MAMUN
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 Meetings Work at MAMUN...
Because many Delegations to the Mid-American Model
United Nations have participated in other Model UN's and because the
rules of procedure at MAMUN closely resemble the rules used at the
real United Nations, we offer you this brief overview on how meetings
will be run at our conference. Definitions:
Here are a couple of terms you should keep in mind
when reading this article and throughout the MAMUN conference: Item:
refers to an agenda topic, not to a resolution, amendment or
other motion. For example
the items before the Political Committee are topics A, B, C, D and E,
on the former Yugoslavia, Middle East, etc. Adjourn:
to kill an item or session.
It is an irrevocable action of the committee. Suspend a
Meeting:
a recess of session to be resumed at a specific time.
The following is a discussion of some things we think
will make your participation in committee and General Assembly
sessions easier and more productive.
This notice is not part
of the rules of procedure.
Some of the ideas presented below cannot be considered part of the
official rules. I.
Agendas are pre-set.
The agenda for the General Assembly and its
committees is pre-set.
Topics will be discussed in the order of which topic has the most
number of resolutions submitted prior to the conference.
In the General Assembly you will rotate through the committees,
one topic at a time, in the order set by each committee in its report
to the General Assembly.
In order to cover the most topics possible, delegates should exercise
great restraint in attempting to change the order of agenda.
In the event of an international emergency, a change in the
order of agenda may be desirable, otherwise changes often impede the
progress of the body.
Once a topic is on the floor of a committee, the
chair will open a speakers’ list --
the only speakers’ list that
will be opened for the topic.
The initial order of the speakers will be by random selection.
The Chairperson will call for any nations wishing to speak on
the topic. A computerized
system will randomize the list
so as to prevent favoritism.
After the initial list of speakers has been exhausted, any
speaker may be added to the list, even if that speaker has already
spoken. The committee may
limit the number of times a speaker may appear on the list, though
initially, it is probably not a good idea to limit the list in this
way. III.
Resolutions and amendments are debated concurrently.
During the course of debate, a delegate may move to
the floor any of the resolutions contained in the resolution packet.
If the motion to consider that resolution receives a second,
the chair will ask if at least 1/3 of the committee members agree to
consider that resolution.
Any number of resolutions may
be on the floor at once.
The same is true of amendments.
Speakers may address their comments to any of the resolutions
and/or amendments that the committee has approved for discussion by
the 1/3 vote. IV.
Voting is normally done by show of hands.
Roll call votes should be very rare.
In the real United Nations less than 5% of all votes are
recorded. Votes on
amendments should almost never be done by roll call or electronic
means. Even resolutions
should be voted on by show of hands whenever possible. V.
Closing Debate versus Adjourning Debate.
Closing debate on an item (topic area) brings an end
to discussion of all resolutions and amendments that have been moved
to the floor. The chair
will order the amendments from furthest to least removed in substance
from the resolution being amended, and call for a vote on each
amendment. If the passage
of one amendment necessarily conflicts with the content of another
amendment, no vote will be taken on the second amendment.
For example, if an amendment calls for $1,000,000 in aid to The
Committee to Save the Artichoke Hearts, and a second amendment calls
for $20 in aid to be sent to the same group, the $1,000,000 amendment
will be voted on first. If
it passes, no vote will be taken on the $20 amendment.
It will, in essence, have failed because the first one passed.
Voting on resolutions will be taken in the order in which they
were brought to the floor, unless the committee decides otherwise.
There are two ways to end debate on an item.
The first way to end debate is to adjourn debate on that item.
This has the effect of
killing permanently all debate on that topic for the duration of
MAMUN. There is no way to
"un-adjourn" a topic.
The most common way to end debate on an item is to close debate.
At that point all resolutions and amendments will be voted on
in accordance with the procedures described above.
Again, do not move to adjourn an item unless you wish to permanently
kill that item and all resolutions within that item!!
What you should have noticed in reading this article
is that, at MAMUN, we emphasize substantive debate just as in the real
United Nations. Procedural
motions have serious consequences for the meeting and should not be
made frivolously. Each
committee has five topics, which has to be accomplished in a short
time. If you come prepared
to debate, then do that, and don't allow any delegate or set of
delegates to dominate the meetings with procedural motions.
Procedural motions have their place, but that place is to
facilitate substantive debate, not replace it.
© 2009 Mid-American Global Education Council PO Box 8411, Ann Arbor, MI 48107 (231) 758-2413 mamun@mamunonline.com |