Australasian Intervarsity Debating Championships

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The Australasian Intervarsity Debating Championships (known colloquially as Australs) is one of the world's largest debating tournaments, second only in size to the World Universities Debating Championship, and one of the largest annual student events in the world. Australs follows the Australia-Asia three-speakers-plus-replies format, rather than the British Parliamentary Style of 'Worlds'. It is held annually during early July, under the auspices of the Australasian Intervarsity Debating Association (AIDA). The host university is selected a year before at a meeting of the AIDA Council.

Since the inaugural tournament at the University of Sydney in 1975, Australs has continually expanded the scope of its participants, now attracting around 300 competitors each year from around the Asia-Pacific region. Teams come from Australia, Bangladesh, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and the Philippines.[1]

The best speaker of the tournament is awarded the "Martin Sorensen Best Speaker Prize". In 2006 the tournament was hosted by New Zealand's Victoria University of Wellington, where the inaugural "Jock Fanselow Cup for Best Speaker in the Grand Final" was awarded. Australs will next be held at Malaysia's Universiti Teknologi MARA during July 2007, whose website can be accessed here.

Contents

[edit] Past Hosts and Champions

Year Hosts Champions
1975 University of Sydney (Australia)
1976 University of Melbourne (Australia)
1977
1978 University of Sydney (Australia)
1979 University of Sydney (Australia)
1980 University of Canterbury (New Zealand) Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand)
1981 Monash University (Australia) University of Sydney (Australia)
1982 Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand) Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand)
1983 University of Adelaide (Australia)
1984 University of New South Wales (Australia)
1985 University of Auckland (New Zealand) University of Sydney (Australia)
1986 University of Melbourne (Australia) University of Sydney (Australia)
1987 Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand) University of Sydney (Australia)
1988 National University of Singapore (Singapore) University of Sydney (Australia)
1989 Australian National University (Australia) Australian National University (Australia)
1990 University of Adelaide (Australia) University of Sydney (Australia)
1991 University of Melbourne (Australia) Australian National University (Australia)
1992 University of Sydney (Australia) Monash University (Australia)
1993 International Islamic University (Malaysia) Monash University (Australia)
1994 University of Tasmania (Australia) Macquarie University (Australia)
1995 Monash University (Australia) University of Sydney (Australia)
1996 Australian National University (Australia) Monash University (Australia)
1997 De La Salle University (Philippines) University of Sydney (Australia)
1998 University of Sydney (Australia) Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand)
1999 Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand) University of Sydney (Australia)
2000 Monash University (Australia) Monash University (Australia)
2001 Nanyang Technological University (Singapore) Monash University (Australia)
2002 University of Melbourne (Australia) University of Melbourne (Australia)
2003 Multimedia University (Malaysia) University of Sydney (Australia)
2004 University of Technology, Sydney (Australia) Monash University (Australia)
2005 University of Queensland (Australia) University of Sydney (Australia)
2006 Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand) Monash University (Australia)
2007 Universiti Teknologi MARA (Malaysia) To be decided July 2007

[edit] Martin Sorensen Prize for Best Speaker in the Tournament

The Best Speaker Award was first given in 1989. In 1994, it became the "Martin Sorensen Best Speaker Prize" in honour of the well-liked Monash University debater who died only days after winning the award for the second time. It is awarded to the debater with the highest total sum of speaker scores in the opening seven rounds of competition.

Year Speaker University
1989 Richard Douglas Australian National University (Australia)
1990 Richard Newcombe Australian National University (Australia)
1991 Julian Beckedahl Monash University (Australia)
1991 Rufus Black University of Melbourne (Australia)
1992 Martin Sorensen Monash University (Australia)
1993 Martin Sorensen Monash University (Australia)
1994 Tony Burke University of Sydney (Australia)
1994 Christian Porter University of Western Australia (Australia)
1995 Christian Porter University of Western Australia (Australia)
1995 Matthew Richardson University of New South Wales (Australia)
1996 Lizzie Knight Monash University (Australia)
1996 Phillip Senior University of Western Australia (Australia)
1997 Chris Fladgate Monash University (Australia)
1998 Praba Ganesan De La Salle University-Manila (Philippines)
1999 Dan Celm Monash University (Australia)
2000 Kim Little Monash University (Australia)
2001 Steve Bell University of Melbourne (Australia)
2002 Tim Sonnreich Monash University (Australia)
2003 Tim Sonnreich Monash University (Australia)
2004 Mathew Kenneally Australian National University (Australia)
2005 Ivan Ah Sam University of Sydney (Australia)
2006 Elizabeth Sheargold University of Melbourne (Australia)

[edit] Jock Fanselow Cup for Best Speaker in the Grand Final

Year Speaker University
2006 Roland Dillon Monash University (Australia)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mulrooney, Paul. "Students compete in war of words", Stuff, July 3, 2006 (retrieved 10 June 2006).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links