Aims and Scope
Across BPM, certain research topics, findings, or ideas quietly disappear: studies that failed, prototypes that didn’t work, promising directions reviewers discouraged, or questions no one seems to care about. Yet these elements often contain insights that never surface in published work.
The 1st International Workshop on Forgotten, Overlooked, and Rejected Topics in Business Process Management (FOR-BPM) provides a forum for ideas, studies, and perspectives in Business Process Management that, for various reasons, have not found their way into mainstream discourse. Contributions are often filtered out due to non-confirmed hypotheses, unconventional approaches, or shifting community interests. However, such "forgotten, overlooked, or rejected" work can be highly valuable, both as inspiration for new directions and as a reality check against overly selective research agendas.
Main goals
The workshop has five goals:
- Resurface neglected ideas and rejected-but-loved papers: Provide a space for topics, theories, or findings that have been overlooked but may have long-term value.
- Learn from negative or null results: Create a constructive environment where unsuccessful studies or non-confirmed hypotheses can be discussed, to learn and build from them.
- Reignite forgotten directions: Revisit past research that has fallen out of attention but deserves renewed exploration in light of current technological and societal shifts.
- Explore speculative research: Create a space for imaginative, forward-looking, and unconventional ideas that challenge current assumptions or inspire new trajectories.
- Share insightful results regardless of impact or trend: Allow space for results that provide interesting insights, regardless of their larger long-term impact or alignment with popular research directions.
Types of contributions
We invite contributions that revisit ideas, findings, or perspectives in Business Process Management that have been overlooked, rejected, or forgotten. This includes, among others:
- Papers describing studies with non-confirmed hypotheses or negative results.
- Revisits of topics once considered important but later neglected.
- Practitioner reports on ideas that were disregarded in academic discourse but proved valuable in practice.
- Vision papers re-framing old or rejected concepts in light of new technologies and contexts.
Submission guidelines
Submissions should follow the LNBIP format and should not exceed 12 pages, excluding appendices.
Authors are encouraged to include an optional brief history of the idea, either in the paper itself or in the appendix (for example: prior submissions, reviews, and reception). This contextual information will be used solely to evaluate topical fit and to foster constructive re-positioning within the community.
Open reviewing process
In alignment with the workshop theme, the review protocol is designed to surface perspectives that are often hidden.
Reviews will be openly shared among the contributing authors and the PC. This transparency encourages constructive commentary, mitigates bias against unconventional ideas, and helps identify promising directions that might be overlooked under standard closed review.
We expect this reflective format to be particularly beneficial to early-career researchers and to researchers proposing speculative or re-emergent ideas.
Workshop format
During the workshop, we will work collaboratively to bring these topics back into the spotlight and explore their potential for renewed impact.
Depending on the nature of each contribution and the total number of accepted submissions, we will form groups and collectively:
- Consider how to reposition ideas for greater acceptance within the community.
- Identify possible collaborators or mentors.
- Discuss avenues for further development, including funding possibilities and suitable publication outlets.
We will also reflect on the meta-practices that shape our field, including reviewing norms, publication bias, and hype cycles that influence what becomes visible and what quietly disappears.
Important dates
- Paper submission: June 5, 2026
- Notification to authors: July 3, 2026
- Camera-ready submission: July 31, 2026
- Workshop: September 28, 2026
All deadlines are set to 23:59 Anywhere on Earth (AoE), GMT+12.
Organizers
- Iris Beerepoot, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
- Manuel Resinas, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain
- Tijs Slaats, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Program committee
Coming soon