About Us...
What is Model United Nations?
Model United Nations is program that has been around for over fifty
years in colleges and high schools around the world. The premise is
this: Students assume the roles of ambassadors to the United Nations
and are provided with an agenda comprised of items also being debated
by the real United Nations in New York. Students, acting as delegates,
research the issues from the agenda and study their assigned nation's
point-of-view in order to accurately represent the country.
Upon arriving at a Model United Nations conference, delegates will
meet in committee sessions to debate the issues from the agenda, draft
resolutions, and ultimately arrive at the best solution the committee
can devise. During a conference, delegates are challenged to persuade,
influence, compromise, and ultimately make peace with friends and
strangers while working within a structured process of debate.
How does Model UN operate within my school?
Most schools operate Model United Nations either as a club or as a
class. Generally schools establishing a new Model United Nations
program will create an extracurricular club that meets once a week
before or after school. Each club needs an advisor, or a teacher who
will be responsible for communicating with the Mid-American Global
Education Council (MAGEC) staff and for providing guidance to the
students as they prepare for a Model United Nations conference.
Several successful clubs operate with elected student officers who run
the meetings and track student progress.
Once the number of students in the club has been determined, the
advisor can register for a Model United Nations conference from the
MAGEC web site. Our largest and most popular conference is the
Mid-American Model United Nations Conference (MAMUN) which takes place
every spring. After completing the registration process for this
four-day conference, the advisor will receive confirmation of the
countries that his/her school will be representing. Each country is
represented on four to six different committees; one student will need
to be assigned to each of these committees. This unit of four to six
students representing the same country on different committees is
known as a delegation.
Model United Nations meetings might include practice with
Parliamentary Procedure, student presentations on current events or
historically important events, mock debates on conference agenda
items, or instruction writing resolutions.
What are we expected to do?
The MAMUN Handbook can answer many of your questions regarding
deadlines, rules of procedure, agenda topics, and expectations for
student research. If you have questions, don’t wonder silently! E-mail
us at mamun@mamunonline.com so that we can point you in the right
direction.
Delegates are expected to prepare the following prior to MAMUN:
1. Resolutions from each delegate are highly encouraged; committee
work is largely dependent on these documents, and they will be an
important criterion in determining awards. Delegates should be very
familiar with the resolution writing and amending process by the time
they arrive at MAMUN. ONLY RESOLUTIONS SUBMITTED BY THE DESIGNATED
DEADLINE WILL BE CONSIDERED AT THE CONFERENCE! Please refer to the
MAMUN Handbook for information on resolution format and for submission
guidelines.
2. Opening presentations on the agenda topics are required of many
delegations attending MAMUN. Upon receiving your country assignments,
you will be informed which delegations are responsible for preparing
opening presentations. Again, please refer to the MAMUN Handbook for a
full description of what this presentation entails.
3. A position paper is simply an essay prepared by a delegation that
briefly discusses the country's position on one topic from each
committee. Complete guidelines can be found in the MAMUN Handbook.
Drafting a position paper is a great way for delegations to prepare
for debate.
4. Parliamentary Procedure is a set of procedural rules that govern
the meetings of the United Nations. Those familiar with Robert’s Rules
of Order or any formal board-style meeting rules will have a general
notion of what this is. Students need to be exposed to Parliamentary
Procedure prior to the conference.
This is all that is required. Anything else that can be done to enrich
the students’ knowledge of their nations and the nations' policies
will provide them with an advantage in debate.
What goes on at these conferences?
MAMUN begins on a Wednesday morning with a meeting of the General
Assembly, which is made up of all delegates present. After this
Opening Session, the General Assembly breaks up into five different
committees, each having its own agenda.
Committee sessions will be facilitated by an impartial staff
chairperson, but the delegates will be in charge of the proceedings.
Delegates will direct the debate, decide how much time to spend on
each topic, decide when to break for caucuses (informal working
sessions), and generally run the committee. The staff chairperson will
ensure that the committee remains focused and that procedures are
followed as smoothly as possible.
After two and a half days of debating and amending resolutions, each
General Assembly committee will submit the resolutions it has passed
to the General Assembly. The General Assembly, comprised of all
delegates who are not sitting on the Security Council, will meet from
Friday afternoon until Saturday afternoon. The General Assembly will
discuss topics from each committee and decide whether or not the
resolutions passed in committee will be ratified by the entire body.
During the General Assembly session, other meetings will occupy
delegates for short blocks of time. The International Court of Justice
will meet to hear and evaluate a case, and several delegates will be
invited to participate in meetings to solve a simulated regional
crisis.
At the end of all this negotiating and discussion, the conference is
closed with a meeting of all delegates, advisors, and staff and a
presentation of awards to those who truly distinguished themselves
during the week.
Who is MAGEC?
MAGEC is the Mid-American Global Education Council, an organization of
volunteers that sponsors and directly runs Model United Nations
conferences for high school students. We are a well-seasoned group of
college students and graduates who organize three Model United Nations
conferences each year: the Mid-American Model United Nations
Conference (MAMUN) in March, the Canadian-American Security Councils
(CASC) in December, and the Historical Security Councils (TCHSC) in
late spring.
The members of the MAGEC staff have all been involved with Model
United Nations since our high school years, and we devote our time and
effort to this organization because of our shared belief in the
immeasurable value of Model United Nations. We are dedicated to the
success and perpetuation of this sort of student-centered activity,
and we will do whatever we can to help make Model United Nations
successful at your school.
How can we get more information?
Browsing around the MAGEC web site is the easiest way to familiarize
yourself with our organization and our conferences. In addition, you
can e-mail us at mamun@mamunonline.com with your unanswered questions.
If your school will be attending MAMUN for the first time, you should
e-mail us at mamun@mamunonline.com in order to schedule a date for us
to come and visit your club. We are always happy to do what we can to
support a teacher who has taken the initiative to organize a Model
United Nations program, and we enjoy the opportunity to welcome new
students and advisors to the MAMUN family.