词条 | Moot court | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Moot court is an extracurricular activity at many law schools in which participants take part in simulated court or arbitration proceedings, usually involving drafting memorials or memoranda and participating in oral argument. In most countries, the phrase "moot court" may be shortened to simply "moot" or "mooting". Participants are either referred to as "mooters" or, less conventionally, "mooties". Moot court involves a simulated appellate court (appellate advocacy) or arbitral case, which is different from a mock trial that involves a simulated jury trial or bench trial (trial advocacy). Moot court does not involve actual testimony by witnesses, cross-examination, or the presentation of evidence, but is focused solely on the application of the law to a common set of evidentiary assumptions, facts, and clarifications/corrections to which the competitors are introduced.[1] Though not a moot in the traditional sense, alternative dispute resolution competitions focusing on mediation and negotiation have also branded themselves as moot competitions in recent times, as had role-playing competitions in the past. Moot court is one of the key extracurricular activities in many law schools (the others being law review and clinical work around the world). Depending on the competition, students may spend a semester researching and writing the written submissions or memorials, and another semester practicing their oral arguments, or may prepare both within the span of a few weeks. Whereas domestic moot court competitions tend to focus on municipal law such as criminal law or contract law, regional and international moot competitions tend to focus on subjects such as public international law, international human rights law, international humanitarian law, international criminal law, international trade law, international maritime law, international commercial arbitration, and foreign direct investment arbitration. Procedural issues pertaining to jurisdiction, standing, and choice of law are also occasionally engaged, especially in arbitration moots. In most moot court competitions, each side is represented by two speakers or oralists (though the entire team composition may be larger) and a third member, sometimes known as of counsel, may be seated with the speakers. Each speaker usually speaks between 10 and 25 minutes, covering one to three main issues. After the main submissions are completed, there will usually be a short round of rebuttal and even surrebuttal. Depending on the format of the moot, there may be one or two rounds of rebuttal and surrebuttal, and communications between speakers may or may not be prohibited. Throughout the course of the submissions, judges may ask questions, though in some competitions questions are reserved to the end of submissions. In larger competitions, teams have to participate in up to ten rounds; the knockout/elimination stages are usually preceded by a number of preliminary rounds to determine seeding (power seeding is often used). Teams almost always must switch sides (applicant/appellant/claimant on one side, and respondent on the other) throughout a competition, and, depending on the format of the moot, the moot problem usually remains the same throughout. The scores of the written submissions are taken into consideration for most competitions to determine qualification and seeding, and sometimes even up to a particular knockout stage. International moot court competitionsInternational moot competitions are generally targeted at students and only allow participants who have not qualified to practice law in any jurisdiction. However, there are a handful of international moot competitions that are targeted at young lawyers, such as the ECC-SAL Moot, which is a regional moot started in 2012 and is jointly organised by Essex Court Chambers and the Singapore Academy of Law. The first table below lists some of the more notable international moot competitions for students, the second table lists the champions and finalists for the major or grand slam competitions, while the third and final table lists the champions and finalists for the minors and regionals. Major or grand slam international moots typically refer to class-leading moots or those that attract a substantial number of teams, while smaller or less established and region-only competitions are known as minors and regionals respectively; "international" class moots are sandwiched between grand slams and minors and regionals in terms of scale and prestige.[2][3][4] Some countries also divide competitions into various tiers of prestige for the purpose of awarding points in league tables, with moots such as the Jessup and Vis competitions being considered as belonging to the highest tier.[4] List of notable competitions
List of champions and first runners-up for major or grand slam competitions
List of champions and first runners-up for internationals and minors/regionals
RecordsMost number of international championships in a season
Most number of international championship finals in a season
Most number of major or grand slam international championships in a season
Most number of major or grand slam international championship finals in a season
Teams that have successfully defended a major or grand slam international championship
Mooters with multiple international championshipsAt least two majors or grand slams
At least one major or grand slam
Minors or regionals only
Domestic moot court competitionsList of notable competitions
USAOperationLaw schools structure their moot court programs differently. Some moot court organizations accept a small group of people for membership, and those members each participate in a number of national or regional moot court competitions. Other schools accept a larger number of members, and each member is matched with one competition. A few schools conduct moot court entirely intramurally. Moot court competitions are typically sponsored by organizations with interest in one particular area of law, and the moot court problems address an issue in that field. Competitions are often judged by legal practitioners with expertise in the particular area of law, or sometimes by sitting judges. The basic structure of a moot court competition roughly parallels what would happen in actual appellate practice. Participants will typically receive a problem ahead of time, which includes the facts of the underlying case, and often an opinion from a lower court that is being challenged in the problem. Students must then research and prepare for that case as if they were lawyers or advocates for one or sometimes both of the parties. Depending on the competition, participants will be required to submit written briefs, participate in oral argument, or both. The case or problem is often one of current interest, sometimes mimicking an actual case, and sometimes fabricated to address difficult legal issues. A number of moot court competitions focus on specific areas of law. For example, the First Amendment Center annually holds a National First Amendment Moot Court Competition, in which the judges have included numerous United States Circuit Court judges.[52] The American Collegiate Moot Court Association{{refimprove section|date=February 2013}}In the United States, undergraduates experience moot court in a variety of disciplines and a variety of settings. The most common are in-class exercises that are assigned by professors. Other schools actually form competitive teams. These teams often compete in intramural events, some in statewide competitions, or they can enter tournaments sponsored by the [https://www.acmamootcourt.org/ American Moot Court Association] (AMCA). While undergraduate moot court is still a relatively new forensics activity when compared with debate and intercollegiate mock trial, by 2010, there were 248 teams who competed at the regional tournaments. In 2019 there were more than 500 teams competing in 13 different regional tournaments to gain bids to the AMCA National Competition, which has 80 teams competing every year. Teams are awarded bids either through the regional tournaments themselves, or through "open, at large bids," which are usually awarded to 7-8 each year. If a regional tournament is awarded 5 bids, then the top 5 teams with the highest ballot counts at that regional are awarded bids. The only teams guaranteed bids are teams that make it to the finals of their regional. Schools can earn more than eight bids to Nationals, but can only field eight. The qualifying tournaments are held during the fall semester, most are in November, and the championship tournament is in mid-January. All ACMA tournaments, including invitationals, regionals, and nationals, have three preliminary rounds in the first day of competition where all the teams that enter compete. In the second day, teams that "break" move on to a series of single elimination rounds. The number of teams that break varies depending on the invitational, but in regionals they are required to break to 16 teams and at nationals all teams that earn 3 ballots or more are required to break, which usually is around 40-45 teams. Undergraduate moot court cases pose two certified questions. The case (known as the “record”) includes an appellate majority opinion and a dissent. Undergraduate Moot Court exists within a "closed universe," meaning that students can only reference statements from the listed cased directly or from in-case citations from those specific cases. Students cannot use anything from an in-case citation that is not from the opinion listed in the record. Typically, the record includes twenty opinions that students can rely upon for their arguments. All teams competing in AMCA-sponsored events will argue the same case. ACMA students have engaged in oral argument on issues such as same-sex marriage, national health care, privacy under the 4th Amendment, life terms for minors who are not guilty of murder or attempted murder, freedom of religion, a federal ban on firearms on school grounds, warrantless domestic wiretapping of suspected terrorists. More recently they have argued the constitutionality of: solitary confinement (8th amendment), memory-testing brain scans (5th amendment), male-preference university admissions, and university employment termination (1st amendment). Cases are written by AMCA and the case problem is released on their website. Undergraduate moot court teams consist of two oral advocates. The advocates are responsible for knowing both issues – but typically are only asked about one certified question. Each team will receive 20 minutes to argue its case, and each advocate must speak for a minimum of seven minutes. Teams are judged on their forensics, knowledge of the law, demeanor, and ability to answer questions from the bench. Good judges are the key to a good moot court hearing. Judges are typically lawyers or members of the state or federal bench. At times, law students (especially those with past undergraduate moot court experience) are asked to judge. Past judges at AMCA events have included former US Attorney General John Ashcroft and federal judges Otis Wright and George Schiavelli. The ACMA also sponsors a brief writing contest. Students are not required to prepare briefs in order to compete for the oral advocacy national title. Teams who enter follow a specific set of rules and compete for prizes. The competition is judged by lawyers and law professors. This competition is named for the late Sandra Knerr, who along with her husband, was a dedicated supporter of intercollegiate moot court. United KingdomThe courts systems differ in various parts of the United Kingdom. Thus, the style of a moot will often vary depending in which jurisdiction it is to be heard, although some national competitions do exist. The principal differences are between the laws in Scotland and those in England and Wales. England and WalesIn England and Wales the moot will typically simulate proceedings in either the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court. Moot questions generally involve two questions of law that are under dispute and come with a set of facts about the case that have been decided at the first instance trial.[53] Generally the question will surround a subject that is unclear under the present state of the law and for which no direct precedent exists. Mooting is a team effort, consisting of senior or lead counsel and junior counsel. It is normal practice for the senior counsel to take on the first point and the junior the second; although this may vary depending upon the exact nature, and necessary length, of the arguments.[54] Typically the question will focus on one area of law, e.g. tort, contract, criminal law or property law. The question will be provided to the teams a few weeks in advance of the moot along with details as to which of the appellant or respondent they are to represent. It is then up to each team to prepare their case as though they were barristers. Authority for each argument is necessary and will usually take the form of precedent from case law but may also involve legislation. Reliance may also be placed on governmental papers, research from NGOs and academic journals and texts. A few days before the moot takes place each team will prepare and exchange their skeleton arguments or brief. Copies will also be provided to the judge along with the moot problem. The judge is normally an academic or practising solicitor or barrister. The moot itself takes the form of an oral argument. The competition may also allow the appellants an additional few minutes in order to reply to the respondents arguments.[55] After the presentation of arguments has concluded, the judge will retire to deliberate on both the law and the overall winning of the moot. A moot is not won and lost on the legal argument, but on the advocacy skills of the participants. It is often the case that the team that has the weaker legal argument is in a better position as they have to argue that much more persuasively. ScotlandIn Scotland a moot can be set in a variety of fora; in civil law problems it is set most commonly in either the Inner House of the Court of Session or in the House of Lords, although it is not uncommon for a moot to be heard in the Sheriff Court before the Sheriff or Sheriff Principal. Occasionally, an Employment Appeal Tribunal may also be used as a forum for a Scottish civil law moot. If the moot problem concerns Criminal Law, the moot will most likely be heard as though in the Appellate division of the High Court of Justiciary (commonly known as the Court of Criminal Appeal). The moot points and style of the problem are similar to that of England and Wales stated above; however, the format of the moot is significantly different. Junior counsel is more likely to take the first moot point and senior counsel the second (this can however be reversed depending on the problem). The format of the moot is far more adversarial than that of English and Welsh moots. This is primarily due to a more adversarial legal system. This manifests itself in different ways, most notably with the appellants and respondents facing each other during a moot, rather than, as in England and Wales, facing the judge. There is only one national Scottish competition, the Alexander Stone National Legal Debate, administered by the Law School at the University of Glasgow. All Scottish universities that offer the LL.B. are eligible to take part, although in recent years the competition has been fought out mainly between Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde universities. The final is held in the Alexander Stone Court Room at the University of Glasgow in February or March each year. There are also several annual inter-varsity competitions between law schools, including the Glasgow Sheriff's Cup (the University of Glasgow v the University of Strathclyde) and the Granite City Moot (the University of Aberdeen v Robert Gordon University). These competitions are ordinarily judged by a Senator of the College of Justice. Law schools also take part in UK-wide competitions, such as the Oxford University Press and the English Speaking Union Moot. These moots are UK-wide in participation, but typically follow the style and law of moots in England and Wales. The University of Glasgow reached the semi-final of the English Speaking Union moot in 2008 and the final in 2005. The University of Dundee reached the semi finals of The Oxford University Press moots in 2009. Judges in Scottish moots are typically legal academics, solicitors, sheriffs, advocates or Senators of the College of Justice. For Primary and Secondary Schools, the national Scottish Competitions are handled by the School Mock Court Case Project SCIO.[56] During the 2018/2019 academic year the charity ran some 17 projects in Inverness, Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Falkirk, Hamilton and Ayr involving circa 100 school and some 3,000 students. These trials are also heard in the Court of Session, High Court and the Sheriff Court IndiaSurana and Surana International Attorneys have been conducting various moot competitions from mid 1990s including Surana & Surana International Technology Law Moot Court Competition, Surana & Surana National Corporate Law Moot Court Competition, and Surana & Surana National Trial Advocacy Moot Court Competition. See also{{portal|Law}}
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^http://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1031094 35. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.cisgmoot.org/index.html#|title=The Annual Willem C. Vis (East) International Commercial Arbitration Moot|publisher=}} 36. ^{{cite web|url=http://pricemootcourt.socleg.ox.ac.uk/competitions/oxford|title=Price Media Law Moot Court Programme - International Rounds 2012|publisher=}} 37. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.investmentmoot.org/archive/|title=Frankfurt Investment Arbitration Moot Court :: Archive|website=www.investmentmoot.org}} 38. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.iislweb.org/lachsmoot/history.html|title=International Institute of Space Law|publisher=}} 39. ^{{cite web|url=http://lawasiamoot.org/past.aspx |title=LAWASIA International Moot |publisher=LAWASIA |date= |accessdate=2012-11-20}} 40. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.redcross.org.hk/web/moot9/previous.html |title=9th Red Cross International Humanitarian Law Moot 2010 |publisher=Redcross.org.hk |date= |accessdate=2012-04-21}} 41. ^{{cite web|url=http://kokusaiho.aquasky.jp/en/records/index.htm|title=ILSEC --- International Law Students Exchange Council|publisher=}} 42. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.oiprc.ox.ac.uk/mootresults.php|title=Oxford Law :: OIPRC moot - results|publisher=}} 43. ^{{cite web|url=http://sarins.org/moot-court/|title=Sarin Foundation » Moot Court|website=sarins.org}} 44. ^1 {{Cite web |url=http://www.lawgazette.com.sg/2015-08/1370.htm |title=Archived copy |access-date=2016-01-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160201200508/http://www.lawgazette.com.sg/2015-08/1370.htm |archive-date=2016-02-01 |dead-url=yes |df= }} 45. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 https://lawgazette.com.sg/news/updates/international-moots-review/ 46. ^1 2 {{Cite web |url=http://www.lawgazette.com.sg/2016-06/1601.htm |title=Archived copy |access-date=2017-05-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202001219/http://www.lawgazette.com.sg/2016-06/1601.htm |archive-date=2017-02-02 |dead-url=yes |df= }} 47. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/smu-edges-out-nus-in-sydney-moot-contest|title=SMU edges out NUS in Sydney moot contest|first=|last=hermes|date=14 April 2017|publisher=}} 48. ^{{cite web|url=http://law.nus.edu.sg/about_us/history_milestones.html|title=NUS - Faculty of Law : Asia's Global Law School - History & Milestones|website=law.nus.edu.sg}} 49. ^https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/smu-team-wins-moot-contest-in-the-hague 50. ^{{cite web|url=https://essexcourt.com/barrister/lucas-bastin/|title=Lucas Bastin - Essex Court Chambers|publisher=}} 51. ^1 2 3 {{cite web|url=https://www.nusmooting.com/achievements|title=NUS Law Mooting and Debating Club - International Achievements|website=NUS Law Mooting & Debating Club}} 52. ^National First Amendment Moot Court Competition. 53. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.firstlight.demon.co.uk/law/mooting/first.html#facts|title=Mooting Net - How to Moot I|publisher=}} 54. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.firstlight.demon.co.uk/law/mooting/first.html#split|title=Mooting Net - How to Moot I|publisher=}} 55. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.firstlight.demon.co.uk/law/mooting/day.html#reply|title=Mooting Net - How to Moot II|publisher=}} 56. ^http://www.mockcourt.org.uk External links{{wiktionary|moot court}}{{wiktionary|The American Collegiate Moot Court Association}}
3 : Informal legal terminology|Legal education|Moot court competitions |
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