Mooting captures a law student's attention perhaps like no other co-curricular activity. Mooting is a highly useful, competitive activity. It helps you develop the core skills of research and writing, argumentation and presentation, and teamwork. Many excellent mooters land up with top internship and job offers solely on the basis of the mooting capabilities.
A good moot court competition is a journey towards self-development. HRIL provides for a quality pattern of mooting culture which will help students learn the fundamentals and the advanced aspects of mooting. It is not only the participating teams who put in their effort for the competition, the Moot Court Society comprising of faculties and students also worked hard to make this a huge success. Workshops were conducted by Moot Court Society for the students to motivate them to take part followed by another workshop where in they were briefed about the benefits and importance of Moot Court Competition and how it will help them to become more confident and better person in their life.
It is a replica of real court proceedings -a tool of persuasive advocacy to train the future generation of lawyers. It consists of two teams- Defendants and Respondents. The mooting presents a hypothetical case and both teams are required to research it and represent their arguments.