[1][2] The BLC operates under the direction of a committee, with an executive consisting of a president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer.
A central aspect of the annual BLC Conference is a workshop for PhD students, and support for PhD students is a key criterion in the awarding of funding.
To represent the breadth of logic within the UK, the BLC always actively solicits participants from all of the above areas to offer an environment where members of the various logical communities can meet and exchange ideas.
Additionally, the BLC provides resources, to both members and non-members, relating to logic in all its forms,[5] and members of the BLC are entitled to reduced subscription rates to the journal History and Philosophy of Logic.
[6] The BLC grew out of informal meetings of logicians first arranged by Arthur Prior in the 1950s.