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MUN/Copenhagen Business School Model United Nations
Copenhagen Business School Model United Nations
Part of the Copenhagen Business School Model United Nations series

Copenhagen Business School Model United Nations

Copenhagen, Denmark · college

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Dates
Mar 11–2027 (day: 14)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
200
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

Copenhagen Business School Model United Nations brings a mid-sized college-level circuit gathering to the Danish capital, hosted on a campus better known for finance and strategy than for diplomatic theatre. The conference positions itself within the broader Northern European MUN scene, drawing delegates who want a serious committee experience without the scale crush of the largest continental conferences. For traveling delegations, CBSMUN reads as a focused spring stop: a business-school setting in Copenhagen, a manageable delegate count, and the kind of committee chamber density where individual performance is visible to chairs rather than buried in the crowd.

Why this edition matters in 2027

Copenhagen sits at an interesting intersection for Model UN. Denmark is a small state with outsized diplomatic ambition - active in climate negotiations, development assistance, and the Arctic Council - and Copenhagen Business School trains a generation of professionals who will staff the ministries, NGOs, and multinationals that translate those ambitions into policy. A college MUN held in that environment inherits some of that pragmatic, policy-literate atmosphere. The European college circuit has matured into a serious development pathway, and conferences in the Nordic capitals tend to attract delegates who are already comfortable with substantive debate rather than purely performative speechmaking. A mid-sized field in Copenhagen means committees are large enough to test bloc dynamics but small enough that chairs can actually evaluate written and rhetorical work. For delegates building a competitive record, the value of a stop like CBSMUN is less about prestige inflation and more about the quality of the room. Business-school MUNs frequently lean into economic, trade, and sustainable development committees, which rewards delegates who can move beyond generic position papers into actual policy mechanics.

How to prepare

Preparation for a Copenhagen-hosted conference should start with the host country's diplomatic posture. Denmark's foreign policy emphasises climate leadership, multilateralism, humanitarian aid, and an Atlantic security orientation balanced against close EU integration. Even when you are not representing Denmark, expecting that worldview to shape chair expectations and informal floor norms is a reasonable working assumption. Because the host is a business school, delegates should over-prepare on the economic and financial dimensions of their portfolios. If your committee touches sanctions, development finance, supply chains, energy markets, or industrial policy, build a position that engages with the numbers and instruments rather than treating economics as background colour. Chairs at business-school MUNs tend to reward delegates who can speak fluently about trade-offs. The college-level format also implies a higher floor on research expectations. Position papers should treat secondary sources as a starting point, not the destination - actual UN documents, treaty texts, and recent Security Council or General Assembly records will separate serious delegates from the rest. Travelling delegates should also account for spring weather in the Nordics when planning their wardrobe for committee photos and closing ceremonies. Finally, use the application window early. Mid-sized European conferences often fill desirable country assignments quickly once allocations open, and late applicants tend to inherit the assignments nobody else wanted.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
college
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Mar 11, 2027 – Mar 14, 2027

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend CBSMUN?

    The conference is run at the college level, so it is designed for university students rather than secondary-school delegates. High schoolers looking at the European circuit should target dedicated youth conferences instead.

  • Where exactly does the conference take place?

    CBSMUN is hosted in Copenhagen, Denmark, on the Copenhagen Business School campus, which sits within the wider Greater Copenhagen area accessible from the city's main transit network.

  • How large is the delegate field?

    CBSMUN runs as a mid-sized college conference, large enough to support a real range of committees but small enough that individual delegates remain visible to their chairs throughout the weekend in Copenhagen.

  • How do I apply?

    Applications are handled through the conference's MyMUN listing, which is the standard registration channel for European college MUNs and where individual and delegation sign-ups for the Copenhagen weekend are processed.

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

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