The complete procedural framework for all UN body simulations — General Assembly, Security Council, ECOSOC, UNHRC, and specialised agencies. The foundational ROP every MUN delegate must master, with detailed coverage of every rule, point, and motion.
UNA-USA (United Nations Association of the USA) format is the most globally prevalent Rules of Procedure framework used at Model United Nations conferences. Developed by the United Nations Association of the United States, it provides a standardised procedural scaffold that governs committee conduct across the widest possible range of simulations — from General Assembly bodies (UNGA committees I through VI) to the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), the Security Council, and specialised agencies including UNICEF, WHO, and UNESCO.
Understanding UNA-USA is the foundational skill for any delegate — because regardless of your committee, conference, or country assignment, this procedure is the common language of MUN. It standardises how debate opens, how delegates secure speaking time, how working papers develop into draft resolutions, how amendments modify those resolutions, and how the committee reaches its final collective verdict through a structured voting procedure.
Mastering UNA-USA means mastering MUN itself: once you have internalised the Speakers' List, the caucus system, the amendment process, and the nuances of Points and Motions, you can walk into any committee at any conference and operate with complete procedural authority. The rules covered in this guide are recognised at conferences across Delhi NCR and across the world.
Every rule, point, and motion you need to operate in any UN body simulation. From opening roll call to final voting procedure.
Walking into committee prepared is the single largest advantage you can give yourself. Here is a systematic preparation framework every delegate should follow.
Your committee's study guide is written by the Executive Board and contains the exact scope they want debated. Read it at least twice — once for general understanding, once to identify gaps and provocative questions. The EB will not ask about things outside the study guide scope.
Identify where your assigned country stands on the agenda topic. Check official government statements, UN voting records, foreign ministry communiqués, and past General Assembly resolutions. Know which blocs your country aligns with — G77, NAM, Western Group, WEOG — and why.
Your opening remarks are your first impression. Structure it around: (1) your country's position on the topic, (2) one specific policy proposal or priority, and (3) a call to action or coalition signal. Do not read a definition. Do not fill time with pleasantries. Every sentence should carry substance.
Most UNA-USA committees have two potential topics. Know both, but go deeper on Topic 1 — committees typically debate it first. Understand the historical context, existing UN frameworks (previous resolutions, treaties, conventions), current developments, and the range of state positions from hardline to reform-minded.
Read this guide until the procedure is instinctive. You should know without hesitation: how to second a motion, what to include in a moderated caucus motion, how to yield time, and what points can interrupt a speaker. Procedural confidence makes you look experienced from your very first session.
Think in advance about what operative clauses you want your bloc's resolution to contain. Draft 3–4 potential operative clauses for your country's priority issues. Going into unmoderated caucus with draft language ready is a massive advantage — you become a drafter, not just a signatory.
These are the most frequent procedural errors at MUN conferences. Know them before you walk into committee — and you will already be ahead of most first-timers.
A Point of Information cannot interrupt a speaker — only a Point of Order or Point of Personal Privilege can. If you raise your placard during a speech for a PoI, the Dais will rule you out of order. Wait for the speaker to finish, then raise your hand.
When the Speakers' List is empty and no one adds themselves, the committee moves to voting. You cannot ask to speak at that point. If you have more to say, you need to move to reopen the Speakers' List before it is exhausted.
When you yield your remaining time to another delegate, that delegate receives your remaining time — but they cannot yield it again to a third person. This is a frequent procedural error that the Dais will correct. If your delegate tries to re-yield, the Dais will move on.
A motion for a Moderated Caucus must include three elements: the topic of the caucus, the total duration, and the speaking time per delegate. Missing any one of these will cause the Dais to rule the motion incomplete and ask you to restate it.
A Point of Order addresses a procedural error by the Dais — not a factual disagreement with a speaker's argument. If a delegate makes a statement you disagree with, the correct response is to use your speaking time or a Point of Information, not a Point of Order. Misusing it marks you as procedurally unprepared.
Giving a speech about what the agenda topic is — rather than what your country's specific position and proposal is — is the hallmark of an unprepared delegate. The Dais and other delegates will notice immediately. Always lead with your country's stance, not a definition.
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