North American Debating Championship
The North American Debating Championship is one of the two official university debate championships of North America. It is sanctioned by the national university debating associations in the United States and Canada, the American Parliamentary Debate Association and the Canadian University Society for Intercollegiate Debate. It has been held each winter on an alternating basis between the United States and Canada since 1992. The host university arranges all judging and is not allowed in the competition. The most frequent hosts have been the University of Toronto and McGill University, which have each hosted the championship three times. Bates College, Cornell University, Johns Hopkins University, and Queen's University have each hosted twice. This tournament, often abbreviated as NorthAms, is not to be confused with the North American Universities Debating Championship, abbreviated as NAUDC, which is hosted separately in the fall of each year as a British Parliamentary Style tournament. The two events are coordinated such that each is hosted by a different country, the United States or Canada, in a given year.
The most recent iteration was held by Dartmouth College in January 2026. The current North American champions are from Stanford University.
Results
[edit ]Since 1992, the most successful university overall has been Yale University with nine championship victories, including three of the last four. Following it is the University of Toronto with seven wins. After that, Princeton University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University and McGill University have two championships each, and no other university has won more than once.
No team has ever repeated as the top team at the championship. Five individuals have won the top team award twice. Most recently, Matthew Song won in 2022 and 2024, representing Yale University. Matthew Wansley of Yale University won back-to-back championships from 2005 to 2007. Prior to that, Nathan MacDonald and Robert Silver won first together for the University of Western Ontario in 1997–1998, then MacDonald for the University of Guelph in 1998–1999, and Silver for the University of Ottawa in 1999–2000. Three people have won the top individual debater award twice: Casey Halladay of the University of Ottawa in 1997–1998 and 1999–2000, Rory Gillis of Yale University in two consecutive years from 2004 to 2006, and Kate Falkenstien of Yale in two consecutive years from 2010 to 2012.
| Year | Host | Champion Team | College | Top Debater | College |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | United States Dartmouth | Claire Beamer & Tejas Subramaniam | United States Stanford | Tejas Subramaniam | United States Stanford University |
| 2025 | Canada Odette | Alessandro Perri & Roy Tiefer | United States UChicago | Elizabeth Li | United States Stanford University |
| 2024 | United States UChicago | Justin Kim & Matthew Song | United States Yale | Ryan Lafferty | United States Dartmouth College |
| 2023 | Canada Western | Ye Joo Han & Matt Mauriello | United States Harvard | Matt Mauriello | United States Harvard University |
| 2022 | United States Brandeis | Cameron Chacon & Matthew Song | United States Yale | Devesh Kodnani | United States University of Chicago |
| 2021 | United States Penn | David Edimo & Eva Quinones | United States Yale | Eva Quinones | United States Yale |
| 2020 | Canada Waterloo | Gautier Boyrie & Chris Pang | Canada Toronto | Samuel Arnesen and Shreyas Kumar | United States Princeton |
| 2019 | United States Rutgers | William Arnesen & Xavier Sottile | United States Yale | Sophia Caldera | United States Harvard |
| 2018 | Canada Toronto | Harry Elliott & David Slater | United States Stanford | Christopher Taylor | United States Yale |
| 2017 | United States Middlebury | Megan Wilson & Kyle Hietala | United States Yale | Nathan Raab | United States Princeton |
| 2016 | Canada Queen's | Anirudh Dasarathy & Brian Litchfield | United States Princeton | Denizhan Uykur | Canada McGill |
| 2015 | United States NYU | Juliana Vigorito & David Israel | United States Hopkins | Shomik Ghosh | United States Michigan |
| 2014 | Canada Ottawa & Carleton | Kaya Ellis & Louis Tsilivis | Canada Toronto | Michael Barton and Veenu Goswami | United States Yale and Canada Toronto |
| 2013 | United States Syracuse | Coulter King & Josh Zoffer | United States Harvard | Coulter King | United States Harvard |
| 2012 | Canada Toronto | Simon Cameron & Romeo Maione | Canada Carleton | Kate Falkenstien | United States Yale |
| 2011 | United States Fordham | Nate Blevins & Pam Brown | United States Yale [1] | Kate Falkenstien | United States Yale |
| 2010 | Canada York | Adam Goldstein & Bill Magnuson | United States MIT [2] [3] | Richard Lizius | Canada Toronto |
| 2009 | United States Amherst | Grant May & Andrew Rohrbach | United States Yale | Mark Samburg | United States Harvard |
| 2008 | Canada Carleton | Jon Laxer & Jason Rogers | Canada Toronto | Josh Bone | United States Yale |
| 2007 | United States Bates | Dylan Gadek & Matthew Wansley | United States Yale | Ian Freeman | Canada Carleton |
| 2006 | Canada Toronto | Ben Eidelson & Matthew Wansley | United States Yale | Rory Gillis | United States Yale |
| 2005 | United States Cornell | Joanna Nairn & Melanie Tharamangalam | Canada Toronto [4] | Rory Gillis | United States Yale |
| 2004 | Canada Queen's | James Renihan & Gordon Shotwell | Canada McGill | Greg Allen | Canada UBC |
| 2003 | United States Hopkins | Phil Larochelle & Patrick Nichols | United States MIT [5] | Emily Schleicher | United States NYU |
| 2002 | Canada McGill | Rory McKeown & Aaron Rousseau | Canada Toronto [6] | Ranjan Agarwal[7] [8] | Canada Ottawa |
| 2001 | United States Cornell | Storey Clayton & Adam Zirkin | United States Brandeis | David Silverman | United States Princeton |
| 2000 | Canada Queen's | Casey Halladay & Robert Silver | Canada Ottawa | Casey Halladay[8] | Canada Ottawa |
| 1999 | United States Smith | Nathan MacDonald & Averill Pessin | Canada Guelph | Jason Goldman | United States Princeton |
| 1998 | Canada McGill | Nathan MacDonald & Robert Silver | Canada Western | Casey Halladay[8] | Canada Ottawa |
| 1997 | United States Hopkins | John Oleske & Niall O'Murchada | United States Princeton | John Oleske | United States Princeton |
| 1996 | Canada Toronto | Matt Cohen & Jamie Springer | Canada McGill | Ron Guirguis | Canada Guelph |
| 1995 | United States Penn | Jeremy Mallory & Neal Potishman | United States Swarthmore | Michael D'Abramo | Canada Toronto |
| 1994 | Canada Dalhousie | Randy Cass & Avery Plaw | Canada Toronto | Avery Plaw | Canada Toronto |
| 1993 | United States Bates | Jason Brent & Thomas Meehan | Canada Toronto | Marc Givens | Canada Queen's |
| 1992 | Canada McGill | Marc Givens & Elicia Maine | Canada Queen's | Ted Cruz | United States Princeton |
North American Public Speaking Championship
[edit ]Every year from 1992 to 2001, and biannually from 2003 to 2007, individual public speaking was also an event at the championship. It was run as a parallel tournament, with a grand public speaking final before the final round of debate. After 2007, it was discontinued as APDA had shortened debating tournaments and discontinued public speaking as a regular event at US tournaments. No individual ever repeated as North American Public Speaking Champion. McGill University and the University of Ottawa each had three public speaking champions, the most of any university.
| Year | Winner | College |
|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Vinay Kumar Mysore | Canada McGill University |
| 2005 | Jason Rogers | Canada McGill University |
| 2004 | Stuart Savelkoul[9] [10] | United States Dickinson State University |
| 2001 | Aidan Johnson | Canada University of Toronto |
| 2000 | Jeremy Holiday | United States Middlebury College |
| 1999 | Mark Bigney | Canada McGill University |
| 1998 | Michael Podgorski | Canada Queen's University |
| 1997 | Jordan Mills | United States University of New Mexico |
| 1996 | Shuman Ghosemajumder | Canada University of Western Ontario |
| 1995 | Marika Giles | Canada Concordia University |
| 1994 | Jake Irving | Canada University of Ottawa |
| 1993 | Michael McKneely | United States Colgate University |
| 1992 | Awanish Sinha | Canada University of Ottawa |
References
[edit ]- ^ "APDAWeb - Results - Fordham NorthAms (2010-2011)". apdaweb.org. Archived from the original on 2016年08月28日. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "News + Video | MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering". meche.mit.edu. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "www.yorku.ca/mediar/archive/Release.php?Release=1811". yorku.ca. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "A Way With Words | World University Debating Championship 2006, U of T Award Winners 2006 | Summer 2016 | University of Toronto Magazine". magazine.utoronto.ca. 18 March 2006. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "2003 CUSID-APDA North American Debating Championships Final Round on Vimeo". vimeo.com. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "Not Just Black and White | U of T at North American Debating Championships, Aaron Rousseau, Rory McKeown | Summer 2016 | University of Toronto Magazine". magazine.utoronto.ca. 2 June 2002. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "Fulcrum 091108". scribd.com. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ a b c "Home | Faculty of Law - Common Law Section | University of Ottawa". commonlaw.uottawa.ca. Retrieved 2016年07月24日.
- ^ "Signal Butte" (PDF). 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010年05月27日.
- ^ "40 Under 40 - Stuart Savelkoul | North Dakota Business Watch". Archived from the original on 2009年11月30日. Retrieved 2010年05月14日.