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International Moot Court

International Moot Courts

Currently Columbia students participate in three international moot court programs.  Involvement in a moot court is yet another excellent way for students to get experiential training with international law subjects.  This hands-on work nicely complements their courses in international law, human rights, international arbitration, international trade and WTO law.  Faculty members teaching within the respective fields are involved in each moot competition.

Jessup International Law Moot Court
Named after Columbia Professor Philip C. Jessup, this is the premier international moot court.  The national/international competition is sponsored by the International Law Students Association in conjunction with the American Society of International Law, under rules prescribed by ILSA/ASIL.  At Columbia, the Jessup team has been selected through a local competition organized by the previous year's team and publicized through the Columbia Society of International Law.. We have won the regional competition several times recently; in 2003 the CLS team won national/international competition and Nick Boeving received one of the oralist awards. 

In 2005, Columbia's Jessup International Law Moot Court Team won both the national and international competition in the final rounds of arguments held in Washington, D.C. The Columbia team included Tracy Appleton, Seth Davis, Vincent Levy, Alka Pradhan, and Corey Whiting.

Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot Court
The Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot is the world's leading law school competition in private international law. Every year thousands of students compete through written memos and oral rounds held in Vienna and at the sister moot in Hong Kong. Vis immerses students in a hypothetical but thoroughly practical dispute in international trade between private parties. Along the way, they learn much about commercial law and arbitration. Columbia's record of success at the Vis includes: First Place Team in 1994; Third Place Team and First Place Claimant's Memo in 2006; and Second Place Claimant's Memo in 2007. The team is run by student and alum coaches with the involvement of Professors George Bermann, Hans Smit, and Alejandro Garro. All Columbia Law students, including 1Ls and LLMs, are welcome to apply for the Vis team around the start of each school year. For more information, visit: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vismoot/

WTO Moot Court Competition
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP and the Institute of International Economic Law at Georgetown University Law Center are co-sponsoring the third annual WTO Moot Court Competition.  The competition provides students with a unique opportunity for hands-on experience with the dynamic issues of international trade law that confront governments, businesses, and the public. In past years, students have presented oral arguments before WTO legal experts from the trade community, including former WTO panelists, diplomats, and a wide array of experts; the latter group includes professionals from the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, the U.S. International Trade Commission, Congressional committee staff, and the International Monetary Fund, and advocates with experience arguing cases before WTO panels and the WTO Appellate Body.


Photo: Dustin Ross

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European Law Moot Court

The European Law Moot Court, founded in 1988, is the second largest international moot court competition in the world, and the largest and most prestigious in Europe. Each year, over 120 teams submit written pleadings for the competition. Teams from the European Union, Central and Eastern Europe, the United States, Canada, and Australia participate in the competition. In 2005, Regional Finals for the competition were held in four locations: Boston; Dublin, Ireland; Ljubljana, Slovenia; and Bratislava, Slovakia. Past regional finals have also been held in various cities such as Thessaloniki, Exeter, Vienna, Bruges, Maastricht, Stockholm, Toulouse, Lisbon, Parma, Copenhagen, Budapest, Warsaw, Durham, Tallinn, Tartu, Prague, Edinburgh, Toulouse, Uppsala, Florence, San Francisco, Basel, and Cologne. In last year's competition, Columbia's team was selected to participate in the Regional Finals of the competition, which were held in Dublin, Ireland.
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