2017 Student Essay Competition
CABA is proud to
announce the 2017 edition of its annual student essay competition. This
competition is an integral part of CABA’s mission to provide a voice to
Canadians in the United States and Americans in Canada and to foster a
greater understanding of rules with cross-border implications as well as
an engagement in their development.
Admissibility
Any student registered in a Canadian or American law school for the
Winter and/or Spring semesters of 2017 (whether in the J.D., LL.B.,
B.C.L. or equivalent first degree program, or in the LL.M.
program). However, students completing doctoral or postdoctoral
studies are not admissible.
In addition, based on this year’s essay theme, students registered in
undergraduate or master’s degree programs which have a mandatory
international law component are also admissible.
Theme
Since the North Agreement Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”), a regional
agreement between Canada, the United States and Mexico to implement a
free trade area, entered into force on January 1, 1994, the two-way trade
between Canada and the United States has more than tripled, reaching some
$2.4 billion in goods and services daily over the course of 2015.[1] Canada is now the top
export destination for 35 American states, while the United States is the
most important destination for Canada’s direct investments abroad.[2]
Despite this increasing level of economic interdependency and trade,
during his campaign for the American presidential election, Donald Trump
qualified NAFTA as the “worst deal ever made” and vowed to withdraw from
the agreement if he cannot achieve a satisfactory renegotiation of the
treaty.[3] In the days following the
election, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared that he was
“happy to talk” about renegotiating NAFTA.[4]
A memo from Mr. Trump’s transition team obtained by the media indicates
that the next American president intends to follow through on the
renegotiation of NAFTA, and more particularly with regards to Canada,
intends to target the rules currently regulating livestock and softwood
lumber.[5]
Since it is likely that renegotiation over NAFTA will commence in 2016,
we invite students to write essays identifying one issue which in their
opinions should be part of the renegotiation of the agreement between
Canada and the United States. The essays should explain why the
issue is in need of renegotiation, how it affects both countries, and how
a renegotiated agreement should address the issue and why.
Rules
The essays should be drafted in English or French, submitted in both Word
and PDF formats, and have no more than 3500 words, including the title
and the footnotes. It should be submitted no later than May 31,
2017 via email at policyandadvocacy@canambar.com.
In the cover email, the student should include the following information:
(a) full name; (b) city of origin; (c) school; (d) program; (e) year
level; (f) address; and (g) phone number.
The winner of the essay will be announced on or before July 31, 2017.[6]
Prize[7]
- $500 USD from our sponsor
Dorsey & Whitney LLP
- Publication of the
winning essay on CABA’s website
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