Peter A Allard School of Law

Upper Year Moots for Current Students

About Upper Year Moots

Moots are simulated court proceedings where students carry out the work of counsel in an appeal, trial or arbitration.  Students from the Peter A. Allard School of Law (“Allard Law”) work together as a team and participate with teams from other schools.  The benefits of mooting include intensive training in written and oral advocacy before judges, practitioners and academics, the opportunity to work with other students, and the chance to meet law students from other universities. Positions on moot teams are highly sought after by students, and professors and counsel participate enthusiastically as advisors, consultants and coaches. 

Historically, our students have done well in these moots and the Faculty works hard to ensure that the standard of performance remains high. Students who have an interest in acquiring instruction and training in advocacy and or other related skills are encouraged to apply. However, please keep in mind that significant time commitment and motivation are required.  Further, students may wish to participate in a moot in third year rather than second year. 

Credits for Upper Year Moots

  • Successfully completing an upper year moot fulfills the JD Experiential Learning Requirement.
     
  • Students are limited to 20 credits of clinical and competitive mooting credits (the credits allocated to each moot are noted below).
     
  • If you have been accepted for a moot, you do not need to self-register for the moot course or any pre-requisite/co-requisite course associated with that moot through the UBC Student Services Centre. Academic Services staff will register accepted students into their moot course and contact them in advance of registration to save seats in any prerequisite or corequisite courses (if the student has not already taken such courses). When planning for registration of other upper year courses, students should factor in the total number of moot credits, including any pre-requisite or co-requisite course (and credit allocation across terms), to ensure they do not exceed the maximum credit load per term (18 credits) or per Winter Session (34 credits).
     
  • Credit for participation in a moot will be given by way of the following courses:
    • LAW 483C.001 Competitive Moots Advocacy Credit A (5 credits – 3 in term 1, 2 in term 2):
      • Adam F. Fanaki Competition Law Moot
      • British Columbia Law Schools Competitive Moot
      • Davies Canadian Corporate/Securities Law Competition
      • Gale Cup Moot Competition
      • Harold G. Fox Moot (Canadian Intellectual Property Moot)​
      • Ian Fletcher International Insolvency Law Moot 
      • Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Law Moot
      • Jessup International Law Moot*
      • Julius Alexander Isaac Moot
      • Laskin Moot*
      • National Labour Arbitration Moot
      • Oxford International Intellectual Property Moot
      • Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot
      • Willms & Shier Environmental Law Moot
      • Wilson Moot
    • LAW 483C.002 Competitive Moots Advocacy Credit A (5 credits in term 2):
      • Kawaskimhon Aboriginal Rights Moot
    • LAW 483B Competitive Moots Advocacy Credit A (4 credits across year – 2 in term 1, 2 in term 2)
      • Donald G.H. Bowman National Tax Moot
    • LAW 475C Competitive Trial Advocacy Credit (3 credits in term 1):
      • Peter Burns Moot
    • LAW 475D Competitive Trial Advocacy Credit (4 credits across year- 2 in term 1, 2 in term 2):
      • Western Canada Moot (MacIntyre Cup) - Students who advance in the Burns Moot will be withdrawn from Law 475C and registered in Law 475D

*The Jessup and Laskin Moots have a researcher position in addition to oralist positions. The researcher may have a different credit allocation than oralists. Students will be advised if they are being offered an oralist position or researcher position on the team. Researchers do not give oral submissions at the moot but may be called upon to give oral submissions in a backup capacity should one of the oralists be unable to attend the moot. The specifics of this role will be particular to each moot, and students should inquire with the relevant moot for additional information.

Application Information

All students applying to a 2023-2024 upper year moot should thoroughly review the information on this page.

Important Dates

  • March 1, 2023 | 12:00pm-2:00pm, Room 104; 2022-2023 Upper Year Moot Information Session (Hybrid)
  • March 10, 2:30pm-7:30pm: Moot Tryouts
  • March 13, 12:40pm-6:00pm: Moot Tryouts
  • March 25, 9:00am-2:00pm: Moot Tryouts
  • March 27, 11:59pm: 2023-2024 Upper Year Moot Application Deadline
  • Late-May, 2023 | 2023-2024 Upper Year Moot offers made

2023-2024 Moots

The following moots will be offered for 2023-2024:

  • British Columbia Law Schools Competitive Moot
  • Davies Canadian Corporate/Securities Law Competition
  • Donald G.H. Bowman National Tax Moot
  • Gale Cup Moot Competition
  • Jessup International Law Moot Competition
  • Julius Alexander Isaac Moot
  • Kawaskimhon: Aboriginal Rights Moot
  • Laskin Moot
  • National Labour Arbitration Competition
  • Peter Burns Moot, Western Canada Moot, Sopinka Cup Moot
  • Willms & Shier Environmental Law Moot
  • Wilson Moot

How to Apply

All students applying to an upper year moot must complete the 3 following steps by March 27, 11:59pm:

  1. Pick your Moot(s) and check the Pre-requisites: Consider the moots to which you would like to apply and your order of preference; 
    • Review the moot descriptions below to learn more about the moot offerings and any pre-requisite or co-requisite course requirements
       
  2. Prepare your Application:  Review the relevant Application Fact Sheets (found in the Moot Descriptions below) to determine the application materials that are required for each moot and prepare your materials accordingly.
     
  3. Submit your Application: Apply by completing the Upper Year Moot Application Online Survey, which collects personal information about you, asks you to rank each moot by your preference and to submit your application materials. Complete the survey in one sitting; do not complete a survey for each moot that you are interested in.  Do not complete this survey until you have finalized your moot preferences.

Try-Outs

Sign-up link: 2023-2024 UY Moot Tryout

If your moot requires a try-out, sign up to complete a 7-minute tryout using the Calendly link which will go live on this page on March 2, 12:30pm.

Presentation topic: 2023-2024 Moot Tryout Prompt

  • You will be presenting to 1 or more judges. Your 7 minutes should budget time for at least 2 questions.
  • You only need to try out once. All moot coaches will receive a recording of your tryout. You do not need to try out separately for each moot.

Where / When: There are limited time-slots per day that are granted on a first-come, first-serve basis. Students are encouraged to sign up as soon as possible.

  • March 10, 2:30pm-7:30pm, Allard 106
    • BC Law Schools Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 3:30pm-5:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
    • Peter Burns Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 2:30pm-3:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
    • Wilson Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 2:30pm-4:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
       
  • March 13, 12:40pm-5:00pm, Allard 122 / 5:00pm-6:00pm in Allard 104
    • Gale Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 3:30-4:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
    • Jessup Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 3:30-4:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
    • Julius Alexander Isaac Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 1:30pm-3:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
    • Peter Burns Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 2:30pm-3:30pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.
       
  • March 25, 9:00am-2:00pm, Allard 106
    • National Labour Arbitration Moot: Students interested in this moot are encouraged to tryout between 12:00pm-2:00pm. If there is no availability, students can tryout at other times.

Legal Writing Sample

If your moot requires a legal writing sample, prepare a legal writing sample to be used for your application.

Content:

  • First year students should use an excerpt of their final Legal Research and Writing Assignment or an excerpt of their First Year Moot Factum that they authored 
  • Upper year students may use the same documents as first year students or they may use an excerpt of a seminar or advanced legal research paper

Format:

  • The writing sample must be a maximum of 2 pages
  • The writing sample must be saved as a single file in PDF format
  • The writing sample should be named using the following convention: Last Name, First Name, Student Number, Writing Sample (LRW Paper/1L Moot Factum/Seminar Paper/Legal Research Paper)
    • Example: Wu, Allan, 12345678, Writing Sample (LRW Paper)

Grades

If grades are collected, review the relevant Application Fact Sheets for additional information on the collection / distribution of your grades.

Other Materials

If other material is required, please refer to the instructions in the relevant Application Fact Sheet to prepare such materials.

  • Resumes: should be a maximum of two pages. Current Allard Law students may consult the Career Services Office webpage for further resources regarding resume writing
  • Kawaskimhon Moot Application Form: the application form must be saved as a single file in DOC, DOCX, or PDF format. The application form should be named using the following convention: Last Name, First Name, Student Number, Kawaskimhon Moot Application Form
    • Example: Wu, Allan, 12345678, Kawaskimhon Moot Application Form

Questions about the application process can be directed to  Barbara Wang, Manager, Student Affairs or Kaila Mikkelsen, Assistant Dean Students. Appointments can be directly booked online via Calendly.

 


List of Upper Year Moots

An overview of the moots is provided below. However, please keep in mind that moots may vary from this list in any given year, according to the availability of faculty advisors and funding.

 

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