For the complete documentation index, see llms.txt.
Skip to main content
MUN/Kathmandu Model United Nations
Kathmandu Model United Nations
Part of the Kathmandu Model United Nations series

Kathmandu Model United Nations

Kathmandu, Nepal · high-school

📅 Add to calendar
Dates
Sep 12–2026 (day: 13)
Fee
TBD
Reg deadline
TBD
Delegates
TBD
Language
English
Format
In-person
Apply / Learn more →

Summary

Kathmandu Model United Nations convenes high-school delegates in the Nepali capital for a focused weekend of committee debate, resolution drafting, and multilateral role-play. Hosted in Kathmandu and listed through the MyMUN conference directory, the gathering positions itself as an accessible entry point for secondary students who want to test their diplomatic skills in a South Asian setting rather than travel to the larger circuits in Europe or North America. The conference is compact by design: a short program, a single host city, and a high-school eligibility frame that keeps the room developmentally coherent. For students in the region, it is a chance to engage with United Nations procedure close to home; for visiting delegations, it is an opportunity to encounter perspectives that often get underweighted in Western-anchored circuits.

Why this edition matters in 2026

Model UN circuits in South Asia have grown steadily, but the bulk of media attention still flows to conferences in Europe, the Gulf, and North America. A Kathmandu-based event matters because it shifts some of that gravity. Delegates who debate climate adaptation, migration, or food security from a Himalayan vantage point bring different instincts to the table than those who learn the craft in Geneva-adjacent rooms. That diversity of starting assumptions is precisely what multilateral practice is supposed to surface. Nepal itself is a useful classroom for diplomacy. It is a small state navigating between two large neighbours, a major contributor to United Nations peacekeeping, and a country whose development trajectory intersects almost every Sustainable Development Goal. Students who simulate UN bodies in this context are not abstracting from geopolitics - they are sitting inside a live case study. For the broader Model UN ecosystem, conferences like this one are part of how the activity stays globally legitimate. If the simulation of the United Nations only happens in wealthy capitals, it risks becoming a finishing school rather than a training ground. A high-school weekend in Kathmandu, organised at a manageable scale, helps keep the pipeline genuinely international.

How to prepare

Delegates preparing for a high-school conference in Kathmandu should start with the fundamentals of UN procedure: how a committee moves from general debate into moderated and unmoderated caucus, how working papers become draft resolutions, and how amendments are handled on the floor. Because the program is short, sessions move quickly, and the delegates who arrive fluent in the mechanics spend their energy on substance instead of process. On substance, the most transferable preparation is policy research that goes one layer beyond the obvious. Reading a country's foreign ministry statements, its voting record in the General Assembly, and its positions in regional bodies produces a more defensible stance than relying on encyclopedic summaries. For agenda items touching South Asia in particular, delegates should expect informed pushback from peers who live with the issues. Logistically, an international high-school conference in Kathmandu rewards early planning around travel documents, visas where applicable, and chaperone arrangements. The apply_url on MyMUN is the operative channel for registration details, and delegations should treat the listed schedule as the binding reference rather than secondary write-ups. Finally, delegates should rehearse the soft skills that distinguish strong performances: opening speeches that land in under a minute, bloc-building conversations that are specific rather than generic, and the discipline to write clauses that could survive a real drafting committee. Awards follow the delegates who combine preparation with composure.

Eligibility deep-dive

Level
high-school
Age
Team size
Country quota
Open

Schedule & deadlines

  1. Conference

    Sep 12, 2026 – Sep 13, 2026

Frequently asked questions

  • Where is Kathmandu Model United Nations held?

    The conference takes place in Kathmandu, Nepal, with registration and program details routed through the MyMUN listing for the event.

  • Who is eligible to participate?

    Eligibility is set at the high-school level, making this a secondary-student conference rather than a university circuit event.

  • How long does the conference run?

    It is a short-format weekend program in Kathmandu, structured to fit a compact committee schedule rather than a week-long simulation.

  • How do students apply?

    Registration is handled through the conference's MyMUN page, which serves as the primary source link for delegates and faculty advisors.

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

Trusted outbound references