Editor is not satisfied with the review process for a special issue paper, he may either reject the paper or send it for additional review. As a last resort, the Executive Editor has the discretion to reject the entire special issue if the reviewing practices are found to be flawed.
All special issues are required to include a survey of the field (at least 15 pages) as its first article, which can be written either by the Guest Editors or experts in the field commissioned by the Guest Editors. This is in addition to a 1-2 page preface by the Guest Editors.
Best Regards
Dr Tharindu Ranasinghe | Lecturer in Security and Protection Science
School of Computing and Communications | Lancaster University
Contact me on Teams<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/chat/0/0?users=t.ranasinghe@lancaster.ac.uk>
www.lancaster.ac.uk<https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/>
SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS
=======
LARP
Language models And RePresentations
September 8 - September 9, 2025, Gothenburg, Sweden
=======
https://gu-clasp.github.io/LARP/index.html
Invited speakers
----
Dan Roth, University of Pennsylvania and Oracle
Vaishak Belle, University of Edinburgh
Moa Johansson, Chalmers University of Technology
Important dates
----
- Submission deadline (archival): April 28, 2025
- Notification of acceptance (archival): June 20, 2025
- NEW!!! Commitment deadline for pre-reviewed ACL ARR submissions: July 31, 2025
- Submission deadline (non-archival): August 1, 2025
- Notification of acceptance (non-archival): August 8, 2025
- Camera ready (archival): August 8, 2025
- Camera ready (ARR Commitments): August 15, 2025
- Registration deadline: TBA
- Conference: September 8–9, 2025, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Language models And RePresentations (LARP) brings together researchers that explore how information is structured, encoded and used in computational language systems. We encourage submissions on both neural (sub-symbolic) and discrete (symbolic) representations from the fields of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence or their intersection.
The conference is organised by the Centre for Linguistic Theory and Studies in Probability (CLASP, https://gu-clasp.github.io/), University of Gothenburg. The conference will be held between September 8 and 9 in Gothenburg, Sweden (on-site and hybrid).
Topics of interest
----
We hope to see innovative work that considers neural and symbolic learning and processing in terms of different modelling perspectives. Papers are invited on the following topics as they relate to natural language:
- Neuro-symbolic integration: novel hybrid frameworks combining symbolic representations with neural network learning for enhanced reasoning and natural language processing
- Explainable machine learning: techniques that allow for better interpretability, transparency, and explainability of neural, symbolic and neuro-symbolic architectures
- Logical constraints in neural networks: methods that use logical structures (e.g., knowledge bases, ontologies) for post-hoc or inherent explainability
- Automated reasoning systems providing human-interpretable rationales for decisions
- Symbolic planning and control in neural workflows
- Application-driven scenarios (robots, autonomous systems) showcasing benefits of symbolic approaches
- Techniques that integrate symbolic representations into text or multimodal generation
- Approaches that enforce domain knowledge, consistency, or adherence to constraints in text and/or multimodal generation
- Fine-tuning and in-context learning strategies that incorporate logical or rule-based knowledge
This list is illustrative but is not intended to be exhaustive.
Submission Requirements
----
**Archival track**
Archival track will feature the following types of submissions to appear in conference proceedings: we accept long papers (max 8 pages) and short papers (max 4 pages). Long and short papers must describe substantial, original, and unpublished research. Supplementary materials, appendices, a section on limitations and ethical concerns do not count towards the page limit. Archival accepted papers will be published in the 2025 ACL Anthology as a CLASP Conference Proceedings. Papers should be electronically submitted via the OpenReview system at https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/Conference. Submissions should be .pdf files and use the LaTeX or Word templates provided for ACL submissions (https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). Archival submissions must be anonymous. Please make sure that you select the right track when submitting your paper. Contact the organisers if you have questions.
**NEW!!! ARR Commitment**
We accept papers that have been pre-reviewed via ACL Rolling Review<https://aclrollingreview.org/>. You are welcome to submit the link to your ARR submission. The linked submission must include both the reviews and the meta-review. Both the submission and its reviews will be evaluated by the programme committee for their relevance to the conference topic. To submit, please visit https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/ARR_Commitment.
**Non-archival track**
At the time of submission, authors may indicate that their paper should be considered for the non-archival track. The format for non-archival submissions is the same for both long and short papers as it is for the archival submissions. Non-archival papers will not undergo the peer review process. They will be evaluated by the programme committee for clarity and content relevance before the decision by the PC is made. Non-archival papers do not need to be anonymous. If accepted, they are to be published on the conference website and presented as posters.
**Poster abstracts**
We invite researchers to submit abstracts in the above areas of interest. Abstract submissions are non-archival. This is a great opportunity to get feedback on work in progress or to present previously published work to a new audience. The deadline for abstract submission is the same as for non-archival papers. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by August 8, 2025. Abstract submissions should be .pdf files and use the LaTeX or Word templates provided for ACL submissions (https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). Abstracts should not exceed 2 pages (supplementary materials, appendices, a section on limitations and ethical concerns are not included) and be submitted via OpenReview system at https://openreview.net/group?id=CLASP/LARP/2025/Conference. The acceptance decision on abstracts will go through the same procedure as papers for the non-archival track. Accepted abstracts will be presented as posters.
Concurrent Submissions
----
Papers that have been or will be submitted to other conferences or publications must indicate this at submission time using a footnote on the title page of the submissions. We will not accept publications or presentation papers that overlap significantly in content or results with papers that will be (or have been) published elsewhere.
Authors of papers accepted for presentation at LARP must notify the program chairs by the camera-ready deadline as to whether the paper will be presented. All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the Proceedings.
Camera Ready Versions
----
Camera ready versions must be deanonymised. Archival submissions get 1 more page to address comments from reviewers: long papers can be maximum up to 9 pages, short papers can be maximum up to 5 pages.
Organisers
----
LARP is organised by the Centre for Linguistic Theory and Studies in Probability (CLASP, https://gu-clasp.github.io/) at the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science (FLoV), University of Gothenburg. CLASP focuses its research on the application of probabilistic and information theoretic methods to the analysis of natural language. CLASP is concerned both with understanding the cognitive foundations of language and developing efficient language technology. We work at the interface of computational linguistics/natural language processing, theoretical linguistics, and cognitive science.
For practical inquiries, send an email to larp2025(a)flov.gu.se<mailto:larp2025@flov.gu.se>.
*
UniDive COST Action <https://unidive.lisn.upsaclay.fr/>is a scientific
network dedicated to universality, diversity and idiosyncrasy in
language technology. We are looking for trainers for our winter training
school in Yerevan
<https://unidive.lisn.upsaclay.fr/doku.php?id=meetings:other-events:2nd_unid…>,
Armenia, organized at the Yerevan State University on January 20-24,
2026.The training school is dedicated tolinguistic diversityand related
topics. We are interested in various aspects of diversity relevant to
NLP like lexical, syntactic, semantic, typological, cultural, genre
diversity, etc. We invite course proposals covering (but not necessarily
restricted to) the following:
*
Introduction to typology for newcomers (especially from NLP)
*
Diversity quantification in NLP
*
Diversity and Large Language Models (LLMs)
*
LLMs for low-resourced languages
*
Enhancing diversity in models and datasets
*
Using “universalist” resources (such as Universal Dependencies or
PARSEME corpora) for typological research
*
LLMs and language creativity vs. wooden language
Proposals of courses (4 pages max.) should be sent by Monday June 2,
2025 at the latest to Dan Zeman <zeman(a)ufal.mff.cuni.cz
<mailto:zeman@ufal.mff.cuni.cz>>, Verginica Mititelu <vergi(a)racai.ro
<mailto:vergi@racai.ro>> and Marie-Catherine de Marneffe
<marie-catherine.demarneffe(a)uclouvain.be
<mailto:marie-catherine.demarneffe@uclouvain.be>>, with the subject
“UniDive training school proposal”.
The proposals should include:
*
Title of the course
*
Abstract, including the topics to be covered
*
Level (introductory, intermediate or advanced course)
*
Draft schedule, with a brief description of each session (max. 5
sessions of up to 2h each – the training school goes over 5 days,
but courses do not have to be given every day, see the schedule of
our previous training school
<https://unidive.lisn.upsaclay.fr/doku.php?id=meetings:other-events:1st_unid…>)
*
Necessary infrastructure
*
Prerequisites for the trainees (bibliography to be covered, software
to be installed, accounts to be created, etc.)
*
Bibliography (highlighting the recommended readings for the trainees)
*
Instructors, their affiliation, contact details and experience
Important dates (anywhere on Earth):
*
Monday June 2, 2025: Submission of course proposals from potential
trainers
*
Thursday June 12, 2025: Notification
*
Wednesday November 26, 2025: Publishing the prerequisites for the
courses
*
Tuesday-Saturday January 20-24, 2026: Training school
We cannot offer a salary for the courses themselves but long-distance
travel costs of the trainers will be covered, as well as a daily
allowance of 185 EUR (to cover hotel, meals and local transportation –
see COST Annotated Rules
<https://www.cost.eu/uploads/2025/02/COST-094-21-V2.0-Annotated-Rules-for-CO…>,
Annex A1-3.1 TRAVEL REIMBURSEMENT RULES).
Marie-Catherine de Marneffe, Verginica Barbu Mititelu, Agata Savary, Dan
Zeman (on behalf of the UniDive Core Group)
*
Join the Computational Linguistics group at Uppsala University!
We are hiring an Assistant Professor (Tenure Track) in Computational Linguistics
Application deadline: April 29, 2025
Find out more and apply: https://uu.varbi.com/en/what:job/jobID:809532/
******************************
Description
The department is seeking an associate senior lecturer in computational linguistics. Computational linguistics, or language technology, is an interdisciplinary field dealing with computational models of natural language. Traditionally, research has been driven both by the theoretical goal of understanding human language and by practical applications such as machine translation, information retrieval, and human-computer dialogue. The area has in recent years increasingly been influenced by the emergence of large language models and generative AI. The computational linguistics group at Uppsala University conducts research within a broad field with two focus areas: digital philology and multilingual language technology. Education is primarily offered at the second-cycle level, within the international master’s program in language technology, and at the third-cycle level within the PhD program in computational linguistics.
Subject area
Computational linguistics
Duties
The aim of the position is to give the teacher the opportunity to develop independence as a researcher and enhance their academic as well as their pedagogical qualifications in order to meet the criteria for employment as senior lecturer. The duties comprise research within the relevant area of specialization (50% of full-time) as well as teaching and administration (no more than 50% of full-time). Teaching includes supervision, course responsibility, course administration, and course development.
Teaching primarily consists of courses in language technology, including master’s thesis supervision, within the international master’s program in language technology, which is taught in English. Teaching may include courses with the following specializations: general language technology, language technology applications such as information retrieval and machine translation, machine learning in language technology, as well as programming and mathematics. It may also include supervision of PhD students.
As an associate senior lecturer, the candidate is expected to actively apply for external research funding, to stay aware of developments within their field of specialization, and to take part in the faculty’s and department’s development of research and teaching.
Eligibility requirements
Applicants are eligible for employment as associate senior lecturer if they hold a doctoral degree or have the equivalent academic competence, have demonstrated pedagogical competence, and have the personal characteristics required in order to carry out the duties that the position involves well. Precedence will be given to applicants who completed their PhD projects or reached the equivalent competence no more than five years before the deadline for applications. In order to meet the requirement of pedagogical competence, the applicant should have completed at least five weeks of relevant training in tertiary-level teaching or acquired the equivalent competence in other ways. In special circumstances, the training can be carried out during the first two years of employment.
Ability to teach in English is required. The candidate is furthermore expected to be able to use Swedish as a working language within two years.
The candidate should have the personal characteristics required to carry out the duties of the position well. Such characteristics include flexibility, the capacity to work well with others, and a sense of responsibility.
It is a requirement that the applicant’s academic, pedagogical, and professional competence is relevant to the subject area and duties that the position involves.
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