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Showing posts from September 23, 2025

The Role of Moot Courts and Internships in Legal Education

  Legal education is often described as a blend of theory and practice. However, the real challenge lies in striking a balance between the two, so that students do not remain passive learners of law but instead evolve into active participants in the legal system. In this context, moot courts and internships serve a meta-function: they are not merely activities within legal education, but essential instruments that transform abstract knowledge into lived experience. https://jimsgn.org/ At a surface level, moot courts simulate courtroom proceedings. Students draft memorials, cite precedents, and present oral arguments. But their deeper value lies in functioning as laboratories where legal reasoning is tested in practice. The process of mooting forces students to step beyond rote learning and engage with law critically—questioning interpretations, constructing arguments, and anticipating counter-arguments. Moot courts act as mirrors of the legal system within the university space...