The Competitions Program
The Competitions Program at OU Law is well-known for producing prepared competitions teams and ultimately fierce advocates. The Program offers both internal and external skill-building opportunities.

The Board of Advocates

The Board of Advocates (BoA) is a student organization that promotes oral and written advocacy through intra-school and interschool competitions. The Board is made up entirely of second- and third-year law students who have excelled in moot court, mock trial, client counseling, mediation, and/or arbitration. The Board directly supports the Program through hosting internal and external competition opportunities. 

All students are eligible to join the board after their first year. Applying students should value the role that competitions and other experiential opportunities provide students. Additional expectations for applying students can be found on the application. The Board is selected in April each year. 

Internal Competitions

The Program works with the Board of Advocates to provide multiple intra-school competition opportunities. The BoA organizes and facilitates two annual intra-school moot court competitions and one intra-school negotiation competition. The Daugherty Moot Court Competition for all second and third year students, as well as the Whitten Burrage Negotiations Competition, which is open to all students, occurs in the fall semester. In the spring, the BoA works with the Legal Research and Writing faculty to facilitate the 1L Moot Court Competition. 

In addition to these annual competitions, BOA also facilitates the regional and national inter-school competitions hosted by OU College of Law.

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The Daugherty Moot Court Competition is an intra-school competition hosted during the fall semester by the OU College of Law Board of Advocates. This competition helps the students identify how the United States Constitution affects modern everyday life. Each year, the topic and issues cover a constitutional law problem that is currently being litigated in the courts. Participation in this competition is completely voluntary and open to all OU College of Law second- and third-year students. The participants in the Daugherty Competition do not write a brief, but instead rely on the actual briefs written by the attorneys arguing the case in court. From these briefs the participants prepare and present arguments on both sides of each issue.

The First-Year Competition is associated with the Legal Research and Writing course. All first-year students write appellate briefs and present oral arguments on a case written specifically for them. Each team prepares oral arguments for both sides of the issues. The oral advocacy competition consists of preliminary and elimination rounds. The BOA administers the elimination rounds. The rounds are judged by attorneys, judges, and faculty.
 

Traveling Competition Teams

Second- and third-year students are eligible to apply to participate on a traveling competition team. Each year, the Program prepares almost 100 students to represent the College of Law as student competitors. Competitions take place across the country. 

Moot court competitions mimic real-life appellate advocacy. There is a brief-writing process, as well as an oral-argument component. Students are grouped into teams of two or three students to write the brief and prepare arguments. Each competition is unique but moot court competitions value the combination of written and oral advocacy. 

Mock trials involve building a case theory and presenting a trial to a jury or a judge. Students perform opening statements and closing arguments, as well as direct and cross-examine witnesses. Some competitions allow team members to serve as your witness. Other competitions provide the witness for each round. There is generally no writing component included in trial competitions, but this trend may be changing. Mock trials push students to understand the Rules of Evidence in a simulation setting. 

Dispute resolution and skills competitions encompass a wide range of competitions. These can be negotiations, mediations, arbitrations, client counseling, and more. Other transactional-focused competitions may also fit into this category. These competitions generally aim for students to learn to resolve disputes before the dispute escalates for formal litigation. 

Contact the Director of Competitions

Taylor Freeman Peshehonoff

Director of Competitions and Externships, Assistant Professor of Legal Practice