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MUN/International Conference on Globalisation, Entrepreneurship, and Emerging Economies

International Conference on Globalisation, Entrepreneurship, and Emerging Economies

Part of the International Conference on Globalisation, Entrepreneurship, and Emerging Economies series

International Conference on Globalisation, Entrepreneurship, and Emerging Economies

LONDON, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland · college

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Dates
Dec 11–2026 (day: 12)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
TBD
Language
English
Format
In-person
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Summary

The International Conference on Globalisation, Entrepreneurship, and Emerging Economies brings a college-level Model UN cohort to London for a focused session on how cross-border commerce, founder ecosystems, and developing markets reshape global governance. The agenda sits at the intersection of trade policy, capital flows, and the institutions that try to discipline them, giving delegates a chance to argue questions that rarely get dedicated committee time at broader generalist conferences. Hosted in the United Kingdom, the program leans on London's standing as a hub for international finance, legal services, and emerging-market deal flow. Delegates can expect debate that treats globalisation not as a settled consensus but as a contested project, with entrepreneurship and emerging economies as the proving grounds where that contest plays out.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Globalisation is no longer a uniform tide lifting all economies at the same pace. Supply chains are being rewired, industrial policy is back in fashion in advanced economies, and emerging markets are negotiating harder for terms that match their growth trajectories. A conference that names these tensions directly gives college delegates room to engage with the actual policy debates shaping multilateral institutions today. Entrepreneurship is the connective tissue in that story. Founders in emerging economies increasingly drive employment, tax base expansion, and technological leapfrogging, yet they operate inside regulatory and financing environments that international bodies still struggle to address coherently. Treating entrepreneurship as a diplomatic subject, rather than a purely private-sector concern, is a meaningful framing choice. For a college audience, the value lies in moving past textbook IMF-versus-World-Bank framings and into the operational questions: how trade rules treat digital services, how capital controls interact with startup funding, how sanctions reshape founder mobility. These are the debates working diplomats actually have, and a London setting puts delegates close to the institutions that host them.

How to prepare

Delegates preparing for this conference should start by mapping their assigned country's real economic posture: net exporter or importer, capital account openness, dependence on remittances, exposure to commodity cycles, and the structure of its startup ecosystem if one exists. Generic talking points about "supporting development" will not survive contact with committees that expect specifics. From there, read the actual instruments at stake. WTO dispute summaries, UNCTAD investment reports, and IMF Article IV consultations are dense but unavoidable. Pair that institutional reading with a few founder-level case studies from the region your country sits in, so you can speak about globalisation in terms of concrete businesses and jobs rather than only macro abstractions. Finally, prepare a position that can move. The strongest delegates at economics-focused conferences are the ones who can identify which concessions their country can absorb and which are politically impossible, then trade accordingly. London's policy environment rewards delegates who treat negotiation as a craft rather than a performance.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
college
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Dec 11, 2026 – Dec 12, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is eligible to attend this conference?

    The conference is aimed at the college level, so university students forming delegations are the intended participants.

  • Where does the conference take place?

    Sessions are held in London, in the United Kingdom, drawing on the city's role as a global finance and policy hub.

  • What themes anchor the agenda?

    The program is built around globalisation, entrepreneurship, and emerging economies, so committees and topics are oriented toward trade, investment, and development policy rather than security or humanitarian crises alone.

  • How should delegates approach preparation?

    Because the conference convenes at the college level in London with an economics-heavy focus, position papers should engage with concrete trade instruments, capital flow data, and founder ecosystem realities for the assigned country.

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

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