Appellate Advocacy
WCL's Moot Court Honor Society offers students the opportunity to hone their appellate advocacy skills by competing in local, regional, national, and international law school moot court competitions.
The Stephen S. Weinstein Advocacy Program offers multiple appellate advocacy course sections in civil cases, with an emphasis on federal courts. This course is devoted to brief writing and oral argument techniques, and also provides an overview of appellate procedure, including jurisdiction, finality, the collateral order doctrine, interlocutory appeals, mandamus, standards of review, and issue preservation and harmless error.
Students who want to hone their appellate advocacy skills may apply to join the Moot Court Honor Society, one of four recognized student organizations that send their members to compete in local, regional, national and international law school advocacy competitions.
In the last five years, the students of the Moot Court Honor Society have won six national and regional championships, and finished in the top eight in 10聽competitions. In addition to these team wins, the students also earned numerous brief and oralist awards.聽 These students develop the oral advocacy and brief writing skills that keep them competitive year after year, and prepare to advocate after graduation.
To learn more about the Moot Court Honor Society and the three other student competition teams, please visit the Competition Teams webpage on this website.
WCL's Moot Court Honor Society offers students the opportunity to hone their appellate advocacy skills by competing in local, regional, national, and international law school moot court competitions.