Workshop Presentation
Blockchain technology supports the execution and storage of transactions in a decentralized, transparent and immutable fashion. It is part of a broader set of technologies referred to as Distributed Ledger Technologies (DLTs). Cryptocurrencies represented the first major application of blockchain. Then, the development of smart contracts has provided the opportunity to manage other types of assets and to implement business logic running on blockchain platforms. Finally, the era of broader applications of blockchain technology beyond currencies, finance and markets has emerged. This evolution was coined Blockchain 1.0, Blockchain 2.0 and Blockchain 3.0 respectively.
The opportunities related to the evolution of blockchain technology, along with their challenges have generated a strong and continuously growing interest from industry and academia in the engineering of blockchain-based information systems, and more particularly, in the engineering of blockchain-based solutions for Business Process Management (BPM). Beside classical engineering questions, new and specific challenges arise for blockchain-based solutions for organizations and for BPM, to which conceptual modeling, databases, ontology engineering and information systems communities could provide relevant answers. In particular, the workshop focuses on the definition of requirements for, development, use, and evolution of blockchain-based solutions.
Topics of Interest
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Blockchain-Based Solutions for Organizations
Models, methods and tools for the design of blockchain-based solutions
Meta-models and ontologies for blockchain-based solutions
Challenges related to the design of blockchain-based solutions
Empirical material providing and assessing approaches to the design of blockchain-based solutions
Field experience providing details, benefits or challenges in the the design of blockchain-based solutions
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Blockchain-Enabled Business Processes (BEBPs)
Modeling
Implementation
Execution
Automation
Monitoring
Optimization
Innovation and re-engineering using Blockchain Technology
BEBPs for specific industries (e.g. Banking and Finance, Supply Chain, Retail, Government)
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Blockchain Network and Data Governance
Blockchain data management
Blockchain data provenance
Data security, privacy and trust in blockchain
Governance of blockchain-based networks
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Blockchain for Audit and Governance
Blockchain to support audit
Blockchain to support organizational governance
Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs)
Submission
The papers have to be submitted via EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=caise2023), choosing the present workshop as the track to which you submit the paper.
The different types of papers that can be accepted as well as the standards to follow for the format are the same as the ones of the main track of the conference. All the details are available on the conference website. As a further precision, among the different categories of papers that can be accepted, we can accept full papers (strictly limited to 15 pages, everything included), along with some short papers (strictly limited to 6 pages, everything included). Authors should consult Springer's authors' guidelines and use their proceedings template. Springer encourages authors to include their ORCIDs in their papers. In addition, the corresponding author of each paper, acting on behalf of all of the authors of that paper, must complete and sign a Consent-to-Publish form. The corresponding author signing the copyright form should match the corresponding author marked on the paper. Once the files have been sent to Springer, changes relating to the authorship of the papers cannot be made.
The proceedings of the conference workshops will be published as one volume in the Springer LNBIP series. Short papers will be placed in a designated section.
Important Dates
Dates are Anywhere on Earth (AoE)
Paper
Submission
- 14th of March 2023
Acceptance Notification
- 4th of April 2023
Camera-Ready Version
- Announced by CAiSE Chairs
Workshop Program
Joint Workshop Introduction - Victor Amaral de Sousa and Fadime Kaya
Blockchain for Information Systems (BC4IS) and Decentralized Governance Design (DGD)
PhD Presentation - Fadime Kaya
DECENT: a Domain Specific Language to Design Blockchain Governance - Chaired by Geert Poels
Break
Paper Presentation - Yulu Wang, Fadime Kaya and Jaap Gordijn
Decentralized Governance Design: A Conceptual Modeling Perspective - Chaired by Geert Poels
Paper Presentation - Lei Xu, Yuewei Zhang and Liehuang Zhu
Regulation-Friendly Privacy-Preserving Blockchain Based on zk-SNARK - Chaired by Victor Amaral de Sousa
Paper Presentation - Simona Ramos and Joshua Ellul
The MEV Saga: Can Regulation Illuminate the Dark Forest? - Chaired by Victor Amaral de Sousa
Workshop Wrap Up
Workshop Organization
Organizing Commitee
- Sarah Bouraga - University of Namur, Belgium
- Victor Amaral de Sousa - University of Namur, Belgium
- Corentin Burnay - University of Namur, Belgium
Steering Commitee
- Monique Snoeck - KU Leuven, Belgium
- Stéphane Faulkner - University of Namur, Belgium
- Wim Laurier - University of Saint-Louis - Brussels, Belgium
Program Commitee
- Monique Snoeck - KU Leuven, Belgium
- Pierluigi Plebani - Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy
- Ghareeb Falazi - University of Stuttgart, Germany
- Nicolas Herbaut - University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France
- Antoine Clarinval - University of Namur, Belgium
- Wim Laurier - University of Saint-Louis - Brussels, Belgium
- Michael Adams - Queensland University of Technology, Australia
- Jean-Noël Colin - University of Namur, Belgium
- Felix Härer - University of Fribourg, Switzerland
- Giovanni Meroni - Technical University of Denmark
- Christian Sturm - University of Bayreuth, Germany
- Anthony Simonofski - University of Namur, Belgium
- Georgios Palaiokrassas - Yale University, USA