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MUN/Bee Model United Nations
Part of the Bee Model United Nations series

Bee Model United Nations

Prague, Czechia · high-school

Summary

Bee Model United Nations convenes in Prague for a compact, single-day edition aimed at high-school delegates. The conference is listed on mymun and operates on a tight schedule that compresses opening ceremonies, committee debate, and closing votes into one working day in the Czech capital. For delegates weighing their autumn calendar, BeeMUN offers a focused European stop that pairs the accessibility of a one-day format with the seriousness of a full committee cycle. The event is positioned for secondary-school students rather than university circuits, which shapes both the tone of debate and the kind of preparation that pays off.

Country perspectives

Where the most-relevant 11 countries stand on the dominant committee topic. Click through for the full country dossier.

GermanyGermany

A likely high-volume sending country given proximity and the density of MUN-active schools.

Role: German delegations often anchor European blocs and bring structured drafting habits that other delegates can learn from.

FranceFrance

Another core European sending market with a strong school-level MUN tradition.

Role: French delegates tend to push procedurally tight debate, useful in a one-day format where time discipline decides outcomes.

UkraineUkraine

Increasingly visible at European high-school conferences as Ukrainian schools rebuild international engagement.

Role: Ukrainian delegates bring direct relevance to security and humanitarian agendas that frequently appear on European MUN topic lists.

TürkiyeTürkiye

A regional power whose foreign-policy positioning is a regular study case in European committees.

Role: Turkey is often assigned as a swing actor in Middle East and migration debates, which makes it a high-skill allocation for ambitious delegates.

United StatesUnited States

A standard high-demand allocation that tests whether a delegate can defend an unpopular position with substance.

Role: Representing the United States rewards delegates who can articulate domestic constraints on foreign-policy choices rather than relying on power alone.

ChinaChina

Equally high-demand and often assigned to experienced delegates capable of holding the P5 line.

Role: China's positions on sovereignty, development financing, and climate are recurring fault lines worth pre-drafting clauses around.

BrazilBrazil

A bridging voice between developed and developing blocs in most committee topics.

Role: Brazilian delegates often broker compromise language, which is a high-yield strategy in single-day formats.

IndiaIndia

A rising voice whose positions diverge interestingly from both Western and Chinese blocs.

Role: India is a strong allocation for delegates who want to lead a non-aligned coalition without being pinned to a single ideological bloc.

ArgentinaArgentina

A useful Latin American allocation for delegates focused on economic and human-rights agendas.

Role: Argentine positioning often supplies workable middle-ground language between G77 and OECD blocs.

AustraliaAustralia

A Western-aligned but regionally distinct voice that frequently shapes Indo-Pacific debates.

Role: Australian delegates tend to push pragmatic, implementation-focused clauses that survive contested votes.

VanuatuVanuatu

A small-state allocation with outsized moral authority on climate questions.

Role: Vanuatu is the strongest pick for delegates planning to lead climate-vulnerable coalitions.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Single-day conferences occupy a particular niche in the Model UN ecosystem. They reward delegates who arrive with sharp position papers, pre-drafted clauses, and a clear sense of which blocs they want to build with - because there is no second day to recover from a slow start. For high-school delegates still calibrating their style, that pressure is exactly the point. Prague's location also matters. A conference in the Czech capital is reachable for delegations from across the European Union and neighbouring regions, which tends to produce committee rooms where students encounter peers trained in different debate traditions. That exposure is harder to replicate at conferences that draw mainly from one national circuit. Finally, BeeMUN's listing on a major aggregator signals that it is competing for the same delegates who shop conferences across the continent. For chairs, organisers, and faculty advisors, the relevant question is whether the substantive agenda - committees, topics, and crisis design - justifies the travel cost relative to longer-format alternatives in the same season.

Key topics & committees

  • topic specific research

    In a one-day conference, the delegates who do focused topic research before arrival consistently out-perform those relying on general knowledge. This lesson covers how to compress that work.

    Glossary entry →
  • climate environmental positions

    Climate clauses appear in committee topics far beyond UNEP, and BeeMUN's European audience makes environmental positioning a likely fault line in several committees.

    Glossary entry →
  • researching your country

    The fastest route to committee credibility is knowing your country's voting history, treaty commitments, and current red lines - which matters even more when you only get one day to demonstrate it.

    Glossary entry →
  • awards and strategy

    Single-day formats compress the window in which chairs can observe each delegate. Understanding how chairs actually score performance changes how you allocate your speaking time.

    Glossary entry →
  • the art of note passing

    Back-channel coordination decides which draft resolution reaches a vote, and in a tight schedule, the delegates who write the most useful notes shape the outcome.

    Glossary entry →
  • mock committee session

    Running a mock committee with your delegation before travel converts rules of procedure into reflex, which is the single biggest predictor of performance for newer delegates.

    Glossary entry →

How to prepare

Because the conference runs on a compressed schedule, preparation should be front-loaded. Delegates should arrive with position papers already internalised, opening speeches rehearsed, and at least two draft operative clauses in their notes. The single-day format leaves almost no room for delegates who plan to learn their topic in the room. For high-school delegates in particular, the highest-leverage prep is country-specific. Knowing your assigned state's voting record, alliance structure, and red lines lets you move quickly when blocs form in the first unmoderated caucus. Our guide on [[Researching Your Country](/learn/lessons/researching-your-country)](/learn/lessons/researching-your-country) and the companion [[Topic-Specific Deep Dives](/learn/lessons/topic-specific-research)](/learn/lessons/topic-specific-research) are the right starting points. Delegates who want to convert preparation into recognition should also study how awards actually get decided in short conferences, where chairs have limited observation time per delegate. Our [Awards and Strategy](/learn/lessons/awards-and-strategy) lesson covers how to be legible to a chair under time pressure, and [The Art of Note-Passing](/learn/lessons/the-art-of-note-passing) addresses the back-channel work that often decides which draft resolution survives to a vote. For first-time delegates or those bringing a new school delegation, running a [Mock Committee Session](/learn/lessons/mock-committee-session) in the weeks before travel is the single most useful preparation step. It turns abstract rules of procedure into muscle memory, which matters disproportionately when the entire conference fits inside one day.

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Oct 25, 2026 – Oct 25, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is BeeMUN aimed at?

    The conference is positioned for high-school delegates, with the agenda and committee design calibrated to that level rather than to university circuits.

  • Where does the conference take place?

    BeeMUN is held in Prague, in the Czech Republic, which makes it accessible to delegations travelling from across Europe.

  • How long does the conference run?

    BeeMUN is structured as a single-day event, with opening, committee sessions, and closing all completed within one working day in Prague.

  • How should delegates prepare differently for a one-day format?

    Preparation has to be front-loaded - position papers, opening speeches, and draft operative clauses should be ready before arrival, because there is no second day to recover lost ground. This is especially important at the high-school level.

  • Where can I register or find official details?

    BeeMUN is listed on mymun, which is the canonical source for registration timelines and committee details for the Prague edition.

Last verified May 27, 2026 · Source: mymun.com

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