During the Annual ALSA Conference, mooters from Australia, New Zealand and neighbouring Asian countries participate in a Championship Moot.
In collaboration with the Australian Red Cross, the Australian Law Student' Association (ALSA) host an International Humanitarian Law (IHL) Mooting competition during the annual ALSA Conference.
The purpose of this Moot is to raise awareness of IHL issues, and the importance of IHL as a system of protection during times of armed conflict.
The Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition is the world's largest moot court competition, with participants from over 600 law schools in almost 100 countries. The Competition, administered by the International Law Students Association, is a simulation of a fictional dispute between countries before the International Court of Justice, the judicial organ of the United Nations. Thousands of law students from around the world work all year long on the season's Jessup Problem, and the top teams from each participating jurisdiction earn the right to represent their country at the White & Case International Rounds, held every Spring in Washington, DC
Universidad de Buenos Aires (Argentina) v. University of Pennsylvania (United States). 2016
The University of Queensland is celebrating the addition of a world championship title to its growing list of mooting accolades after winning the 2014 Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition in Washington DC, USA. The TC Beirne School of Law team -- Emily Chalk, Camille Boileau, Hugo Clark-Ryan, Abbey Mawby and Lisa Lee -- defeated the Singapore Management University School of Law in the White and Case Jessup World Championship Round of the competition on 13 April.
For more than 100 years, Harvard Law School has held the Ames Moot Court Competition.
The University of New South Wales' (UNSW) Private Law Moot is a prestigious intervarsity mooting competition, bringing together some of the best mooters from Australia and around the world to compete at the University of New South Wales in Sydney.
The University of Sydney v University of Technology, Sydney. 2019
Murdoch University is pleased to offer the International Martime Law Arbitration Moot for the benefit of law students worldwide. The moot is a competition open to any students enrolled in a law degree (either undergraduate or postgraduate) who have not been admitted to practice.
The venue for the oral competition changes every year, and generally rotates between Australia, South East Asia and Europe. The moot is exceptionally well supported by the maritime industry and maritime law firms.
The 20th edition of IMLAM was hosted at the beginning of July 2019 by Erasmus University Rotterdam in The Netherlands.
The Intellectual Property Moot is held annually in Oxford over a weekend in March. It is hosted by the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre and organised by a committee with an interest in intellectual property. The Competition invites teams from universities around the world to prepare written submissions and present oral argument on each side of a hypothetical intellectual property law problem set by experts in the field.
The 2020 moot concerns Hotenhoffer Pharmaceuticals Erewhon and Hotenhoffer Lilliput v Republic of Erewhon [2019] HCE 46. This year, the moot covers all three of the main IP regimes, with the appeal grounds relating to: (1) the issuing of a compulsory licence in relation to a pharmaceutical patent; (2) an application to cancel of a company's trade mark portfolio on the basis that the marks have become deceptive; and (3) whether the release of documents by the government – being a selection of documents supplied by a corporate whistleblower – is caught by the quotation exception or a general public interest defence to copyright infringement. The moot problem draws from topical matters in IP law, and covers important questions of policy and doctrine.
The Oxford Intellectual Property Moot for 2019 concerned a particular case.
The European Law Student's Association, in conjunction with the Council of Europe, is responsible for organising a Europe wide moot court competition on The European Convention on Human Rights.
Stay up to date with the 2020 European Human Rights competition.
The Price Moot Court Competition is organised by the Programme in Comparative Media Law & Policy at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies within the Faculty of Law, in collaboration with the International Media Lawyers Association. The Competition, which is open to students from around the world, focuses on media law and policy, including, in particular, freedom of expression as set out in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The competition is set before a fictitious body, the 'Universal Freedom of Expression Court'.
The International Law Students Association has compiled a list of International Moot Competitions around the world.