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MUN/Duhovka High School Model United Nations
Duhovka High School Model United Nations
Part of the Duhovka High School Model United Nations series

Duhovka High School Model United Nations

Prague, Czechia · high-school

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Dates
Feb 5–2027 (day: 8)
Fee
$1,300
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
150
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

Duhovka High School Model United Nations convenes secondary school delegates in Prague for a multi-day conference hosted in Czechia. The program is built for high schoolers who want a structured European circuit experience without the scale of a flagship university-hosted weekend. Registration is routed through a single public application page, and the fee structure treats individual and team registrations identically, which simplifies budgeting for schools sending small delegations alongside independent applicants.

Why this edition matters in 2027

For high school MUN programs in Central Europe, Duhovka offers a calibrated entry point: large enough to feature competitive committees and a diverse delegate pool, small enough that newer delegates are not lost in the crowd. That balance is increasingly rare on a circuit dominated by sprawling university conferences, and it matters for advisors trying to develop debaters who can speak, write, and negotiate rather than simply attend. Hosting the conference in Prague also signals something about the geography of secondary school MUN. The European high school circuit has historically clustered around a handful of cities, and a Czechia-based conference adds a credible stop for delegations traveling from the German-speaking world, the Baltics, the Balkans, and beyond. The flat fee approach - the same price for individual delegates and team registrants - is worth noting. It removes the usual incentive structure that rewards large delegations with per-head discounts, and it puts solo applicants on equal footing with school-sponsored teams. That choice shapes who shows up and how committees feel in the room.

How to prepare

Delegations preparing for Duhovka should treat it as a substance conference first and a logistics exercise second. Because the level is explicitly high school, chairs typically reward delegates who arrive with crisp policy positions, a working knowledge of their assigned country's recent voting record, and at least one draft operative clause ready to circulate on day one. Advisors sending delegates to Prague should plan country research around primary sources - foreign ministry statements, UN General Assembly speeches, and Security Council voting records - rather than secondary explainers. High school chairs at European conferences increasingly check whether position papers reflect the assigned delegation's actual stance or a generic summary, and the gap shows quickly in debate. For first-time attendees, the prep cycle should also include mock committee sessions focused on the transition from formal speeches to unmoderated caucus. That hinge is where most high school delegates either consolidate a bloc or lose the room, and it is the single highest-leverage skill to rehearse before arriving. Finally, delegations should factor the total cost - registration, travel to Prague, and accommodation - against the developmental return. For programs building toward larger university-hosted conferences later in the year, Duhovka can function as a tune-up; for programs treating it as a capstone, the substantive depth justifies the investment.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Feb 5, 2027 – Feb 8, 2027

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend Duhovka MUN?

    The conference is explicitly a high school level event, so eligibility is centered on secondary school students rather than university delegates.

  • Where is the conference held?

    Duhovka MUN is hosted in Prague, Czechia, placing it within the Central European high school circuit.

  • How does the fee structure work?

    Registration is priced identically for individual delegates and team registrants, both denominated in US dollars, which simplifies budgeting for schools and solo applicants alike.

  • How large is the conference?

    Duhovka MUN is built around a defined expected delegate count that positions it between intimate weekend conferences and large flagship events, giving newer delegates room to speak while preserving competitive committees.

  • Where do delegates apply?

    Applications are routed through the conference's public listing on the mymun platform, which serves as the single point of registration.

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

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