Richard Bird Distinguished Dissertation Award

Hello fellow users of Rocq,

If you or your students have defended a PhD in 2025 on a topic related to functional programming, then you / they may apply for the (new) Richard Bird Distinguished Dissertation Award. Announcement copied below.

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CALL FOR NOMINATIONS

Richard Bird Distinguished Dissertation Award 2025

Deadline: 31st August 2026

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OVERVIEW

The Journal of Functional Programming is pleased to establish
the Richard Bird Distinguished Dissertation Award, to recognise
an outstanding PhD dissertation in functional programming.

Richard Bird (1943-2022) was one of the leading figures in
functional programming. He was a Professor in Oxford, where
he founded the Algebra of Programming group, and served as
Director of the Computing Laboratory. Richard is renowned
for his many books and pearls on functional programming,
which set a lasting standard for clear and elegant writing.
It seems fitting that an award be established in his name
to further encourage these values in the field.

The award includes a prize of £1,000. Funding for the prize
is supported by a generous donation from Richard himself to
further the cause of functional programming.

CRITERIA

Eligible dissertations must have been completed in 2025.
Depending on the institution, this may be the date of the viva,
corrections being approved, graduation ceremony, or otherwise.

The award is open to all topics within the remit of JFP, with
a particular emphasis on dissertations that reflect Richard’s
own values of clarity, simplicity and elegance. For a
dissertation to be considered for the award it should:

  • Reach a high standard of exposition;

  • Make a noteworthy contribution to the subject;

  • Place the results in the wider context of computer science.

NOMINATIONS

Please submit the following information to the award chair,
graham.hutton@nottingham.ac.uk, by 31st August 2026:

  • Two letters of support, explaining why the dissertation
    should be considered for the award. One letter should be
    from the advisor/supervisor, and one from an independent
    source with no conflict of interest with the candidate,
    such as an external examiner or other expert in the field.

  • A copy of the dissertation itself.

AWARD COMMITTEE

Graham Hutton (chair), University of Nottingham
Matthew Flatt, University of Utah
Jeremy Gibbons, University of Oxford
François Pottier, INRIA
Wouter Swierstra, University of Utrecht
Ningning Xie, University of Toronto

The JFP editors-in-chief serve as observers of the committee.

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