Hobart
Introduction
This elective provides students with the opportunity to develop their legal skills, through engaging in high level advocacy, research and collaborative work. Under the supervision of the unit coordinator, students prepare for, and participate in, a national inter-varsity mooting competition. This involves rigorous training in oral advocacy, research of case law and legislation and the application of that law to oral and written arguments on behalf of fictional clients.
These arguments are tested before academic and practitioner judges, including current judges of state and national courts. Competitions include the Sir Harry Gibbs Constitutional Law Moot, the Castan Centre Human Rights Moot, the UNSW Private Law Moot, the Baker & McKenzie Women’s moot, the Kirby Contract moot, the Animal Law moot and the Administrative Appeals Tribunal moot. Enrolment is limited to the number of team members required for intra-varsity competitions, and is determined through a competitive selection process. While students may participate in more than one inter-varsity mooting competition over the course of their LLB studies, they may only enrol in this unit only once.
Summary 2021
Unit name | Competition Moot |
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Unit code | LAW349 |
Credit points | 12.5 |
Faculty/School | College of Arts, Law and Education Faculty of Law |
Discipline | Law |
Coordinator | Dr Peter Lawrence |
Available as student elective? | No |
Breadth Unit? | No |
Availability
Note
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Special approval is required for enrolment into TNE Program units.
TNE Program units special approval requirements.
* The Final WW Date is the final date from which you can withdraw from the unit without academic penalty, however you will still incur a financial liability (see withdrawal dates explained for more information).
Learning Outcomes
- Make oral arguments to a legal problem in simulated appellate court proceedings before legal practitioners and Federal and inter-state members of the judiciary.
- Complete legal research in a timely manner and to the highest professional standards.
- Produce complex and persuasive written submissions.
- Collaborate effectively as part of a small team under the direction of the unit coordinator.
Fees
Requisites
Prerequisites
Selective enrolment
Teaching
Assessment | Oral Advocacy (40%, Team work, including reflective journal, 1500 words (30%), Written Submission (30%) |
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Timetable | View the lecture timetable | View the full unit timetable |
Textbooks
Required | None |
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The University reserves the right to amend or remove courses and unit availabilities, as appropriate.