Everything first-time delegates need to know — from the preparation checklist to what actually happens on Day 1 in committee. Read this once before your first conference and you will walk in with more confidence than 80% of the room.
A typical MUN conference runs over two to three days and follows a predictable structure once you have seen it once. It begins with registration — usually the morning of Day 1 — where you collect your delegate badge, placard, and conference materials including your study guide if you haven't already received it.
An opening ceremony follows, usually in a large auditorium, featuring welcoming remarks from the Secretary-General, key officials, and sometimes a keynote speaker. This is ceremonial — your real work begins in committee.
Committee sessions are the heart of the conference. Each committee meets in its own room with delegates seated behind their nameplates, facing a Dais (the Executive Board — typically a Director and two or three Co-Directors). Sessions last 2–3 hours each, with multiple sessions across the conference days. The room is smaller and more intimate than you might expect — this is a conversation, not a lecture theatre.
Between and after sessions, social events — cultural programmes, delegate socials — provide informal networking time. The conference concludes with a closing ceremonywhere awards (Best Delegate, Outstanding Delegate, Verbal Mention, etc.) are announced for each committee. The experience is intense, intellectually demanding, and — for most delegates — deeply addictive from the very first conference.
Day 1 morning. Collect your badge, placard, and conference materials. Report to your committee room on time for the first session.
All delegates gather for opening remarks from the Secretary-General and key figures. Ceremonial — usually 45–90 minutes.
The core of the conference. 3–6 sessions across conference days, each 2–3 hours. Debate, caucusing, lobbying, and resolution writing.
Final ceremony where committee awards are announced. Best Delegate, Outstanding Delegate, and Verbal Mentions are presented by each committee's EB.
Usually provided at registration. Your placard is raised to signal points, motions, and to get on the speakers list — keep it on your desk at all times.
Essential for taking notes on speeches, drafting chit content, noting research, and drafting resolution clauses during unmoderated caucus. Bring at least three pens.
Hard copies are better than phone screens in committee — you can annotate them. Print double-sided. If your conference required a position paper, bring a copy for yourself.
Western business formal or Indian ethnic formal for all committee sessions and ceremonies. Comfortable formal shoes — you will be in them all day, and some sessions require you to stand.
Debates are long and rooms can be dry. A refillable water bottle is a practical necessity. Most conferences have water stations on the floor.
Key facts, statistics, quotes from official sources, and draft operative clauses you prepared in advance. Having these organised and accessible saves you time in the heat of debate.
Exactly what happens when you walk into committee for the first time. No surprises.
Delegates sit behind nameplates organised by country or party. Find yours, place your placard on the desk, and review your notes while waiting for the session to start. The Dais will be seated at the front, facing the delegates.
The Director calls each country/party by name. Respond with 'Present' (allows abstentions later) or 'Present and Voting' (commits you to vote Aye or Nay on all substantive matters this session — no abstentions permitted). In AIPPM, you simply confirm attendance.
In the first session, a delegate moves to open the Speakers' List and sets the speaking time. Raise your placard to get on the list. The Director will record your name and call on you when it's your turn.
Committees with two topics must vote to decide which topic to debate first. Know which topic you prefer and why — be ready to give a 30-second speech advocating for your choice if needed.
When your name is called, stand at your seat or approach a designated podium (varies by conference). State your country/party name, deliver your prepared opening remarks, and yield to the Dais when done. You will be nervous — everyone is their first time. Take a breath, speak slowly, and let your preparation carry you.
After speeches, raise a Point of Information (UNA-USA) or Point of Information (AIPPM) to ask the speaker a sharp, targeted question. Do not ask questions you do not know the answer to — the best PoIs expose contradictions or demand specifics the speaker hasn't provided.
When a delegate moves for an unmoderated caucus and it passes, the formal structure pauses. Delegates get up and move around the room freely to talk. This is your chance to introduce yourself to aligned delegations, share your position, and begin negotiating the direction of a working paper. It feels chaotic at first — dive in anyway.
Identify a group drafting a working paper whose direction aligns with your country's position. Ask to join as a sponsor or signatory. Offer your draft operative clauses. Contributing language is what earns award recognition — not just talking in formal debate.
Unused speaking time signals a lack of preparation. If you have 60 seconds, fill 55–60 of them with substantive content. Practice your speech beforehand so you know it fits the time without padding or rushing. The Dais notices delegates who consistently use their full time.
Looking down at your notes the entire time makes you appear unprepared and disengaged. Use your notes as a prompt, not a script. Write bullet points, not full sentences — then speak from understanding rather than reading. Periodic eye contact with the Dais demonstrates confidence.
Open with your country's clear stance on the issue. Follow with your strongest argument (backed by a fact or example). Conclude with a specific call to action — what you want the committee to do. Three clear elements, every speech, every time.
Reading verbatim from a script kills engagement and credibility. Write your speech as bullet points, practice it out loud beforehand, and then speak naturally. The version you deliver from memory will always sound more authoritative than the version you read.
Nervousness makes most people speak faster. The fix is deliberate: slow down, breathe, and pause between sentences. Pauses read as authority in a committee room — they signal that you are choosing your words, not rushing through them. The second time you speak will be easier than the first.
While another delegate is speaking, note one or two sharp questions you can raise. Don't wait until the speech ends to think of a question — you won't have time. The best PoIs identify a logical gap, demand a specific statistic, or expose an ideological inconsistency in the speaker's argument.
Delegates who cite specific data points, name actual UN resolutions or government reports, and demonstrate genuine understanding of the issue's complexity stand out immediately from those who speak in generalities.
Generic positions that every delegate for your country would give are forgettable. Original analysis — a counter-intuitive argument, a fresh framing, a specific proposal no one else raised — is what EBs remember and reward.
Points, caucus motions, lobbying during unmoderated caucus, chit writing (in AIPPM) — a delegate who participates only through speeches will score below one who participates through every available mechanism.
The language you contribute to working papers and draft resolutions is a direct measure of your substantive impact on the committee. EBs pay attention to who is drafting and who is signing.
Your votes, speeches, and coalition decisions should be ideologically coherent. Voting against a clause you sponsored, or suddenly reversing your country's position without justification, damages your credibility with the EB.
Delegates who lead the drafting of working papers, who build consensus across competing positions, and who bring swing-vote delegations into their coalition demonstrate the highest level of committee engagement.
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