Guru Legal

Regional Moot Court

Asia Cup Moot Court Competition

Complete preparation guide, strategy resources and expert moot court coaching by GuruLegal β€” India’s leading moot court mentorship platform.

Section I

About the Asia Cup

The Asia Cup Moot Court Competition is one of the most prestigious public international law moot courts in the Asia-Pacific region. Organised in partnership with leading academic institutions across Asia, the competition simulates proceedings before the International Court of Justice and provides a platform for law students from Asian universities to engage with contemporary issues in public international law that carry particular resonance in the region.

What distinguishes the Asia Cup from global moots like the Jessup is its deliberate regional focus. While it applies universal principles of public international law, the hypothetical cases (compromis) frequently draw on issues with acute Asia-Pacific relevance: maritime boundary disputes, island sovereignty, law of the sea, transboundary environmental harm, use of force in the Pacific context, refugee flows, and the tension between sovereignty and international obligations in rapidly developing nations.

The competition attracts teams from Japan, South Korea, China, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, and beyond. It has earned a reputation for producing advocates who combine technical doctrinal skill with nuanced understanding of how international law operates in the Asian context β€” a combination increasingly valued by international courts, law firms, and diplomatic services.

What Makes the Asia Cup Distinctive

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Asia-Pacific Focus

Compromis issues reflect real regional disputes: maritime claims modelling South China Sea dynamics, nuclear testing legality, transboundary pollution, territorial sovereignty, and regional organisation mandates.

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ICJ Simulation

Proceedings follow ICJ procedural rules closely. Teams act as agents and counsel for fictional states, addressing the Court with the formality and diplomatic decorum expected at The Hague.

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Doctrinal Depth

The competition rewards precise treaty interpretation, careful handling of customary international law, and sophisticated engagement with ICJ and arbitral jurisprudence.

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Regional Network

Participants build lasting professional relationships across Asian jurisdictions β€” a network invaluable in careers in international law, diplomacy, and regional dispute resolution.

Section II

Competition Structure

Team Composition & Eligibility

Teams typically consist of two to four members, with two oralists per side (Applicant and Respondent). Members must be currently enrolled law students at a university in the Asia-Pacific region. Some years allow non-Asian guest teams. Each team prepares written memorials for both sides and must be prepared to argue either during oral rounds β€” you will not know which side you represent until shortly before each round.

The Compromis

The competition problem takes the form of a Special Agreement between two fictional states referring a dispute to the ICJ. It includes the factual background, legal questions submitted to the Court, and any stipulations. Issues typically span two to three major areas of public international law. The compromis is released several months before oral rounds, giving teams substantial preparation time.

Written Memorials

Memorials follow ICJ conventions: Statement of Facts, Statement of Jurisdiction, Questions Presented, Summary of Pleadings, Pleadings (Arguments), and Submissions. They are scored by academic experts and contribute significantly to overall rankings. Word limits and formatting requirements are specified in the annual rules.

Oral Rounds

Each oralist typically receives 15–20 minutes. Judges are drawn from international law academics, practising lawyers, diplomats, and occasionally sitting or former international court judges. Preliminary rounds determine rankings; top teams advance through quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a grand final. The bench actively questions counsel, testing depth of knowledge, ability to handle hypotheticals, and diplomatic poise.

Scoring & Awards

Awards include Best Memorial (Applicant and Respondent), Best Oralist, Best Team Overall, and various special prizes. Scoring balances memorial quality and oral performance. Judges evaluate legal reasoning, use of authority, structure, persuasiveness, courtroom manner, and responsiveness to questions.

Section IV

Research Strategy Masterclass

The Asia Cup Research Mindset

Effective research requires two simultaneous tracks. The first is standard doctrinal research: treaties, case law, scholarly commentary. The second β€” what distinguishes strong Asia Cup teams β€” is regional practice research: how Asian states engage with legal issues through diplomatic statements, ASEAN declarations, bilateral agreements, national court decisions, and state submissions to international bodies. A team that can cite the Philippines’ memorial in the South China Sea Arbitration alongside ICJ jurisprudence demonstrates a sophistication that purely doctrinal teams cannot match.

Primary Sources

ICJ and ITLOS jurisprudence form the core. Study not just judgments but separate and dissenting opinions β€” many Asia Cup judges test your awareness of minority positions. Arbitral awards from UNCLOS Annex VII tribunals (South China Sea Arbitration, Chagos MPA), the PCA (Island of Palmas), and investment arbitration supplement the case law. ILC work products β€” Articles on State Responsibility, Draft Articles on Prevention of Transboundary Harm, Guide to Practice on Reservations, ILC Conclusions on Identification of CIL β€” carry quasi-authoritative weight.

Asia-Specific Sources

Asian Yearbook of International Law: State practice surveys and regional developments. ASEAN Legal Instruments: The ASEAN Charter, Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, Declaration on Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea. Asian Journal of International Law (Cambridge): Cutting-edge scholarship on whether β€œuniversal” doctrines reflect genuine consensus. National court decisions from India, Japan, South Korea, Philippines, and Indonesia constitute state practice for custom arguments.

Research Workflow

Read the compromis three times (facts, legal issues, strategy). Map every legal issue to applicable sources. Conduct ICJ/ITLOS research first, then treaty research, then commentary. Layer regional practice on top. Build argument outlines before writing. Cross-reference Applicant and Respondent arguments to anticipate and rebut the strongest opposing points. Update research continuously until submission.

Section V

Memorial Drafting Guide

ICJ Memorial Standards

Asia Cup memorials follow ICJ written pleading conventions. They must maintain the dignity, precision, and restrained tone expected of state submissions to the principal judicial organ of the United Nations. Memorials are persuasive legal instruments, not law review articles β€” they must convince the Court while respecting the opposing party and the Court itself.

Structure

Statement of Facts: Technically accurate but strategically framed. Emphasise favourable facts, contextualise unfavourable ones. Avoid legal characterisations β€” β€œthe deployment of forces” not β€œthe illegal invasion.”

Jurisdiction & Admissibility: Establish the Court’s jurisdiction under the compromis. Brief but competent.

Questions Presented: Frame legal questions favourably. A well-framed question is half the argument: β€œWhether the Respondent’s unilateral continental shelf extension, absent a CLCS recommendation, violates the Applicant’s rights under UNCLOS” already implies the answer.

Summary of Pleadings: One compelling paragraph per major argument. The first substantive text judges read β€” make it count.

Pleadings: Organised by legal issue. Each argument: state the rule (with authority), apply to facts, address counterarguments, conclude. Clear subheadings guide the reader.

Submissions: Precise relief requested. β€œMay it please the Court to adjudge and declare that…” β€” specify exactly what you want the Court to order.

Tone & Citation

Diplomatic, authoritative, respectful. β€œIt is submitted,” β€œthe Applicant respectfully contends.” No inflammatory language, sarcasm, or ad hominem. Cite ICJ cases: Case Concerning [Name] ([Party] v. [Party]), [Type], [Year] ICJ Reports [page], para. [number]. Use OSCOLA or Bluebook consistently. Footnotes should be functional, not discursive.

Common Memorial Mistakes

Errors that consistently cost memorial points:

  • Citing outdated authorities when recent jurisprudence has evolved the law.
  • Failing to address the opposing side’s strongest argument β€” judges always notice.
  • Treating customary law claims as self-evident without demonstrating practice and opinio juris.
  • Confusing maritime entitlements (UNCLOS) with general territorial sovereignty rules.
  • Over-reliance on scholarship where primary sources (case law, treaties) exist.
  • Vague Submissions that leave the Court uncertain what relief you seek.

Section VI

Oral Advocacy Masterclass

ICJ advocacy in the Asia Cup requires a specific register: formal but not stiff, confident but not aggressive, thorough but not exhaustive. You address the Court as agent or counsel of a sovereign state, conveying that your state respects the Court and is confident in the justice of its cause.

Opening & Structure

Begin: β€œMr/Madam President, Members of the Court…” Introduce yourself and provide a clear roadmap. β€œI will address three submissions: first, that [State] has sovereignty based on effective occupation; second, that the Respondent’s maritime claims exceed lawful entitlements; third, that the Respondent bears responsibility for transboundary harm.” Judges follow arguments more easily with a roadmap β€” and they score you for structural clarity.

Handling Judicial Questions

Never avoid a question. If uncertain: β€œThat is a nuanced point, Your Excellency. While our written submissions do not address this specific scenario, the underlying principle would suggest…” Answer directly, then elaborate. Judges become frustrated when counsel talks around the question. Use questions as opportunities β€” they signal what matters to the judge. Maintain composure under hostile questioning. Request clarification if needed: β€œIf I understand Your Excellency’s question correctly…”

Persuasion Technique

Persuade through authority and logic, not emotion. Combine precise citation with clear analytical reasoning: β€œThe principle of effective occupation requires continuous and peaceful exercise of sovereign authority β€” as this Court confirmed in Sovereignty over Pedra Branca at paragraph 67.” Structure every argument in three layers: legal rule, factual application, conclusion for the Court. Speak from notes, not scripts. Maintain eye contact with the bench.

Time Management

With 15–20 minutes, allocate time per argument in advance. Leave 2–3 minutes buffer for judicial questions. If running short, sacrifice minor arguments rather than rushing everything. Your closing submission must be delivered calmly and with full impact β€” it is the last thing judges hear.

Section VII

Advanced Winning Strategies

Strategy 1: Master the Compromis Before the Law

Read it five times. Map every factual assertion. Identify ambiguities β€” these are the battlegrounds. A team that knows the compromis inside out can respond to any factual question, while a team that knows law but stumbles on facts loses credibility instantly.

Strategy 2: Develop a Theory of the Case

A one-sentence narrative tying all arguments together: β€œThe Respondent has systematically violated the Applicant’s sovereign rights through illegal resource extraction, military intimidation, and refusal to engage in good-faith delimitation.” Every argument should connect to this narrative. Judges remember stories, not lists of rules.

Strategy 3: Anticipate the Other Side

The strongest teams prepare the opposing case as thoroughly as their own. For every argument in your memorial, draft the best counterargument you can β€” then build your rebuttal into your primary argument. In oral rounds, this preparation lets you address counterarguments pre-emptively: β€œThe Respondent may contend that… However, this Court has consistently held that…”

Strategy 4: Leverage Regional Practice

When applicable, cite Asian state practice to support or challenge customary law arguments. ASEAN declarations, bilateral fisheries agreements, joint development zone treaties, and national legislation all constitute state practice. Judges at the Asia Cup particularly appreciate teams who demonstrate that international law is not merely a Western-European construct but is shaped by diverse regional contributions.

Strategy 5: Quality of Engagement Over Quantity of Arguments

Three deeply developed arguments defeat five superficial ones. Each argument should cite primary authority, apply it to the facts, address the strongest counterpoint, and conclude with a clear submission to the Court. Judges reward depth of analysis, not breadth of assertion.

Section VIII

Preparation Roadmap

Phase 1: Foundations (Weeks 1–6)

Weeks 1–2: Core Public International Law

Review sources of international law, state responsibility, jurisdiction, and the ICJ Statute. Read Brownlie’s Principles or Shaw’s International Law as your doctrinal foundation.

Weeks 3–4: Subject-Specific Deep Dives

Based on the compromis topics, study UNCLOS, territorial sovereignty, use of force, or environmental law in depth. Read the key ICJ/ITLOS cases for each area.

Weeks 5–6: Compromis Analysis & Research

Comprehensive issue-mapping. Begin building argument outlines for both sides. Start collecting authorities and organising your research database.

Phase 2: Memorial Drafting (Weeks 7–12)

Weeks 7–8: First Drafts

Write complete first drafts for both Applicant and Respondent memorials. Focus on argument structure and legal reasoning; refine language later.

Weeks 9–10: Revision & Feedback

Seek feedback from coaches, professors, and alumni. Revise arguments based on feedback. Strengthen citation, tighten prose, address counterarguments.

Weeks 11–12: Final Polish & Submission

Proofread meticulously. Check citation formatting. Ensure Submissions clause is precise. Submit on time β€” late submissions are penalised or disqualified.

Phase 3: Oral Preparation (Weeks 13–18)

Weeks 13–14: Oral Outlines

Convert memorial arguments into oral presentation outlines. Identify key points to emphasise, passages to read from authorities, and potential judicial questions.

Weeks 15–16: Practice Rounds

Run mock oral rounds with coaches or senior students acting as judges. Practice both sides. Focus on timing, responsiveness to questions, and courtroom manner.

Weeks 17–18: Competition Readiness

Intensive practice with increasingly difficult judicial questions. Refine transitions, strengthen weak areas. Final mock rounds simulating full competition conditions.

Section IX

Recommended Resources

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Core Treaties

UN Charter, ICJ Statute, VCLT, UNCLOS, ILC Articles on State Responsibility, Hague Regulations, key environmental treaties (CBD, UNFCCC, Paris Agreement).

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Essential Texts

Shaw β€” International Law; Crawford β€” Brownlie’s Principles; Tanaka β€” The International Law of the Sea; Cassese β€” International Law; Crawford β€” State Responsibility.

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Databases

ICJ website (icj-cij.org), ITLOS (itlos.org), PCA Case Repository, ILC documents (legal.un.org), Max Planck EPIL, ICRC Customary IHL database, RULAC portal.

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Journals

Asian Journal of International Law, EJIL, AJIL, Leiden Journal, Asian Yearbook of International Law, ICLQ, Chinese Journal of International Law.

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Regional Sources

ASEAN Secretariat documents, Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, SCS Arbitration materials, Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization records, national foreign ministry legal opinions.

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Online Courses

Hague Academy online lectures, Coursera PIL courses (Leiden, Geneva), MOOC on International Law (Louvain), edX Law of the Sea (Iceland), ICRC online IHL modules.

Section X

Career Impact

The Asia Cup provides a distinctive advantage in careers that intersect international law and Asian affairs. The regional network built through the competition β€” connecting participants across a dozen Asian jurisdictions β€” creates professional relationships that span diplomatic services, international organisations, leading law firms, and academia across the region.

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International Courts

ICJ clerking, ITLOS legal internships, PCA case management. The doctrinal training in ICJ procedure and public international law translates directly to these roles.

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UN & International Organisations

UNCLOS Division for Ocean Affairs, UN Office of Legal Affairs, UNDP, ASEAN Secretariat. PIL expertise is the core qualification for legal officer positions.

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International Law Firms

Firms with inter-state dispute practices (Foley Hoag, Volterra Fietta, Three Crowns, Fietta LLP) recruit from moot court champions. Asia Cup experience signals PIL competence.

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Diplomatic Service

Foreign ministries across Asia recruit international lawyers for treaty negotiations, boundary disputes, and representation before international tribunals.

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Academia

LLM programmes at The Hague, Leiden, Cambridge, NUS, and Melbourne value moot court achievement. Research centres focused on Asian international law actively recruit Asia Cup alumni.

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Arbitration

Investment and maritime arbitration practices overlap substantially with Asia Cup subject matter. PCA, ICSID, and SIAC roles benefit from PIL foundations.

Section XI

Frequently Asked Questions

Both simulate ICJ proceedings and test public international law. The Asia Cup focuses specifically on the Asia-Pacific region β€” both in its participant base and in the issues raised by its compromis. This regional focus allows deeper engagement with maritime sovereignty, ASEAN-related issues, and Asian state practice than the globally-scoped Jessup. The competition is smaller, allowing more interaction between teams and judges.

Policies vary by year. Some editions invite guest teams from non-Asian universities for exhibition rounds, while others limit participation to Asia-Pacific institutions. Check the official competition website for current eligibility rules.

Teams should have completed at least one course in public international law before competing. The compromis assumes familiarity with foundational concepts β€” sources of international law, state responsibility, jurisdiction, and treaty interpretation. Subject-specific knowledge (UNCLOS, environmental law, use of force) is developed during preparation for the specific problem.

Both are important. Strong memorials establish your team’s analytical credibility and provide the foundation for oral arguments. However, oral rounds are where rankings are determined for the knockout stages, and best oralist awards carry significant prestige. The ideal strategy is to invest heavily in memorials first, then use the remaining time before oral rounds to perfect your courtroom delivery.

Moot court compromis are designed to be arguable from both sides. If one side appears weaker, it may be that the strongest arguments haven’t been identified yet β€” or that the judges will be especially impressed by a team that makes a compelling case for the underdog. Focus on finding the strongest possible arguments for your side rather than lamenting the assignment. Judges evaluate the quality of advocacy, not which side wins.

When asked about unsettled areas (e.g., cyber operations, autonomous weapons, climate obligations), acknowledge the legal uncertainty honestly. Present the strongest arguments from existing authorities β€” treaties, customary law, general principles β€” and reason by analogy. Judges reward intellectual honesty and sophisticated engagement with developing law more than false certainty about contested propositions.

Section XII

Final Word

The Asia-Pacific Century of International Law

The Asia-Pacific region is at the centre of the most consequential developments in international law today. Maritime boundary disputes in the South China Sea and the East China Sea are testing the limits of UNCLOS. Climate change threatens Pacific Island nations with existential consequences that the law is only beginning to address. Trade disputes, investment flows, and regional organisations are creating new legal architectures that will shape the international order for decades.

The Asia Cup Moot Court Competition prepares you to participate in these developments not as a spectator but as a practitioner. Every memorial you draft, every oral argument you deliver, every judicial question you field is training for the real work of international law β€” the work of resolving disputes peacefully, upholding the rule of law between sovereign states, and building a legal order that reflects the diversity and complexity of the region you will serve.

Approach this competition with intellectual rigour, diplomatic grace, and the conviction that the law matters. The skills you develop here β€” analytical precision, persuasive advocacy, cross-cultural collaboration β€” will define your career in international law. The Asia-Pacific needs lawyers who understand both the universal principles of international law and the particular challenges of the region. Be one of them.

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Proven strategies used by winning teams across international moot court competitions.

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Step-by-step guidance on drafting persuasive, well-researched memorials that score high.

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