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Topicality

Topicality. A guide to preventing affirmative shenanigans. Part I. Topicality Basics. What Is Topicality?. Topicality is a test for determining whether or not an affirmative plan falls under the broader resolution This year, the resolution is:

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Topicality

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  1. Topicality A guide to preventing affirmative shenanigans

  2. Part I Topicality Basics

  3. What Is Topicality? • Topicality is a test for determining whether or not an affirmative plan falls under the broader resolution • This year, the resolution is: • Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its economic engagement toward Cuba, Mexico or Venezuela. • If a plan is topical, it falls under the topic listed above, and is an example of the resolution • Example: Lifting the Cuban Embargo • If a plan is not topical, it will be unrelated to or only tangentially related to the resolution • Example: Trade with Brazil

  4. The Structure of Topicality (Neg) • A. Interpretation • The interpretation defines the word (or words) in the topic that the affirmative violates, using carded evidence • B. Violation • The violation explains how the affirmative plan falls outside of the definition(s) laid out in the interpretation • C. Standards • Standards are reasons to prefer your interpretation • Common negative standards include limits, ground, and predictability • D. Voters • Voters are reasons that the affirmative team should be rejected

  5. The Structure of Topicality (AFF) • A. We Meet • The “We Meet” argues that the affirmative plan is topical under the negative’s interpretation of the resolution • B. Counter-Interpretation • The affirmative redefines the words that the negative defined in the 1NC violation • C. We Meet the Counter-Interpretation • The affirmative explains how their plan falls under their counter-interpretation • D. Standards • See above • Common affirmative standards include ground and education • E. Not a Voter • Explain why topicality should not be a voting issue

  6. Special Types of Topicality • Extra-Topicality • Part of the plan is topical, but the plan also includes other, non-topical components • Example: Lift the Cuba embargo and have peace talks with North Korea • Unfair because affirmative teams can claim advantages from actions that have nothing to do with the resolution • Effects-Topicality • The result of the plan is a topical action, but the plan itself is not topical • Example: Remove Venezuela from the Terror Watch List • Unfair because there are nearly infinite actions that could eventually result in the goal of the resolution

  7. Why Does Topicality Matter? • In Debate • Non-topical cases are annoying • Requires more research time • Skews the debate to one side • In the Real World • Legal procedural rules matter • http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/26/tech/social-media/texas-filibuster-twitter/index.html

  8. Part II Debating Topicality

  9. Tip #1: Stay Organized • Basic Format • Short overview on top explaining the interpretation and violation, your best standards, and why the impacts to those standards outweigh • Then, answer the affirmative arguments specifically • Think of topicality like a disadvantage • Alternative Format • Forgo the overview and embed your argument extensions in the line-by-line • For example, do your “impact calc” during the standards debate

  10. Tip #2: Do Evidence Comparison • Source Qualifications • What are the qualifications of the author? • Are the qualifications relevant to the question at hand? • How predictable is a definition to a given source? • Intent to Define • Is the author defining a word, or just using it? • If they are defining it, what are they defining it for? • Topicality evidence is often cut out of context • Especially true with “substantial” debates

  11. Example:

  12. Tip #3: Do Impact Calculus • Fairness vs. Education • Types of Education • Research, critical thinking, advocacy skills, etc. • Breadth vs. Depth • Possible Comparisons • Real world importance • How important are certain types of education (or fairness) in the real world? • Necessity of debate • Is debate necessary to teach the skill? • Implications for other impacts • How does a lack of fairness effect education?

  13. Tip #4: Frame The Debate • Competing Interpretations • The debate should be won by the team that has the best interpretation of the topic, which is determined by the standards • It’s the only objective way to determine the debate • Reasonability • The debate should be won by the affirmative as long as their interpretation of the topic is a reasonable one, even if it isn’t the BEST one • Reasonability is way more persuasive if you define what it means to be “reasonable”

  14. Tip #5: Pick and Choose Arguments • Standards = Advantages • Think of each standard as an “advantage” to your interpretation • You don’t have to win all of your advantages to win a debate • Same with topicality standards—just pick the BEST one and compare it to the other team’s standards

  15. Tip #6: Know Your Judge • Smelko Effect • Smelko hates topicality, and he’s not the only one • Even judges who don’t hate T are hesitant to vote on it • Perceived as a “cheap shot” • Truth is Key • If an affirmative seems un-topical on face, judges are far more likely to vote against it • Especially true at the beginning and end of the season

  16. Part III Topicality This Year

  17. Economic Engagement • Types of Economic Engagement • Trade, finance, etc. • System of incentives • Not cultural, political, or military • Positive vs. Negative • Possible that one could engage “negatively” • “Engagement is positive” evidence is okay • Conditional vs. Unconditional • Economic engagement is probably both • T-QPQ is a bad argument

  18. ITS • Direct Engagement • “Its economic engagement” refers to the United States federal government • Third Party Engagement • Some evidence suggests that “U.S. engagement” can go through a third party • This is probably extra-topical

  19. Toward • Highly Broad • Means “in the direction of” • Much less limiting than “to” or “for” • Uncertainty • Including “toward” in the resolution provides additional support for affirmatives that give conditional aid • Third Parties • NGOs, internal groups, etc. all can be included “towards” one of the topic countries • Engagement doesn’t necessarily have to be with the government of the country

  20. Cuba, Venezuela, OR MExico • Who is the target of our aid? • Governments • Cuba, Mexico, and Venezuela = Governments • Groups and/or the People • Cuba, Mexico, and Venezuela = People/Groups • Critical affirmatives could potentially go this route • Likely these affirmatives will be read at some point

  21. Limiting the Topic • Option 1: Mechanism • The plan itself must be economic engagement • Problem: Limits out incentives for economic engagement, which is the core of the literature • Option 2: Goal • Goal of the plan must be economic engagement • Problem: Too broad, and allows for effects topicality • Option 3: Target • Must be government to government • Problem: No Venezuela affirmatives

  22. THE END

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