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How to adjudicate a debate and decide a winner

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When you judge a debate, your job is to reflect what happened in that debate to determine a winner.

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Basic approach is to ask “which team most persuaded me that their side or position was correct.”

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Style, strategy and content are all relevant categories for determining which teams persuaded you that their side was correct.

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When deciding a winner, the best approach is to look at “areas of clash” or the “main issues” that have emerged over the course of the debate.

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What is an area of clash?

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In all debates material from both teams will relate, or come under the umbrella, of a larger broader issue.

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In debates, there will be several significant areas of clash or main issues that the result of the debate depends on.

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E.g.

  • What is the correct moral position in the debate?
  • How will a particular stakeholder be impacted by the policy?
  • What will the societal impact of a policy be?

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For example in a debate on “This house would remove sanctions on Cuba,” the main issues could be:

  • Is it moral to impose sanctions on Cuba?
  • Are sanctions effective in creating internal regime change in Cuba?

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These areas of clash emerge from the material from both teams in the debate - whether it be substantive material or rebuttal.

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The areas of clash will always depend on the material in a particular debate. �They should cover the important material in that debate.

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Part of judging is deciding which team won each area of clash.��The other part is weighing the importance of each area in terms of the overall debate.

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How do you decide which team has won an area of clash?

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This involves elements of style, content and strategy.

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You should first look at how well substantiated or developed a point is in a team’s case - how much did they prove the material on its own?

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This includes:�

  • Looking at mechanisms (have they explained why the point/outcome will happen in the way they say it will)

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  • Do they have persuasive examples that assist to prove the point they are making?�
  • What is the effect of the point they are making? How much does it matter?

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Second, you should look at how each team has engaged with the opposing team’s material (“rebuttal”).

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Rebuttal relates both to negating material from the opposing team and also in many cases reducing its significance in a debate.

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Often substantive material from both teams will indirectly relate to one another.

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Third, the relative prioritisation of material will be relevant - when did the material come out in the debate and how much time was spent on it?

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Overall, you should aim to be comparative.

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Look at the material of both teams, how they have engaged, and decide which team has been more persuasive for the issue at the end.

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This can involve deciding what is the most likely response by stakeholders/actors to a policy based on both teams material?

E.g. How citizens of Cuba react to sanctions

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How do you decide a winner based on these areas of clash?

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Involves a weighing up of the areas of clash in the debate.

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Depends on:

  • To what extent has a team won an area of clash?
  • What has a team proven through that area of clash? What is its significance in the debate?
  • Overall, what appeared to be the biggest issue in the debate?